News Scrapbook 1986-1988
San Diego, CA (San DI go Co.) Dally Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)
JAN 2 8 1987
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SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT WEDNEso,;y, JA""NUARY 28, 1987 3A "LawyerReferral Services Plead Placement Case To Yellow Pages I I I 7 P ific Bell
orUSD,It's ay-BackTime, 82-48 Torero?'Recalling Last Season's Key Loss, Rout Lions efc;i{RfELLO SA DIEGO-Umversity of Sm
USD Law School will also talk about "The Constitution and Foreign Policy.'' Call 231-0111 for more information. tev~n Brian Davis has moved his law practice to 2356 Monroe St., Ste. 201. • • • Cal Western and the ABA are co-sponsoring a conference on "Mexico and the United States: Strengthening the Relationship." It's on Feb. 6 and 7. Call 239-0391 for more information. • • USD Law School's Graduate Tax Program is sponsoring two mini courses for lawyers next month. The tax litigation process will be taught by Senior Judge Theodore Tannenwald Jr. of the U.S. Tax Court from 4:30 p.m. to 6:20 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Feb. 3- 26. Robert Hellawell, visiting law professor from Columbia Universi- ty, will teach selected problems in transnational transactions from noon lo 1:50 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays, Feb. 5-23. • • • A reminder: The Lawyers Club 1s sponsoring its career enhance- ment seminru; from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. this Saturday at Cal Western. Call Susan Mercure at 233-1511 for more information. • • • Beginni Feb. 2 the El Cajon Municipal Court, including th /Continunc on Page ~J ' La~~efs- (Continued from Page SA) Ramona branch, ~ill be open for business between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily. There will be a drop box be- tween 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. for civil pleadings and bail forfeitures. Any documents received by 5 p.m. will be date stamped and considered filed that same day. • • • /
themselve a l11wy,,r rl'ft•rral . •r• v1c, in ord!'r to get po~1llonmg as f r forward m th uttorney ction po Rible. Bar oc111tion and Bar-cer- tified LR s throughout California and the nation d luged Pacific Bell with compl mt - a targ ted "m il campaign," said ifer . "It would have had d v tating impact on the referral rvice," aid )Mt yenr's county Bar presi- dent John eitman 0th ra agr · d. "We felt there would be a substantial and rious impact if placed to the rear," added Cheryl Ru 1er, lust year's Bar tr a urer. Th r were extend d negotia- tion tw nth t te B r, coun- ty Bar oc1ation nd Pacific Bell Directory. The prubh:m was th t me counties were too far into produc- tion of the 1 87 books that Pacific B II couldn't change. For instance, th S cramen,o Bar's LR will ap- p r in the b 1ck of the ction, a move that cculd h ve enormous imp ct on n organization which g t8 89 percent of its referrals from the Yellow Pages. Carol Pro er, the Sacramento B11r'e executi~e assist nt, said it's too early to tell the impact but " we are k ping tr ck of it. ' In San Diego, Pacific Bell wasn't 80 far into production that "th re was nothing they could do," said itman So the Bar nd SDTLA split a $2,000 charge from Pacific B IL The d cieiot to pay, according to er, 1ade by the Bar's ex- utive commi e. "Who wanted to take a chance?" h said. "It was something that w not do..,. .with a great deal of griping; $2,000 emed small to pay to avoid the ri k. It was mo t practical and ex- p dient." Th $2,000 was to defray produc- tion costs in mukrng changes in the metropolitan Yellow Pages, said Seifers. She said that in the San Diego metropolitan Yellow Page~ due out in March Bar-c• rtifled and private LRSs will remain in front of the at- torney section under the heading Attorney Referral Services. While the company's other Yellow Pages in San Diego will also have all LRSs in the front, the°y'll be separately designated with the Bar-certified ones going first. This will be the company's statewide policy beginning in 1988, Seifers said. In San Diego County other Bar- certified LRSs include those of the Foothills Bar Association, the South Bay Bar As. ociation, the North County Bar Association and Legal Aid. Just how "devastating" might a
policy of going to the rear of the S<.-ction be? Loretta Roche, executive direc- tor of the San Gabriel Valley LRS, explarned that its ad was m the back of the attorney sect10n of General Telephone's Pomona di- rectory which came out last sum- mer and the group lost "80 to 85 perc nt of its referrals." "If Yellow Pages were to shut down completely, we might as well clo e our doors," she said. "We re- ally depend on the Yellow Pages." The issue doe~n•t appear lo be going away any time soon. In San Francisco, Drucilla Ramey, the executive director and general counsel of the Bar Assoc1a tion, said that her organization is even cons1dermg fihng a complaint with the State Bar about non Bar- certified LRSs. Adds Raisch: "It's getting to be a national problem" as other direc- tories lean towards putting LRSs at the back of the line. * • • On the Move: Susan Steven- son, a USD Law School graduate, has joir!lid Jennings, Eng:;trand & Henrikson a an as8ociate. Chris a Corday is with Dorazio, Barnhurst & Bonas She also went to USD Law School. Michael Kozak, principal depu- ty legal adviser at the Stat De- partment, will examine the role of law in international relation at a World Affairs Council-sponsored talk tomorrow night at USD Pro- fessor Miamon Schwarz childof
eventually rost them a postseason playoff berth. The memories came flooding back Thursday, and this lime Loy- ola (2-4. 10-9) ccumbed to a wave of good USO shooting, r<'- bounding and fortune. The 34- point Joss was Loyola's worst Smee Paul Westhead took over as coach two years ago. The 48 points the Lions scored was their lowest since December. 1981. Loyola t:ame mto Thursday mght game with a conference-lead111" av rage of 89.9 points a game.
"All week we've been recalling what happened to us last year," said USD's 7-foot center, Scott Thomp~on. What happened. in part, was that Loyola's mailer front line out- played Thompson & Co. inside and wound up winning on a last-second Jump shot by Keith Smith. Smith. however, now plays for the Milwaukee Bucks of the Na- tional Basketball Assn. And with - out him, Loyola had no 1 7iutside Please see us[_ Pare 6
Qiuo's-basketball team remem- bered how Loyola Marymount ru- ined their season a year ago and they were determmed Thursday mght not to let It happen agam. The Toreros, We,t Coast Athlet- ic Conference leaders, put tog ther an impressive performanre with m their 82-48 defeat of Loyola in front of 2,800 in the USD Sports Center. Last sea on, Loyola beat USO m San Diego. sending the Toreros or. a three-game losing streak that
Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573)
Jt\N 30 1987
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E I 888 0 percent of re from the 6 Part II/ Friday, January JO, 1987 J us ~5" c;- Continued from Page 1 shooting to speak of Thursday thought of as the kmd of coach who says, "No, no, no. no (shot goes in] ... mceshot." "Hank Egan 1s the least under- stood guy in town," Egan said. "Never once have I told one of my players that he to k a bad shot." Said Manor, "A$ long as the shot comes within the framework of our offense, he doesn't mmd." With that in mind, Manor fin- ished with 13 points in the first half and USD led, 41-22 In the second half, the Torero continued to do as they plea rd, although they were getting 1rn;,de for their shots Nils Madden, who led USD With 17 points, made 7 of 11 shots from in close. And Thomp- son, the player w o may have been burdened_ the most by Loyola's dommatmg play last season, was determined to make his presence known. On one play early in the second half, Thompson (13 points, 8 re- bounds) missed from in close and tapped the ball back up five times before finally scoring. "It was as if I was playing volleyball," he said. The next time down, Thompson spiked down a dunk and USD had a 51-30 lead with 16,38 remaining. F_our minutes later, Egan went to his bench to rest his starters for the arrival of defending conference champion Pepperdme Saturday night. mght. The Lions shot just 31 % from the floor, hitting 18 of 58 shots. So the Toreros (6-1, 15-4). packed their zone defense in and dominated the boards, 44-32. At the heart of USD's defensive attack was Loya a forward Mike Yoest, who had scored 40 points in two games against the Toreros last season. Yoest had 14 Thursday but he,:,vas conta!ned for the most part. They still remembered last year...no ques tion about it," Yoest said. Their whole team was more motivated than I've een them They played a tremendous gam~ defensively." USD wasn't bad on offense ei- ther. ' Mark Manor, USD's best outside shooter, _hit three three-point shots in the first haif. including two in the opemng three minutes, to help the Toreros take a 9-2 lead. USD's lead was ne'li er Jess than five points the rest of the way. Manor started this season slowly, missing eight of his first nine shots from three-point range. At the time, he was always looking over his shoulder, wondering if Coach Hank_ Egan was upset with his wild shooting. Egan always has been 89 the • Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S. 1,346,343) JAN 30 1987 B, r-certified nd private - in the front of the attorney ect1on ever since ottorneys w re permitted to dverti But la t year the company decid d to ch,1nge, pu. hing all I.R s to the back of the section. The r a n? According to Carol R.-ifer , m n ger of operations and s lo upport for Pacific Bell Direc- tory in S n Francisco. the company " s getting "numerous com- plaints" regarding "bogus lawyer referral service ." Seifer described how a group of attorneys - or even a single attor- m•y - could get together and call .Jl/leri 's P C. B. Esr. 1888 Westhead Suspends Two layers; Loyola ~?~~Y.,~~t~!:: ~- ward Mark Armstrong and reserve center Darryl Carter, lost to the Uniy_ersity of San Diego, 82-48, Thursday night in a West Coast All1teti~n. game ~t San Diego. Loyola Coach Paul Westhead suspended Armstrong, the WCAA's leading rebounder with an average of 10.1. and Carter for one game after they missed curfew Wednesday night. Loyola came into the game averaging 89.9 points, sixth be~t in the nation. The Lions' total of 48 is their lowest since December, 1981. Mike Yoest. the WCAA's leading scorer with an average of 21.9 going into the game, was held to 14 points. Layo a's leading_ scorer was sophomore guard Enoch Simmons, who had 17 points. . The loss dropped Loyola to 10-9 overall and 2-4 in the WCAA. San Diego is nowl5-4 and 6-1. Forward Nils Madden scored 17 points to lead San Diego. Mark Manor added 15 and Scott Thompson had 13 points and a game-high 8 rebounds. San Diego pulled away to a 41-22 halftime lead by outscoring the Lions, 24-9, over the last 14 minutes of the half. A 15-0 spurt early in the second half gave San Diego a 62-30 lead. Loyola's next game is Saturday at St. Mary's. El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Calllornlan (Cir. D. 100,271) Fallbrook , CA (San Diego Co.) Fa llbrook Enterprise (Ci r. W. 6,173) JAN 30 1987 JJl.N 29 1987 .Jltleri 's P c. B 1 xxi. USIU wins meeting 01 county also-rans 1 ,, ._JUI,. ·. P. C B 1888 I 1 University is more concerned with hit lists than rating lists. The Gulls have been on the bottom of the ladder for so long, they might not remember the view from the top. But they are finding some of the people they passed on the way down are the same faces they are knocking off on their way back up. "The little kid on the block theory don't come into play," said USIU forward Charles Redding Thursday after the 0 USlU 3B By Dennis Wynne of the Daily Californian One of the great pastimes of San Diego-area basketball fans is rating the local college teams. The Uniyersity of.£an Diego is, of course, tops. After that you'll get some disagreement as to who comes next. Some will argue there is no second or third and that the remainder of the teams shouldn't even be on the same list as the Toreros. United States International •
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