News Scrapbook 1989

?fProfile > :-qO t l £7

/ Toreras, Aztecs advance By The Associatf'rl P~9'55° GAINESVILLE, Fla. - No. _ 15- seeded USO, bolstered by Jen~1fer Larllng's upset of Stacey Mart1D at No. 1 singles, defeated 17th-see~ed Tennessee 7-2 yesterday in the first round of the NCAA Women's Tennis Championships. No. 13 Texas, No. 14 Arizona and No. 16 San Diego State also advan~ed yesterday with first-round v1ctor1es. Te:r.-s defeated No. 18 Kentucky 5-4 in a match delayed 3 hours, 35 min- utes by rain. Arizona defeated No. 19 Texas A&M 5-1, and San Diego State beat unranked William & Mary 6-3. San Diego State was scheduled to meet No. 1 Stanford in today's see~nd round. USO was to face No. 2 Florida and Arizona was to play No. 3 UCLA. Texas was scheduled to go against No. 4 Georgia. Martin came into her match ranked No. 2, had a 27-match win~ing streak and had not lost a set smce Feb. 4. Larking was ranked 30th but won 6-4, 6-4. "I wasn't thinking of her record or anything like that," Larking said. "I NCAA Women's Tennis Championships

graphs and biographies from the school' s catalog. h . g on Atlantn Like Sherman Marc m . . '' It was like Sherman marchmg mto ~ t- lanta " recalled Stiglitz. " H~ took It e ' • . When he left, it was c ear place by storm: to be the faculty's first that he was gomg . choice." 1· his Always looking at the bottom me, . - pct video project was actually a fund-rais ing venture. d te Since the school could accom~o a JOO more students and still mai!1tam a re- spectable student-to-faculty raltot those students represented a mt ,on- lar increase in revenue . d of Dessent distributed thousan s . s of the video across the country. In ~~~ 1 irst yC'ar, applications 1;0;; 0 t1. 1 a~g~~- blcd from 1,200 in 1985 to •. . 111 ; The increase, Dessent said, is directly a j tributablc to the vid70 be.cause l~w s~~oo_ applications nationwide did not nse s rp Jy un ii 1987. . "d One purpose of the 14-rmnutc v1 eo, h. h opens with spectacular scenes of ~tsan Diego shoreline, is to show pro-

Continue from Page 1 f . not be a pur e acade m1c1a n a ny_- I think you have to be a bus1- • ::~~:\~r~~n to be a dean these days .'' Dessent needed more money to ~eve!- . " s of law - mter- the ''boutique area . . op . 1 1 telecommun 1cat 1ons, nat1onha I aw' that would position the biotec no ogy - legal 1as a forum for contemporary sc hoo , . 1985 the school had only .a issues. Hut m t from its 3 500 alumni. $7,000 endo,wm~\e " scoff~d the dean , "Now, thats a.JO , who last year raised $100,000. D t•s connections with la:,v firms, essen I I rganizat1ons was businesses a nd cu tur~ 1 : faculty selected o11e of the reas~n~ . le dean and him, noter! Jan t•ghtt.ie:::~~'\its on the a faculty mcm er. . Padres the San IJrJards of the San Du~go d • I local • 1 Qf /\rt an severa flie~o I\ useum . !irst interview, Des· busmc~ses A\ ~•s ergy and ideas to the ~cnt poured on us en each member by hculty and addressed . d their photo- 11~me - he had memonze r " he said. "You . burned-out pro esso ' can , ,. 11 ,e o;tlldPnts had a Ev••rytbi11g in he, e lousv area for cat\nf ~rratr•r \"as selling w~s rlark aml the ce 'o i_n,ow !ins a blue t " I he roon hi mi111 cd ,a · d noor white ta "" a11d while rhC'ckere hion~d hnoths. d I · and blue-cus an c 1a1rs, . t me happy campe1s "Now we .~c go a~\vith q[islaction. ~round hrre. hes, sununcr, Desse11 t -~- By the end of the $fi"O 000 on rcnova• peels tu have spc;it fa~·:i1ty ,md staff, he lions. To mot1v~ organizing seminars offers bonuses d books. and publishing article~ a:uitting - people "I don't have peop_ c "he said pull· b art of a winner, · want to e P . d a corkscrew from ing a bottle o~ an The wine label and the shelf behm . tmd with the school's corkscrew, impnnte tie faculty and staff were gifts to ' h. " he "Lit le things, little t mgs , Students as 'Custom,~r:~e school now For its "cuS t omers, ·. Students 1 cw programs. offers severa n ell as in Septem- ta rt in January as w can s II in a two-year program ber; they can enro ourses · and they can by taking su~m~:: speci~lty by takin? augment their n- State Um- s at San_u_r~o .,.___ graduate course ~- •ty of Saii '\e110. . nd the Umversr -~ f h' Ii is cover-ea 6y therr law the cost o w ic school tuition_. . criticism that inc!e- Dessent dismisse_ h on h I focus too muc pendent law sc oo s 1~w theory. The law practice rather r:~~e same, he said, stal}dard aof contemporary law and the a ·ce for the students. classes are a servi 1 D mill _ we' re n()t "W 're not a · · t e h b " said Dessen , just here to teach _et~~ion the pass rate under whose_ admm~~mme; exam has ris- for students m th et . 1984 to 43 percent en from 30 per~en md nts deserve a bal· last year. "I th1~tes~o:ratic method and ance beh':'een,' i Dessent, who ex- the practical_, . sa do ram to offer clerk- p anded the chmcal pr g . h · dges and . . I frms wit JU ships 10 aw 1 . • . return for class t agencies m . · h governmen lous connection wit d·t "It's a marve ere 1. "d the real world," he sru . f the faculty at Cal The m~d1an age_ o Dessent, who be- Western is 45, ga1~ more eager to ex- lieves a young st~v IS Of the 31 full-time plore new areas o aw· o111 i11 the cafetcll~- ]a,;t yea . said. Young Fac~lty · free I 11 ,,,mbers a ong ly ancl calling lllOS t bydnam1 I · " he sa1 , sp " ,. the way, cnnversmg - 1~a,Jmu his arms " Sect Hs, .

T e Diego Union Joe4Flynn retire In July 1990 and to be replaced by Coadjutor Bishop Robert Brom, right.

of the San Di go • I f . i Xp ct d to

& Frve m San llirgo.

1 .. - 1 1 to jn111 the ltll -,,.,'h<' JJrrfl'rrl'd 1 hcr e lw h~d a • .

Ile

m: Ne ly n med coadjutor bis~op n as adv a e of orthodox doctrine from B-t

left tllf' law firm I lessen (' ?rp. n a compan~ . . ,tinuous rcl~t1on• II)

_

J 01011ml pr act1cmr, 1 er than the wlH·t c nnc CUI

h

s Cont nu

. 1 > ,. 11 I pen pl< , '1·111\·t fl''ltr'V roo111 •

1 al

·

• ' ~1,-)1•

,

,

' .. 1 ,,,H·s 0 1 1 < and _ 1 l'fmc ~l'<'i11r, them 11

llll'f'IS l\l \.,

then may go fot yPar s J

.

ap,1i11 ., I], 1 gues ~I I olo• , li e s.111 plenty of us; ~p,ltt wiih Jllow on O\' 1 Fol0111at s_ ml< 1 cF om~t Pventu~lly tls distinctive kiosks. '> prevailed . 'd . can't use ycllow. I "E stman sa, }Oil • · h ,a · L $5()() million m cas • I en vou ,,ave, .. guess w 1 , r the primary colors, you can take one o Dcsse_nt said.. 1at Des sent bPg~n Wl11lc at Foton 1 · at the University te;iching corporate ~:vcd on to become of San Diego, t:1~n C ntral Federal Sa,·• g neral counse 1 .c 1 Three years l;it . & I at, J\ soc1a ror • . tnR ,o, · this tnnc to the move again, er he was on p . ·n establishing the rk with Sol nee 1 ;~cc Club chain of dDisco~~n~ts~~~!~ted the Five years later, cs. deanship at Cal Western . 'That's My Nat,ure' ure " he said, "I guess tha~ s my bnt~ a~ entrcprc- " fi nding new niches, e g and a nd making some money neur a contnbutio~.•~ Jolla with his wife, Katy, He hv_es III a _ Id daughter. Blaire. and their 16-yeahrt O Bryn is a junior at Their elder daug . er, . ' Northwestern Univers?y.er and baseball A. rlevoted tennis P 3 I d to f - Dessent said he would have ove an, t broadcaster. hav~ been a spor s true, b::ieny, when a His dream came nsored a sports fan- local radio ~tat1~i~hskns could write in and tasy show mhw a few pitches or catch a request to t_ row ros Dessent sent a few balls w1t~dthhe•d lik~ to do the com- letter and sa1 e tary for a game. D men . 'th the broadcaster, es- After dinner w1 . t · the press box. sent went up O Id be a rehears- "! thought there two'~But (the broad- I " recalls Dessen • . , a ' "d •s·t down in my assistant s caster) sai , 1 d h nrs ' Then he seat and p_ut 011 ~he h~~!e~ w~'re on the ~aid, 'Ladies an g: is Mike Desscnt. air and my guest t ~hink about today's Mike, what do you 7' " game. lly talkative Dcssent was The norma stopped cold. - SANDRA I'AR/ 1 •

Counctl. He said yest~rday he would onl_y permit the use of the old Mass if there were a clear pastoral need for it. About 3 0 to 400 people attend such as Mass at Holy Cross Chapel h re each week. "I prefer that if there 1s an attach- ment to the Latin, priests use_ lhe Novus Ordo [, ew Orde~ M~ss] with a generous portion of Latin, he said. The new Ma was instituted after the Second Vatican Council in 1_964. Brom plans to study Spanish ID C~- ernavaca, Mexico to impr~ve his fluency. He speaks fluent Italian and Latin. "I really can't make any pre~ic- tion of what I will do h re, until I know the situation better," Brom said y terday He said_ that San Diego has a much more diverse pop- ulation than Duluth. Brom was ordained to the ~riest- hood on Dec. 18, 1963, for the Diocese of Winona, Minn. He served the Wmona Diocese ID parishes, as facul- ty member and rector _of Imma~u- late Heart of Mary Semmary. chair- man of the Commission on acred Liturgy, president of the_ Sena~e of Prlests director of vocations,_ direc- tor of Continuing Education of Priests and Vicar General. He was rector of the Cathedral of the ~er~ Heart rn Winona from 1979 until h~s appointtnent as Bishop of Duluth m 1983. /

just played my own game. I was kind of nervous, but I tried to be as re- laxed as I could." Martin who will turn professional after ne;t week's NCAA individual tournament, said she was impressed with Larking. "I didn't know too much about Jen- nifer coming into the match, but after playing her I know that she's a good player," Martin said. "She pret- ty much kept me pinned behind the baseline. She dictated the points and wouldn't let me play my game." Abagail Brayton, USD's No. 2 play- er, defeated Tennessee's Wendy Ouwendijk 1-6, 7-5, 7-6 (7-4). The Toreras rece1ved straight-set singles victories from Tonya Fuller at No. 3, Christine Schmeidel at No. 5 and Christy Drage at No. 6. San Diego State was tied with Wil- liam & Mary 3-3 after the singles. But the Aztecs swept the doubles, clinching the match when the team of Susan Hawke and Claire Bateman held off Kirsten Caister and Deb Herring 6-3, 7-6 (12-10). Aztecs coach Carol Plunkett, whose team has not won a match against Stanford in two meetings this season, said she knows today's test will be difficult. "Stanford is awesome," Plunkett said.

- -- c,

-

an o,

o Cahf

Un on

(Circ Circ

217 324)

33

788J

MAY 1 1

San Diego, Ca/if. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) MAY 1 11989

.../1,ffen

P C B

, 188X

I

vUSD begins advocacy center for children's rights By Maureen Nuesca Southern Cron

grant from CalCAI will

the Weingart Foundation,

focus on

three areas of

ordinances in the 1990 legislative session, he said. "The state legislature and the state's regulatory agencies are a natural place to start, because that is where the Center for Public Interest Law's strength lies," explained Fellmeth . CalCAI will also encourage and provide an information network system among various children's ogranizations throughout California. Paul Peterson, a CalCAI board of director and San

l

children's health and safety.

ALCALA PARK - Univers_ity of San Diego Law &hool Professor Robert Fellmeth announced the establishment of California Children's Advocacy Institute (CalCAI) at the USD Center for Public Interest Law at a May 1 press conference. be headquartered at the center for at least two years, will advocate the health and safety rights and needs of children under the age of 14 throughout the state, said Fellmeth, who will act as executive director of CalCAI ''One group underrepresented in political and legal forums is children. Out of some 800 lobbyists (in. Sacramento) only one or two represent children on a full-time basis," he noted. Most of the reforms sought by the organization wil! be directed to the state legislature, he said. With a $409,000 The organization which will

Diego attomey, said a newsletter will be sent the various groups promoting "awareness to maximize impact among the clients." Fellmeth said he can promise children "a very hard-working advocate behind the scenes and that there will .be one more entity in Sacramento who will be carrying their spears." Assisting Fellmeth in the management of CaJCAI will be Center Supervising Attomey Julianne D'Angelo .

The first area is adequate child care facilities of which "there is a very serious under-supply,'' said Fellmeth. This is due in part to the Jack of affordable liability insurance. CalCAI will seek insurance reforms and regulations and try to offer creative solutions, such as state subsidizing and pooling, a fonn of self-insurance, he stated. Another area of concern is child abuse detection. San Diego will be used as a case study, Fellmeth said, adding that the organization would be "looking at the front end of the system - detecting patterns which indicate child abuse, such as criminal arrest, drug arrest and/or prior offense, and early intervention when it is warranted.

San Diego Union 265 rebounds

Joe Temple pulled down and scored 1,313 points a

'incoln.

HIGH SCHOOLS

Temple: Academics played big part in decision to attend USD

Findings in any of these areas will be utilized to propose legislation or model ----------------------,

Continued from E-1 ball for three years."

during the summer, working on my ball-handling and outside-shooting skills. They say I'll play off-guard, which is fine with me." Temple will be the second first- team all-section player to sign with the Toreros this school year. Brooks Barnhard of Escondido did so during the early signing period in Novem- ber.

Temple, who was offered a foot- ball scholarship to San Diego State and is a 6-5 high jumper, said he ex- pects to improve a lot. "The problem is, I played inside until la t year, but now the players inside will be 6-10 or taller," Temple said. "I'm going to play every day

Made with FlippingBook - Online Brochure Maker