News Scrapbook 1986-1988

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

1 1987

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

MAR 5 1987

Three-pointers like layups for USD's 'Long Rangers'

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* * * Author/activist Abbie Hoffman will speak Monday night aLUSD's Camino Theater. Tickets are $ 2 for students; $4 otherwise. . -,055 • •• .-<-7

season and recently won the unoffi- cial USD long-ball championships with a shot from beyond the out-of- bounds line. Looking back over the season, Manor could remember only one team that outshot the Toreros from three-point range. "Gonzaga hurt us up there," said Manor of USD's last loss, 15 games ago. "We've really had great luck from three-point range. "But we'd rather get the ball inside to Scott." "I like seeing three-point baskets," Thompson said. "I think it's exciting. And when we start getting some three-pointers down, the defenses have to change." At intermission last night, Thomp- son had seven points and two re- bounds, plus three assists. He fin- ished with a game-high 24 points. "You can't concentrate on taking three-point shots," Egan said. "I think the harder you try to make them, the harder it is to get them to fall. That's not exactly true. "Before practices, we try a lot of three-pointers," Munn said. "We have little games. We just fire away." Last night all that unofficial prac- tice paid off. "It's fun to watch a three-pointer fall," Manor said. "It's a thrill for everyone in the house." Except for the opposition, of course.

intermission.

By Bill Center Starr Writer

During the nine-minute stretch of the second half when the Toreros ex- panded a three-point lead (51-48) into a 20-point rout (79-59) Manor and Munn hit five straight three-pointers between them. "The idea is to take the three- pointer off the offense if you don't have to worry about taking it," Egan said. "We try not to make it a three- point play, and it's helped us." At USD, that's simple logic. u1 understand it," said Means, a wing guard who is shootir.g 49.3 per- cent from beyond the three-point line and only 33 percent from inside it. "With the horses we have inside, our three-pointers are high-percent- age shots. When other teams pack the middle, we're shooting from 20 feet with no hands in our faces. "If the other team doesn't stack it inside on Scott and Nils Madden, we'll score two points 75 percent of the time. If they choose to take our inside game away, we'll score three points about 50 percent of the time. "I think it figures out to be the same thing." Means also sees nothing unusual in his own personal percentages. "The farther I get from the giants, the more relaxed I am," said the 6-1 sophomore. But the most relaxed bomber in the Toreros' lineup is Manor. The senior wing forward has hit on 54.7 percent of his three-point shots this

Mark Manor. Danny Means. Marty Munn. Call them the Long Rangers. The three bombers last night con- nected on a season-high 11 three- point baskets for the Unjyersity_ of San Diego in the Toreros' 99-84 victo- ry over Loyola Marymount Universi- ty in a West Coast Athletic Confer- ence Tournament opener. But what has become an import- ant part of the USO attack this 24-4 season is no part o the Toreros' game plan at all. "We don't take three-pointers to be shooting three-pointers," said Manor, the WCAC's first three-point king. "It's strictly a shot of opportunity. If the defenses are packing the inside against Scott (Thompson) and we can take a three-pointer off our pattern offense, e can take it. "But if we started shooting three- pointers to be shooting three-pointers ... I don't think Coach (Hank) Egan would stand for it." Last night, however, the Lions played right into the Long Rangers' hot hands. For more than half the game they packed the middle so tightly that the 7-foot Thompson had little room to maneuver. So Manor, Means and Munn let fly from beyond the 193/4-foot mark. Manor was 6-for-7 from three-point range. Means was 3-for-6, all in the first half. And Munn was 2-for-4 after

New York , NY (New York Co.) Wall Street Journal (Western Edition) (Cir. 5xW. 426,863)

MJIR 6 - 1987

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t.>- Some 20 federal -court nom~ are pendmg and 50 more vacancies must be filled. New_ Senate Judiciary Chairman Bi· den says his committee's checks of nomin- ees will take enough time to provide "a rea· saned op1mon on their qualifications." Four members led by Vermont Sen. Leahy will condu~t the inquiries. Republicans accuse the Democrats of tlo/lTig to derail conservative nominees. An early showdown may be over an appe;i.ls· cou~ nommat10n of Bernard Siegan, a Uni· ve_mty of San Diego Jawprofessor. Liberal cntics say his writings don't make clear that he agrees with the Supreme Court's 1954 school-desegregation rulillg. He tells senators he supports it. Last week's replacement of the White House counsel may slow administration review of potential court apvuintees_

Eric Musselman (12) takes charge on Chris Nikchevich.

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

Torer.. ' Thompson named WCAC Player of the Year By KirK Kenney coach Hank Egan. . Tribune Sportswriter _"Scott Tho~pson do~ a.. lot of S AN FRANCISCO - USO cen- things fo~ us, Egan said. People t S tt Th n--t be fi keep talkmg about how much more er co ompso la~ e he could contribute, but his presence selected West Coast Ath1 ell_c contributes an awful lot /besides Conference Player of th e Year, ;! points and rebounds). The college was announced here tod~y as t game is iffer~nt tnan the pros. In confere~ce prepared for its tourna- college you can take somebody out of ment this weekend at USF. , the game, but you have to pay the In earnmg the conferences top price. He's forced people to pay the basketball honor, Thompson m~de price." the .all-WCAC team for th~ th1rd Thompson was joined on the all- stra1ght_ re_ar. The 7-foot semor has conference team by USD senior for- ~n cnll~ized by, some for_ not hav-• ward Nils Madden. In addition, Egan mg more impre~ive sta ti sti cs. How- was selected WCAC Coach of the e_ver, Thompsons mere pres~nce a nd Year after guiding the Toreros to a flt m the US(? scheme of th10 gs has 13-1 conference record. Egan shared

Spring Valley, CA (San Diego Co.) Spring Valley Bulletin (Cir. W. 2,708) MAR 5 1987

MAR 6 198/

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Jl/lrn'• P. c. B , / •"s.v. Woman Repr~se~tS W~stern in BijUey Moot _Court, Contest _ Spring Valley4Jtt~o- hr. 1 s8a • . •

~st year's*N~•b: prize winner m economics,,_..,, Buchanan, will give a m'e ecture on the economy and his approach to eco- nomics March 25, 8 p.m., a~ While free, tickets nevertheless are required from the USD office of continuing education.

cit/ding the University ?.f San Francisco School_ of La.W, p.erdine Un1ve!;sltY Schoo. 0 1,aw University of San ' Diego, , r~

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

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Baile; National Moot Court ccm'petition this month al Na- National University School of Law Dean Howard Oren· stein ·has an11ounced thaC 17 law schoo'ls rrom thr?l'ghont the country have qualtf1ed for . Tile moot court competition be'gan thfs·fall with the selcc- tion of teams at Jaw tkhools throughout the country and cl ,Jm1·nates in a three-day sc• · . ries of oral arguments. , tional University. the cornpetiUon.

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been responsible for much of the Toreros' success, according to USD

Jished the contest tn 19~ywitll the sponsorship oI, Ba,il~ · r;s goal is to foste_r _a)tfgh ~~:; of advocacy slolis ,in, Af1:~ull t1:1:ou.gi\_f1 .a . Y strµctured ~:1-tche_s 5 , 1~ 1 \ll tm~ the compet1t1ve _r.~,a):1t1es of quality law practice. , . . , . The competiUOn, wh:och. , 15 pt?rmanently hosted by Na- tional University, .is rree"7in.ct ,.:_:.::::_:::.;;.;c..- · · • ' ' t th opet\ to the p_ul:>lic. Contac e Natiqn;al Univcr.sity School o/ Jaw students

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500)

Please see WCAC,

5 1987

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*WCAf:--+---r----------- continued From E-1 dine junior forward Levy Middle- the honor with Pepperdine coach Jim brooks, USF sophomore forward Barrick last season. Mark McCathrion, St. Mary's sopho- Selections were made based on more forward Robert Haugen and ting done by the conference's eight Portland freshman guard Greg An- oaches. Joining Thompson and Mad- thony, who also was selected the non th 11-WCAC team were Pep- WCAC Freshman of the Year. perdme senior guard Enc White, Thompson was chosen conference Loyola Marymount junior forward Player of the Week twice this season Mike Yoest, Gonzaga sophomore in addition to being named Player of swi~gman Jim ~cPhee, Gonzaga the Month for February. The 7-foot semor center Dale Haaland, Pepper- senior averaged 15.8 points and 7.5 rebounds to lead the Toreros to their second WCAC regular-season cham- pionship in four years. Madden, USD's 6-8 forward, aver- aged 11.4 points and 6.5 rebounds this season. He led the conference with a 59.8 field-goal percentage. The Toreros are 24-4 under Egan this season and amid a 14-game win- ning streak entering tomorrow's WCAC semifinals game against Pep- perdine.

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Institute lor Christian Ministries will offer the following courses next month: Sin and Reconciliation March 9, 16, 23, 30 and April 6 from 6:3Q,.to 9:15 p.m. in Serra Hall, room 204, $30 fee; Theology of the Worshipping Community March 11, 18, 25 and April 1, 8 from 6:30 to 9:15 p.m. in Serra Hall, room 204, $30 fee; New Directions in Western Spirituality March 14 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., $15 fee. For further information, call 260-4784. ' "Theology of the Worshipping Community," an Institute for Chr~stian Ministries course, will begin March 11. Cost i $35. Call 260-4784 for details. leadership Skills for Elfectlve Groups/Meetings, an Institute for Christian Ministries course, March 28 from 9 a.m. to 4·30 p.m. For registration information, call 260-4784.

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months of legal research and ~ write a 40-page appellate court brief which will pe scored by, panels of judges comprised of active attorneys and jurists. Before each round of com- pel ition all the students re- ceive · valuab1c coaching from F. Lee Bailey, \VhO driJ:ws on his many years as a trial ':t: torney. _ . Bailey, ' Lne autho, of several books includii:ig "The Defe.nse :Never Rests/' is riatfonally known for his role in the trials o,f Dr. Sam Sheppard, Capt. Ernest Medina, Patty HearS t and many others , T his yeai' Chapman and her team will argue the legal im· plications of requir ing g,uvern· mental employees, 1ice,1sees and contractors' employees_ to submit to urinalysis tcstmg for drugs, . .Among t~e 17 schools qualt· fying 'for the competition i:rc George Washington umvers1ty National LaW Center, NeW York U"niversfty, vmano,va University Law SchOol an:d s t · John's Univifrsit_y Sch0·01 of Lttw. , , . Several tcains from Cal1for- ' nia wil\ also be coinp"eting ~ -

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Rancho Bernardo, CA (San Diego co.) Bernardo News (Cir. W.) MP.R 5

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the Economic Status of~ will be presented on Thursday, March 12 at 7:30 pm at the Manchester Con- ference Center on the USD campus, Forum leaders will be Drs. Harriet Baber and Denise Dimon. eol2 /

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