News Scrapbook 1986-1988

San Diego. Calit. Union (Circ. D 217,324) (Ciri;. S. 339. 788)

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

1987

NOV 8

Jl/la.', P. C. 8

Es r. 1888

viJSDFallsBehindEarly, Loses, 34-7 ~1c:::< The UnjyecsiY at San Diego fell led, 20-0. passes for 183 yards, and tight end

F asketbal eeks consistency ~q~S y I JOH 'ON Clar

Jll

F.sr. 1888

P. C. 8

l IOI

'•

vSt. Mary's too strong for USO defense, 34-7 Specia~r1e5u£ McDermott for a 50-yard ouchdown pass.

Jon Braff had 7 catches for 126 Murphy, who was sacked 5 times, was 5 for 15 for 80 yards, and Virgil Enriquez had 11 carries for Linebacker Bryan Day had 18 tackles, including 8 solo, to lead The Toreros play host to Menlo College next Saturday with a poss~- ble playoff berth at stake. Menlo IS ranked No. 4 in the West and USD 1s No. 6. Four teams will qualify the West region for 16-team Division III playoffs. the yards. 33 yards to lead USD. USD. from

USD (6-2-1). an NCAA Division III team, scored with 38 seconds leftin the first quarter on a 50-yard touchdown pass from freshman quarterback Brendan Murphy to SL Mary's added two touch- downs in the second half on a six-yard run by quarterback Tim Rosencranz and five-yard touch- down pass from Rosencranz to Bennie Taylor. Bauer kicked both St. Mary's had 374 yards total offense; USD was held to 142 yards. Rosencranz completed 14 of 29 extra points. Sam McDermott.

behind by 20 points i~e first quarter and las. to St. Marys, 34-7, Saturday in a 1onconference foot- ball game at M,raga, Calif. Alex Bauer tticked field goals of 25 and 42 yarls to give St. Mary's James Javer scored on a two- yard run ard Bobby Crame re- (7-2) a6-0le1d.

the huury 0£ coachJng eip r1 nc d pl ye s durtn his tenure on the Hilltop. "I t rt d th! p gram with a bunch of rodles," he aid. "Thi i th flrst ume I feel that at least we hav a le m •• S KS CONSISTENCY All th i xpert nc bould provide BrovelU with oth r plec th I w s mis Ing from the Don ' puzzle la t I t ncy "Last ason w very • WCAC,to Pa

MORAGA - The Uni.yersity__of San Diego, ranked first in scoring defense -among NCAA Division Ill schools, al- lowed St. Mary's 374 yards yesterday in a 34-7 loss. St. Mary's (7•2), a Division II team, moved out to a 20-0 lead. Alex Bauer made a 25-yard field goal, starting the scoring for the Gaels. Then he made a 42-yarder. James Javier scored on a 2-yard run. Then linebacker Bobby Crume in• tercepted a pass from Toreros quart- erback Brendan Murphy that deflect- ed off the hands of wide receiver Pat Hefler and ran it 8 yards for a touch- down. The Toreros (6-2-1) were able to score before the half, and closed to 20-7 when Murphy threw to Samm

turned a pass m- terception eight yards for another kicked the extra points and St. score. Bauer

The second half was no different. Gaels quarterback Tim Rosenkrantz, who was 14 of 29 for 183 yards and one interception, ran in from 6 yards. That made it 27-7, just after the start of the third quarter. USD coach Briln Fogarty said, ''We knew we wrr beat today and still, they rubbed out noses a little by throwing d p." Bennie Taylor to 1k a 5-yard pass from Rosenkrantz m for the la t score of th ~ame, late in the fourth, quarter.

SAN DIEGO COUNTY

Mary's, an .'lCAA Division Il team,

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

NO'I 9 Murphy, who fin ished 5 of 15 for 80 yards and two interceptions, said, "They got tougher as the game wore on." USD had 142 yards of total offense. Agencies discover USD law-student watchdogs can bite o tph Thesken d-- '1 511 Whal they do or don touche the lives of people in Sham to cov r PUC hearings, where SDG&E rat ncreas bu e Edu ton Wnter this tate Cntical dec1 re mad by th agencies w r routmely reviewed and usually approved. t LL B ·o of Umv~cl n D1eg law t • Th public has no 1 hats gomg on (a th m t ha told F llmeth that the PUC was heanng only one en eav the classroom each s m er and v Y u would ha, to be an expert mt e par cul r ar as 1d t of the utility company while the rights of the tur forth to ge~pract1cal first-hand exper1 w th board o three or ou n on o kno h t wer rarely addressed. He wanted to change the la b attendrng the meetmgs of state agenc n interest groups. Th re·s a bonus for the pubhc · exerC1Se. m the meetmgs, the students form an unofficJ.al watchdog group keeping tabs on agencies often ov neglected or free of public scrutiny lo one noted instance a second-year la student too on San Diego Gas Electric Co. at the Public Utilities C mm, - hcanngs a d won a significant VIcto H a typical of th 40 students who mtern year! m USD s Center for Publ'c Interest Law, which assigns th rr to cover on a regular basis the meetings of 25 J>"Jbhc-m rest age. c.ies and 60 Califorrua regulatory agencies '987 I I <1 1~88

JHl~n• P. c. B

"Th e agencie are very important, ev n though th pub- lic knows little about them, ' said cente director Robert Fellmeth, a formnr San iego assistant di trict attorney

.

,

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

,i

NO\J 8

1987

PTog.-photoby

on the HIiitop this season.

Jim Brovelll hope• to enjoy more vlctort

Jl/l~ri••

P. C. 8

far 1888

Ro race expect-.,.__ • WCAC, from Page Bl use a little seasoning, BrovelU d.

• The St. Mary's Gaels' bead coach Lynn Nance sald of the fifth place prediction, "That's pretty much where we are right now." Also, guard Sly Hunter (of Lowell High School) broke his ankle in a pickup basketball game and will be placed on med- ical redshlrt. • The Gonzaga Bulldogs hope experience makes up for heavy losses in the frontcourt. SAN DIEGO DECIMATED • The University of San Diego 24-6 and 13-1 in league play. Hardest to fill will be the high- tops of center Scott Thompson, last season's WCAC player of the year. To make matters worse, the only two seniors on this year's team - center Jim Pelton and swingman Marty Munn - have missed most of the preseason practices with injuries. • The University of Portland Pilots have a new head coach, former Portland Trailblazer Larry Steele. It's too bad Steele can't suit up and strengthen his team' weak backcourt. 8-TEAM PLAYOFF All ls not lost if your favorite team finishes in last place. All eight WCAC teams will play in the WCAC Port-Season Tourna- ment at Santa Clara's Toso pavil- ion. Last season, four teams competed in the tournament. WCAC commlbsioner Michael Gllleran admitted that the league ls still tinkering with post-season match-ups. "We don't know what the perfect format ls," he said. USF's Brovelll also suggested some changes for the tourna- ment. "It would be ideal If It was held t a neutral site," he said. "that makes ltfalr for everyone." A final word for Dick Vitale fans •Commissioner Gilleran aid he Is "99.9 per cent sure" that the championship game of the WCAC Tournament will be broadcast on ESPN, the all·s~rts cable television network. l_ S'S ;Torer Jost fo from shed ast year s team that

Sophomore guard Kevin Ellis, senior forward Pat Giusti and senior guard Keith Jackson round out the roster. Brovelll said a tough non- conference schedule should adequately prepare the Dons for league play. He added that the opener against Southwest Missouri State might be the Don's toughest game of the se on. AQUICKLOOK As for rest of the WCAC, the Bib teal quote, ''He who Is first shall be last, and he who ls last hall be first " might apply. Here's a look t each team in the order of their predicted finish: • The Loyola Marymount Llons finished in WCAC cellar last y r. Prognosticators have reserved the penthouse for them this se son. Back are Miki: Yoest and Mark Armstrong, the league' top scorer and re- bound n respectively last season. Guards Bo Kimble and Corey · Ines and forward Hank Gathe :... all former starters at Pacific JO Conference school .,... are ell ble after sitting out last year. MIDDLEBROOKS RETURNS • The Pcpperdlne Waves have four tarters returning, in- cluding senior forward Levy Middl brooks (of St. Ignatius), a 1hr year starter and an all· WCAC pick la t year. • 'I he San ta Clara Bronco won the WCAC Po ·t Sea on Touma m nt I t year and dvanced to the NCAA Tournament. Four Uni r and nine lettermen r tum from that te Ql• • the Univ rsity of San Fran cl co Dons hope CQJl I t nt pl y pr v nts a re o la t ea on' fourth pl ce lnlsh.

Play Writing-Local poet and l)lavwriQht

Hal a . six-week _..,......., on beg nning play wntmg lfom w.... H._ w ·t-· Bookstore 7-10 p.m. Tuesdavs at n . $4S &. Haven. 3341 Adams Ave. Cost ,s . To reg ster, call the boOkstore. -'lexand• will leart

STUDENTS LEARN TO MONITOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES Robert Fellmuth, director of USD's Center for Public Interest Law, instructs class

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,01 OJ (Cir. S 55,573) NO\J 8

.P'~-

Watchdogs Continued From B-1

ants. "At those meetings, I was usually the only one in the audience," she said. "The board got to know me and listened to what I had to say." J.l§D law students interviewed abouf1Tie center agreed that cover- ing the hearings has been helpful to their careers. "The advantage is that I'm getting actual experience at the meetings, rather than theory in the classroom," Karen Gleason Huss, said. "I came to USD law school be- cause of the center. I knew about it because I. used its resources when I was getting my master's in public administration at San Diego State University. "I decided I wanted to come here (USD) to combine my public adminis- tration degree with a law degree. The center was the perfect way to go." Fellmeth and his assistant, Julie D' Angelo, are proud of the reception the center's Journal is getting in both legal and legislative circles. "One of the biggest things for us is that the Journal is beginning to be cited in court decisions," Fellmeth said. "It also is being used in Sacra- mento among legislators and state officials. "We have about 1,000 subscribers, including lawmakers, law libraries, trade unions and lawyers."

different agencies in their second year at the center. They usually have one large one, such as the California Bar or the California Board of Medi- cal Quality Assurance, and two smaller agencies. They pick up agendas of the meet- ings in advance, so they are well- informed on the i$SUes. They get a modest travel budget from the cen- ter to attend meetings, usually for one day, in Sacramento and other California cities. The students are responsible for writing quarterly reports on their particular agencies, and these are published in the center's California Regulatory Law Reporter. Kate Turnbull, a third-year stu- dent, and her classmate, Jenni Baines, are helping the center pre- pare a class-action suit against the Califorma Board of Medical Quality Assurance, charging it violated the civil rights of foreign medical stu- dents. Turnbull, who attended the board meetings last year, contends the board is discriminating against such students by delaying the issuance of their licenses, and at the same time favoring graduates of American medical schools. The board has de- nied this claim. To illustrate the variety of experi- ences, Turnbull said she also moni- tored hearings of a little-known board that licenses physicians' assist-

UCAN regularly battled SDG&E's rate-increase requests in the PUC hearings and succeeded in saving San Diego ratepayers about $150 million in potential rate hikes, Shames esti- mated. He noted that the U.S. Supreme Court in 1986 ruled that the inserts were a violation of the utility compa- ny's First Amendment rights and were discontinued. But UCAN's membership has grown to 75,000 and continues to be a force in consumer advocacy, Shames said. Fellmeth said he and the law stu- dents found a number of the agencies they monitored should be eliminated because they are either ineffective or unnecessary. "Of the 85 agencies we monitor, I once made a list of 15 which should be dissolved," he said. "But it is vir- tually impossible to dissolve them, because many are funded by the in- dustries they oversee and they pro- tect their own. "We did succeed in abolishing one, the Board of Fabric Care, which li- censes dry cleaners. In 10 years the agency had disciplined only one per• son." Students at the center take Fellmeth's course, "California Ad- ministrative Laws and Practices," in conjunction with their agency assign- ments. Most students are assigned three

19S7

Jl/kri ' 1

P. C. B

I 888

far

1/E:_lc~

?ee~:ture on ethics in today's sor.,etv wtll be conducted by Lee Shapiro, a for tnal attorney and judge, at 8 p.m. Th~rsd•v in Salomon Lecture f'•!W lo er~ t II tf liai::1 Diego. The twerhour talk, followed by a reception, is sponsored by the SD law School Student Speakers Bu u.

Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Blade Tribune (Ci r. D. 29,089) (Ci r. S. 30,498) NOV 9

1987

Jl[/ai', P. C. B

£sr. 1888

,___. USO homeg:Jming held All Un~e!:iitj'. of San Diego alumni are mvited to etum rn campus for a gala homecoming weekend, Nov. 13-15. Hom~coming activities include scramble golf tournament, three- mile and five-mile fun runs, homecoming football game, din- ner-dance and c.hampagne brunch. For further information, call Joan Murry at 260-4819.

Made with FlippingBook Annual report