News Scrapbook 1986-1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. 0. 123,092)

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. o. 217,089) (Cir. s . 341 ,840)

SEP 24 t9 7

SEP 2 5 l 01

col e ians aiming for political clout cott-Bla r

Un~1ty of 'an Diego. The next challenge, he said, is to get the stu- dent informed on the issues that affect students and are handled by the C'ity Council and its agen- an example, Danon explained that the City Coun 11 rec ntly voted 5-2 to restrict the number of tudents who can hve in a rental property - the •minidorm" controversy Danon id only one student official lobbled in favor of the students' interest, and that effort went unheeded by the council. "People sometime forget that we are not only tudents, we are citizens of San Diego. We have an interest m the city and it should have an interest m u ," aid Alina Kulikowski, UC- ·an Diego stu- dent I ader. 'In the pa !," Danon said, "government has lJS- ten d to us with patience but ha rarely heard us. I thmk that by operating throu h the political pro-

cess, just as the Gray Panthers, the teachers and other special-interest groups, the university com- muni,y can get a lot more attention from its elect- ed officials." The idea of a collegiate council is not new A similar council has been operating in Los Angeles for more than a decade and has become a consid- erable force in city politics, said Danon. "In fact. (the Los Angeles collegiate council) is thinking of hiring a full-time paid lobbyist. We are nowhere near that point, at present." he said. The San Diego coalition is in its formative stag- es as the different colleges return for the new academic year and the respective student-body governments begm to review the Collegiate Coun- cil's const1tut1on and by-laws. The council is made up of public and private campuses, both four year and two-year. Those in- stitutions include UCSD. San Diego State Universi- See Clout on Page 8-5

• The U~ersity of Sa~iego Auxiliary had a membership tea Tues ay in the home of Carol and Mike Alessio . Claire McNamara and Alison Tibbitts were chair- men.

Christine Guittard, left, and Fern Murphy at USD tea

Los Angeles CA (Los Angele; Co) Times (San Diego Ed ) (C!r. D 50,010j (Cir. S 55,573) SEP i:: 5 1

rhe San U1ego and 1..trossm~m1 ~u- yamaca Community College d1 tncts have mor than 43,000 student , who are on the verage 30 years old and hgible voters. San Diego tale has 35,000 stu- dents, mcludmg 30,000 who should be eligible to vote. UCSD, USO and l'LNC add another 30,000 potential tudent voter . e their cooperative effort a a n w development in liai- son between th umversities and col- leg that ha not been po sible be· fore. "There is no doubt that the UC people looked on SDSU as ~~con~· class citizens m the past, said Danon. "And both UC and SDSU hardly ac- knowledged that the comm_umly col- leges existed," added Alma K~\J- kowsk1's sister Alice, representing Mesa College Now the students say, they are pooling th ir strengths in recognition of mutual interdependence. It is not the first effort at such a The students

..Alta.'• P. C. B

l'tt 1888

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) SEP 2

F~AN DIEGO H.ttr,~ ~LERY (Desales MondaY-Friday. are noon-5 p.m.

Air Coyot . ASan Diego executive who commutes regularly to LA 1s accustomed to sharing flights with the occasional suspected alien. But the other night, the floodgate broke. Late for his plane, he lined up at American Airlines behind two Hispanics who paid cash for 15 tickets each. The executive had to race to his flight, but he did beat the two m~panics, who arrived just in time to lead 40 silent aliens to their seats. Airborne, our executive got on the first-class phone to tip Immigration m LA. The agent on the other end was resigned. ''We'll do our best," he sighed. But when the plane landed, no agent was in sight. And the 40 aliens just scattered. Unusual scene? Happens every day, ys Airport Mgr. Bud McDonald "That's why we went over a million passengers in August." And that's only half-funny. In a "good'' month, according to McDonald. as many as 15,000 undocumented aliens pass through Lmdhergh Field. Immigration does its best, McDonald figures, but the aliens are winning by sheer force of numbers. ''The joke," says McDonald, "is that we'll call INS and say, 'We've got five illegals at gate so-and-so.' And the agent says, 'Call us back when you've got 25.'" Meanwhlle, the coyotes grow ever more sophisticated. " ow," says McDonald, "they even carry beepers." San Diego Shuffle: The tragedy of bandleader Woody Herman, ailing and broke, has brought out the best in our musicians. At Elks Lodge 168, from 3 to midnight Sunday, a stream of entertainers, led by Frankie Laine and Patti Page, will lend their talents to benefit the Woody Herman Trust Fund. (And if you a11t to pre- taste the real thing, yci.; co,J!d tune to KSDS-FM at 10:30 Saturday morning for Rod Page's 90-minute remembrance of the great /, bandleader.) ... "Like Father, Like Son," the new Dudley Moore-Kirk Cameron comedy shot on location here, open;; tonight in local theaters. ... KFMB Radio, returning to a format of earlier trmmph, will try to ease fans' withdrawal pains Sunday by broadcasting a "Fantasy Football" game from the parking lot at SD Stadium. The tailgate party starts at 10:30; "kick-off" is at noon And a voice from the Chargers' pa..t will handle radio color: former defensive coach Tom Bass. Itemized: San Diego State ranks 9th in the nation, and 2nd statewide, in the percentage of accounting students who pass the CPA exam first time out. "Pretty good," notes Mike Hornung, "for a university that also ranked 3rd among Playboy's best party schools." According to the most-recent figures, 41.3% of SDSU students who took the test passed. (UC Santa Barbara was first in the state at 44.4%.) ... Le Cirque du Soleil, the ammal-free circus that's made such a hit at the Los Angeles Festival, is coming to San Diego. The, II pitch the big top on Park Blvd. (opposite Balboa Park) and hold forth Oct. 2-18, sharing 10% of ticket grosses with the City. Seussian: La Jolla's Ted Geisel - Dr. Seuss to us - missed the opening of his showing at the Tampa Museum of Art. But Steve Brezzo, ..1e SD Museum of Art director who organized the original exhibit here, carried an unmistakably Seussian message from Geisel: "Now I wish I could be there in person to thank/one Joe and a Joel and three Jims and a Frank ... How I'd love to thank you and all of the rest of your kind-hearted gang/for deciding my pictures are worthwhile to hang.''

1987

Jlllffl'• P. C. B

. 1 d

sue

E,r 1886

mbro1

tud nt b om

If th

rantz to Leave as Dean of USD Law School

111 ci uch thing! a South African poll- and national i. u , they will be- come divid d and destroy their effcc• "I have worked with the San D1 go State studen on political I su and found them to he v1:ry informed and very r . ponsible. . ''I can e this council a an exc1t- mg re ource that could help defuse i uallon that in the past hav com- pt tely polarized community and tu• d nt group to the point that they could not even peak to each other," McCarty said. ttven as a group, he . aid. .

::µ:,,-_,,,.-- By ifM tCHA~HTER, Times Staff Writer

increased the reputation-not only locally, but nationally-of that school." Krantz said he took pride in his role in rev1Sing the law school's curriculum to increase its emphaslS on clinical skills and legal ethics, reflecting the evolving nature of legal practice. Such concerns will be his locus as he works to com- plete a book, ambitiously titled, "The ~lure of the Legal Profes- sion." Krantz said he was untlecided what he would do after finishing the book. University officials, meanwhile, have not yet an- nounced plans for seeking his re- placement. . "We feel a real loss that Sheldon has decided to step down," USD President Author Hughes said in a written statement.

centers and formed the San Diego Immigration Law Coalition to coor- dmate the provision of legal aid to aliens seeking legalization under the federal amnesty program. Krantz, a national leader in cor- rections issues, also guided the formation of a blue-ribbon com- mission that recommended the scuttling of San Diego County's beleaguered cruninal defense sys- tem for indigents and its replace- ment with a quasi-public defender office. "I believe the law school has Jost an incredible talent, and one that has been unselfish in h!S communi- ty involvement," said M. James Lorenz. the former U.S. attorney who was chairman of the blue-rib- bon commission. "He has been a very strong moving force that has

have grown as well. "USO is accepting more qualified students and turning out better lawyers," said Craig Higgs, a San Diego attorney who serves on the law school's board of Visitors. "One or the measures of that is that major law firms from throughout the country are hirmg USD graduates, when that was not the case not too many years ago." Krantz, formerly a law professor at Boston University, has heavily engaged the law school in commu- nity affairs. Through the San Diego Law Center, which he helped es- tablish in 1981, volunteer lawyer and arbitration programs were de- veloped and spun off as independ- ent entities. With his wile, attorney Carol Hallstrom, he developed a group of neighborhood mediation

Sheldon Krantz, who led the University of San Diego's law scnool to newfound recognition in six years as dean, announced plans th:s week to resign the post. Krantz, 49, will go on sabbatical at the end of the current academic year and formally leave USD at the end of the 1988-89 term. "You reach a point in a particular career where you feel it's neces- sary to take the next step in your life, and that's just the point I've reached," Krantz said Friday. "When I became dean in 1981, I don't thmk I ever anticipated doing 1t for this Jong." Recruitment by law firms at the 23-year-old law school has quad- rupled during Krantz's tenure, ac- cording to university statistics, and both applications and class size

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Ci r. D. 123,092)

EP 24 1987

i~.~~2~!~~~~!La,r~.!: this weekend. . out 3-0 The losses were

Jlll~rr·•

I 88

I I

P C 8

keep ball ;rolling

/ Azt

i::~\1!~~Jto)

they visit the University of San Franc1Sco,

j:;;

anir:en:::r:~:n::e

By Ri k Davis Tnbul1l' JWT1.S 1 wter

11 1~;r~~~•s college soccer scene:

aa;1

ad~~is~~r:J·

but San Diego State's

• • •

shuttmg out C~l 1-~ a~: Pseas!n•s first two games, the defense has exposed goa!:~~ce - compared to a .96 Dominguez Hills m e Scott Huckleberry. His

A na 1onal rank ng logig~\•inning streak to lour ~~;;ghLJac~rn~:t~b;xd:reatmg UC Santa Barbara 2-0 m the ztec Bowl had t ed No 1 ranked Fresno State 1-1 Santa Barbara 1 · ln the season o~ er. has thrown shutouts m all four of • The Aztecs de cnse d t v.ere over NAIA it win ' alt~ough it shoNuld w~hapman) Still, a chools (Pomt Loma azar oal-ha y SDSU hutout' a hutoul, espec1all~h!orco~ing o/tyle Whit· which wa exp _ctewd to ~:at~~~s fall. while rebuilding its lemore nd Eric yna a backhne 1 f om the defense All-West "We lo t three en ors r P 1 Stumpf and Ted Coa t ection Steve Boartm:roa!~ Kuhn. "It appears Wacl;.cr) noted Az~\ pub oved Chris Keenan back to th t mce Chuck ?gg lmd po ition) it has stabilized per (Boardman s o • thmg ." 6-f ot-3 190-pound jumor bas While \\h1tte10 1 'ft off t~ 1986 (20 goals, 10 assJSts. 50 picked tp where e W alda have adjusted points), Keenan la6n5d) l insferred from soccer tradition- Keenan (5-9, r f Cl gg Wynalda nch lndia_na to pli h!S fen~rJ:::i;a ~:un~y's Westlake {6-1 165) is ii fres maCnlFroSoulh"rn Section Player of the High, where he was ,,. Ye~~ming forward occas1onally, Keen::h:Os/tit;!9~!:~ goals a!t t:oalnst1 ;01~~Y~!1!~ e[ou~a\e over. the club last w gf Whittemore Wynalda has five goals, sconng lead rom · a I ts Whitt more ha five and two. ( 11 LXTh Azte who lost their presea on stattu~a~n\iate nkcd 11th) with losse O • t te Fullerton. could regain it by

streak extend- yet the Gulls

· 1 ·

USIU -The Gulls (3-'4) saw 1::1rpeo~n; 1-0 de~ision to

goals-against average IS . figure all last seaso~. A year afte~ g?mf

opW

ed to three games when they Santa Barbara Tuesday at home.

w

19-+{ but being snubbed when

'

orse

e're handed out, the Toreros NCAA playof~ 1knv1tat~~";e;po for any sort of repeat. will have to pie up • • • d ' 1-0 loss to Pomona-Pitzer was the UCSD - Satur ay s Th ·r overall record jumped Tritons' first of f:belsO~nt~ry !~er Azusa Pacific yester- to 3-1-2 after their · VIC day at home. 1 team" said "The last two years, we\e 1 i:/ w~f 0 dfrect the U.S. coach Derek. Armstrong,. w tohe World Youth Cup next der-20 national team m ood g :onth in Chile. "Wh~! we have now are g youn Players with potential. bl·t (72 GAA) defender Rod Cram I Goalie Greg Stadler · .' 1 · '86) are the and forward Bubba_Winga~e ~~t~~nfrom a knee only seniors and_ w;;:ga~~f,/ Division Ill playoffs last injury suffer~ mT ·te ere NCAA runners-up, losing a season Those 86 rI ons w 2-0 fin~le to North Carolina-Greensboro. • • • NAZARENE- What's young? Try 16 Qf POINT LOMAbe_ filled by freshmen. That's coach 22 roster spots mg . Mark Halpert's situation at ~omt Loma~ weren't good to "We had sophomores ~nd l~~~orsr;"!hose club is off to stay on the team," edxpflamt~dg Re:a~ds 1-0 yesterday at a 3-1-1 start after e ea m

College soccer ·

y of the three losses.

were unable to score ID an . · t Angh1: r~ngames follows next Wednesday's on-cam- s ra1 . 1 M rymount pus match agamst f:,i-~ :eni~r forwa;d from So~th Afri- Jon Sds ons,tah5-y club-scoring list with nine pomts (two ca lea a pa c go~ls, five asstistso).unusual stories unfolding out on the There are w Pomerado Road cambpusk. f Cem Er a sophomore for- • One 1s the come ac o • . Jin 1 ward and Turlush national. He is back m the eudp r~p- ft uffering a crushed sternum an tha~a r~ ine: spenalty-area collision during a gam:. tur . -~ ~l State Los Angeles. Er, miraculously, is bacl !f::;~pen-heart surgery, and even has scored two,goa s th i! is the swirh o!~n~i!! i:r:e\~:~ra!~t~~ cis from goalkeeper lo orw . because of a fractured at the Div1s1on I level. Fr~ncis, 't have medical hand that hasn't healtedtbsufflects1enJ~; ~=:n sufficient ball I ance to return o e n · d th c e r rt f ont however and has nette ree kills to ta up r • • f USIU A string of eight d · d •t get any easier or

goals

Tribune photo by Dana Fisher

CEM ER - BACK WITH USIU

home.

ti d them r d CaI orthridge an k d vullmg off a w

t on the road. Tomorrow mght,

en up

/

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. o. 123,092)

,

P. c. e

.JHl~n •

,sss

I ,

/ Friday, October 2

'l...

/. kfast seminars, "Growth potlor as one of its br~ab Associate Professor of am at the Douglas F. Economics Dirk Yandell from 7:JOCa.~ ro USO F·ee is $15. Reg1stra- Manch ster Executive Conference en e • · --= tion required. USO will Control Consequences for San Diego, t J .

Made with FlippingBook Annual report