News Scrapbook 1986-1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San ~iego 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) l
SEP 24 1987
19 7 Clout Cpllege students are voters, council in San Diego. Contlnu d from B-1 Student leaders aid they are
SEP 2 5 is~,
There was one such attempt by students in 1974, It was a countywide effort that failed because there were too many government agencies to deal with and too many issues to con- sider, Danon said. A second effort in 1978 also was countywide and failed for the same reasons. "That is the lesson we have learned· focus the issues and deal with one government agency," said Rapp.
determined to deal with the student voter apathy and to focus their atten- tion ''We ar d termined to find a way to reg1 ter all potential voters," aid Danon. McCarty aid he ha tried in the pa t to get . tudent · to register to vote while regist nng for classes, but he said that effort so far hasn't been ·ucc ful. ''We know (voter registr l n) is our first major challenge, but we will overcome 1t," d Danon.
"On u , we intend to focus down to about a half-dozen, and they r~---~----- ..L.:... will all be concerned with the quality of tud nt hfe, on such issues as tr n portahon and hou ing," said Oanon • 'tud n ar a Ii pmg political 1ant that could do a lot of good in the community;' said Kulikowski
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fL°s Angeles, CA T .os Angeles Co) rmes ,~~n Diego Ed ) tr. D 50 010i (Cir. S 55,573) SEP 5 1
Chrisline Guillard, left, and Fern Murphy at USO tea
nd words: Tension
thou
betwe n college
. administrators and student Jo~rnahsts is o news. But at USD, VJSCa c 111 to or1ca Sanchez is .... trying_ to case the headaches. With a comphrnentary copy of this semes er's first edition of the Vista Sanchez sent uni er ity Pres. Auth~r Hughes a bottle of aspirin. Air Coyote: A San Diego executive who commutes regularly t~ LA1s ~ccustomed to sharing fhghts with the occasional suspected alien. But the other night, the floo~gate broke. Late for his plane, he 1 :ned up at American Airhnes behmd ~wo Hispanics who paid cash for 15 tickets each. The executive had to race to his flight but he did ~eat_the two Hispanics,'who arrived Just I~ time to lead 40 silent aliens to their seats. Airborne our executive got on the fir~t-class phone to tip Immigration in LA The ~ge~t on the other end was resigned. Well do our best," he sighed. But ~h~n the plane landed, no agent was m sight. And the 40 aliens just scattered. Unusual scene? Happens every day, says Airport Mgr Bud McDonald. "That's why we went over a million passengers in Aug~~t. that's only half-funny. In a good month, according to McDonald, as many as 15 000 undocument~d aliens pas~ through ~mdbergh Field. Immigration does its best, McDonald figures but th ahens are winning by she~r forceeof numbers. "The Joke," says McDonald, "is that we'll call INS and say, 'We've got five illegals at ~ate so-and-so.' And the agent says Call us back when you've got 25 ' ,,' Meanwhile, the coyotes grow ev~r more soph1st1cated ", 'ow, " says McDonald, they even carry beepers.'' f San Diego Shuffle: The tragedy o bandleader Woody Herman aT ~nd broke, has brought out th~ mour musicians. At Elks Lodge 168 from 3 to midnight Sunday, a strea~ of ~ntertamers, led by Frankie ~~me and Patti Page, will lend their Ta ents to benefit the Woody Herman rust Fund. (And if you ·aTJt to pre- taste the real thing, ycu co11ld tune to KSDS-FM at 10:30 S;iturday mornmg for Rod Page's 90-minute remembrance of the great ~"~.leader.) .. . "Like Father, Like /, n, the new Dudley Moore-Kirk Cameron comedy shot on location here, open:; tonight in local theaters . . . KFMB Ra~io, returning to a . format of earlier triumph will t to ease fans' withdrawal pains ry Sunday by broadcasting a "Fantas F,ootball" ~ame from the parking fot a. SD Stadium. The tailgate art starts at 10:30· "kick-off' . Pt Y A d . • 1s a noon a voice from the Chargers' . will h~ndle radio color: former pa.;t defensive coach Tom Bass.
Th San Diego and Gros mont/Cu- yamaca Community College districts have more than 43 000 stud nls, who are on the verage 30 years old and eligible voters San Die o talc has 35,000 stu d nts, me udmg 30,000 who should be ehgible to vote UCSD, USD and PLNC add another 30,000 potential tudent vol rs. The tudents see their cooperative effort a a new development in liai- on betw n the umver itie and col• lcge that has not been po ible be- fore ''There i no doubt that the UC people looked on SDSU a second- cla s citizen m the past," said Danon. "And both UC and SDSU hardly ac- knowledged that the commumty col• leges existed." added Alina Kuh- kowski's sister Ahce, representing Mesa College Now, the students say, they are pooling their strengths in recognition of mutual interdependence. It is not the fir t effort at such a
JU/or~
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fat. 1888
Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573)
SEP 2 6 1987
Jltl~rt 1 1 P. C. B
far 1888
K a!!tz to Leave as Dean of USD Law School By ~ CHACHTER, Times Staff Writer
increased the reputation-not only locally, but nationally-of that school." Krantz said he took pride in his role .in revising the law school's cumculum to increase its emphasis on clu~1cal skills and legal ethics, reflecting the evolving nature of legal practice. Such concerns will be his focus as he works to com- P,lete a book, ambitiously titled, '.l'he t'uture of the Legal Profes- s1on.11 Krantz said he was umiecided 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 Pr~s1dent Author Hughes said in a written statement. ---~
have grown as well. "USD is accepting more qualified students and turning out better la:,,,yers," said Craig Higgs, a San Diego attorney who serves on the law school's board of visitors. "One of the measures of that is that ma)Or law firms from throughout the country are hiring USO graduates when that was not the case not~ 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 !lnd s~un off as independ- ent entitles. With his wife, attorney Carol Hallstrom, he developed a group of neighborhood mediation
Sheld~n Krantz, who led the Umvers1t of San Diego's law scnool to newfound recognition in si~ 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 hfe, and that's just the point I've ~eached," Krantz said Friday. W~en I became dean in 1981, I don t think I ever anticipated doing 1t for this long." Recruitment by law firms at. the 23-year-old law school has quad- rupled dunng Krantz's tenure ac- cording to university statistics ' and both applications and class ·size
cent~rs and formed the San Diego Immigration Law Coalition to coor- dinate the ~rovision of legal aid to aliens seeking legalization under the federal amnesty program. Krantz, a national leader in cor- rection_s issues, also guided the formation of a blue-ribbon com- mission that recommended the scuttling of San Diego County's beleaguered criminal defense sys- tem for_ indigents and its replace- me_nt with a quasi-public defender office. "I believe the law school has lost an incredible talent, and one that has _been unselfish in his 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
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
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EP 24 1987
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they visit the University of San Francisco, which is 8-0 and ranked seventh nationally. They now compete in the Nevada-Las Vegas tournament /Azt cs keep ball rolling in rebuilding year By Ri,.k Da vis ,,,Zf/~ '1ribun • por "r,ter Elsewhere, on the local men's college soccer scene: this weekend.
USO is 3-2-1 after starting out 3-0. The losses were administered by Fullerton (5-0) and UNLV (2-1). After shutting out Cal 1-0 and putting a 3-1 clamp on Cal State Dominguez Hills in the season's first two games, the defense bas exposed goalkeeper Scott Huckleberry. His goals-against average is 3.00 since - compared to a .96 , A year after going 19-¼-1, but being snubbed when NCAA playoff invitations were handed out, the Toreros will have to pick up the tempo for any sort of repeat. • • • UCSD - Saturday's 1-0 loss to Pomona-Pitzer was the Tritons' first of the season. Their overall record jumped to 3-1-2 after their 1-0 victory over Azusa Pacific yester- day at home. "The last two years, we've lost a whole team," said coach Derek Armstrong, who also will direct the U.S. under-20 national team in the World Youth Cup next month in Chile. "What we have now are good young players with potential." Goalie Greg Stadler (.72 GAA), defender Rod Cramblit and forward Buhba Wingate (eight goals in '86) are the only seniors and Wingate is yet to return from a knee injury suffered in the NCAA Division III playoffs last season. Those '86 Tritons were NCAA runners-up, losing a 2-0 finale to North Carolina-Greensboro. • • • POINT LOMA NAZARENE - What's young? Try 16 llf 22 roster spots being filled by freshmen. That's coach Mark Halpert's situation at Point Loma. "We had sophomores and juniors who weren't good to stay on the team," explained Halpert, whose club is off to a 3-1-1 start after defeating Redlands 1-0 yesterday at figure all last season.
• • • USIU - The Gulls (3~4) saw their losing streak ext.end- ed to three games when they dropped a 1-0 decision to Santa Barbara Tuesday at home. Worse yet, the Gulls College soccer were unable to score in any of the three losses. And it doesn't get any easier for USIU. Astring of eight straight road games follows next Wednesday's on-cam- pus match against Loyola Marymount. Jon s· oru., a 5-foot-7 senior forward from South Afri- ca, leads a patchy club-scoring list with nine points (two goals, five assists). There are two unusual stories unfolding out on the Pomerado Road campus. • One is the comeback of Cem Er, a sophomore for- ward and Turk1Sb national. He is back in the lineup less than a year after suffering a crushed sternum and rup- tured atrmm in a penalty-area collision during a game . against Cal State Los Angeles. Er, miraculously, is back after open-heart surgery, and even has scored two.goals this season. • The other is the switch of English import Gary Fran- cis from goalkeeper to forward - an unlikely transition at the Division I level. Francis, because of a fractured hand that hasn't healed sufficiently, doesn't have medical clearance to return to the nets. He's shown sufficient ball kills to tart up front, however, and bas netted three goals. • • • USO -:...The Toreros opened a three-game road swing yesterday at Cal State San Bernardino with a 3-3 tie.
A nal101 I ranking is long gone, but San Diego State's occ: r team ext nded its winning treak to four straight la t night by defeating UC Santa Barbara 2-0 in he ztec Bowl Santa B rbara had tied o. 1 ranked Fre no State 1-1 In the se on ope er • The Aztec · defense ha thrown shutouts in all four of 1 wtn , although it shOuld be noted two were over NAIA schools (Point Loma Nazarene and Chapman). Still, a shutout' a shutout, especially for goal-happy SDSU, which wa expected to feature the coring of Kyle Whit- temore and Enc Wynalda this fall, while rebuilding its b ckline. 'We lo t three cmors from the defense (All-West Coa t e ection Steve Boardman, Paul Stumpf and Ted Wacker)'' noted Aztec publ ist Dave Kuhn. "It appears th t ince Chuck Clegg moved Chri Keenan back to · eper (Boardman's old po ition), it has stabilized thmg ." While Wluttcmor , a 6-foot-3, 190-pound junior, has picked up where e I fl off 10 1986 (20 goals, 10 assists, 50 potnt ), Keenan and Wynalda have adjusted Keerian (5-9, 165) tran (erred from soccer tradition- rich Indiana to play his senior season for Clegg. Wynalda l 1, 165) i ;i freshman from Ventura County's Westlake High, where he wa CIF South~rn Section Player of the Year. Commg forward occasionally, Keenan has notched two goals and two a I t Wynalda erupted for three goals la t week against Point Loma to take over the club coring lead from Whittemore. Wynalda has five goals, six a 1sts Whittemore ha five and two. The Aztecs, who Jost their preseason status (one poll had them r nkcd 11th) with losses to Cal State orthr1dgc and Cal State Fullerton, could regain it by pulling off a weekend upset on the road. Tomorrow night, men'
lt~mized: San Diego State ranks ~th m the nation, and 2nd statewide m the percentage of accounting , students who pass the CPA f t . exam ir:s time out. "Pretty good " not ~1ke Hornung, "for a unive~sity ~:at a so ranked 3rd among Playbo '.s best party schools." According~o the most-recent figures 41.3% of SDSU students who took the test passed (UC Santa Barbara was first in the stat~ at 44.4%.) . .. Le Cirque du Solefl, the animal-free circus trou ~at s made such hit at the Los p ~geles Fesuval, 1 s c< ming to San ~1ego. They II pitch tl1P, big top on ark Blvd. (oppo~ite Balboa Park) and_ hold forth Oct. 2-18, sharin 10% of ticket grosses with the City. g - Seussian: La Jolla's Ted Geisel D~. Seuss _to us - missed the openmg of hlS showing at the Tampa Museum of Art. But Steve Brezzo •.1e SI? Museum of Art director who orga_mzed the original exhibit here carried an unmistakably Se . ' uss1an message from Geisel: ''Now I wish I could be there in person to t~ank/one Joe and a Joel and three J1ms and a Frank .. . How I'd love to tha~k you and all of the rest of your ~md-hearted gang/for decidin my pictures are worthwhile to g hang.''
Tribune photo by Dana Fisher
CEM ER - BACK WITH USIU
home.
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San Diego, CA (San Diego co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
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/ { Friday, October 2 USO w·11 sp~or as one of its breakfast seminars, "Growth Control:""Consequences for San Diego," by Associate Professor of Economics Dirk Yandell from 7:30 a.m to 9 a.m. at the Douglas F. Manchester Executive Conference Center, USO. Fee is $15. Registra• t1on required. t.,...__ .::,:...:...:..;;;...~--~-~-------------= ")..
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