News Scrapbook 1988

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) FE 1 '.'.\ 1988 l' '• 181 P. C. B

San Di go, CA (Snn D,eg Co .) an Diego Union (Cir . D. 217 ,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) f B 12 , 88

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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S. 1,346,343)

Ice-cold Pi ots ;)f'aII to Toreros

USDWill ~ce Gonzaga at Home Tonight SA~db-The U,111ver 1ly of S,m P1rgo_ basketball team, wniM! 1s out of la t place in the West January. Coast Athletic Conference, will r--~-----'== ==::::::::::-,1_ play host Lo Gonzaga at 7:30 tomght two games other sohd effort U D h n't won in a row since early

FEB 3 1988

Briefly

In the IJSD Sports Center. The Torero• (10-12, 2-7) es- caped the cellar Thursday mght with a 61-41 victory over Portland, which shot Just 9 for 55 from the field Coach Hank Egan said he was more interested in the play of his team, which he said was the best he has seen durmg the conference ~eason. Although USD could not be ex- pected to hold Gonzaga down the way it did Portland. Egan hopes his team can come through with an-

Montana fly fishing guide John Seam n will speak at the San Gabriel Valley Flyf1RhP.r ' ~'eb. 24 general membership meeting al 7,30 at the Whittier Narrow• Visitors c~nter in El Monte, . , . Show- time, Fred Hall's 1-'ishlng and Boat Sh w will run from March 2-6 at the Long Beach Convention Center. . . . El Nino, a wcath• er phenomenon associated with water temperature and ocean currents, will b the sub;cct of a talk by oceanographers Dr. Tim Barnell of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Dr. Forrest Miller of the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Com- m1s•ton, ~'eb. 17 at 7 p,m. at thc_:aU.!!n·~-'"". of San QL~o.... The Long Beac C-1 t- ing Cluowlll host the 1988 Southwestern Casting Tournament at the LBCC club- house Feb. 27-28 at 9 a.m. at Recr~at1on Park In Long Beach.

By Mark Zeigler Starr Writrr S1xteen-pomt-four percenL

and muttermg "incredible" every few words. 'When you're 2-of-25 at halftime, t's more that ju t being horrendQus and poor shooting. It's also menta1i- ty," he said. ''We start off the game with our center taking the two long- est sho of his career. Don't ask me why - I do ' know. And our point guard, who' played well the last few games, all of a udden decides to cast off. Why? I don't know. "The only thing I can tell you is that it's contagious. Onre it got tart- e1, we could not get it turned off by substitutions, by time uts or by shouting. It was 2 full-blown ep·dem- tc. It was incredible - I've already "ed that word about 30 times.' O\ he knows how the Toreros felt when these two teams met m Portland last Saturday. Egan's team opened what would be a 68-64 loss th 14 straight m es. Said Egan "If you play hard and run your offense and challenge the other team defen I el , which I thought they did, th not a whole lot you can do." The Toreros didn't shoot well themselves, makm 22 of 2 shots 35.5 percent). But they were tough on the boards and committed 13 turn- overs to Portland's 18.

Although mo t were amazed at Ir--~~--~----~--. Portland's poor shooting, USO

That's what the Portland m n's basketball team shot from the field last night against th Umv f San Die o. e Pilots took 55 hots and made nine. At various junctures, they were O-of-5, 1-of-21, and 2-of-37. Their half- time mark of 080 (2-of-25) set a West Coast Athletic Conference record for worst hooting percentage m a half. Their fmal percentage (.1636) missed the smgle-gam record (8-of-4 by St. fary's in 1955) by 0003. So 1t came as no surprise to the 570 fans scattered throughout the USD ports C nter that their Toreros won, 61-41. "It's absolutely incred1b e," said Pilot.. coach Larry teele, whose team enter d the game hooting a respect hie 45 percent. "I'm tickled to death only lost by 20." Go-figure d partment The Pilots made 21 of 26 fr e throws, including their first 18 stra1 ht SD 10-12, 2-7) entered the game tied for la t m th eight-team WCAC; now Portland (5-17, 1-8) owns all shares of that distinction. The Toreros moved into a tie for sixth (in the eight-team league) with Gon1.aga (11-11, 2-7). A victory here tomorrow night against the Bulldogs possibly could propel the WCAC defending regular-season champions into fifth. "I think it's our be t effort since we've hit conference (play)," USD coach Hank Egan said. "There are no X's and O' · that can replace effort. If you don't have that, there's no way you can cfo anythmg. ' On the other side of SD's Sports Center, Steele was baking his head • ---- -

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

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DBeats Point Loma Nazarene, 6-4 c1hifct 'l~ went 3 for 5 and \ 'in, and Larry Johns'on (0-2) took Da e Rolls had 2 RBIs as the the loss.

Ugversity of San Diego beat Point Lona Nazarene, ~4. in a noncon- fe nee baseball game at mm T rsday , .,),am, who 1s 7 for 10 over the alt two game , had a smgle, dQlbl a1 d trip! and scored a run . at F1 1..s1mon (1-0) earned the

Mark Trafton, Parris Sonanello and Steve Skamnes were 2 for 4 for USO (2-3), which has won two consecutive games. Designated hitter Scott Freder- icks had two RBIs for Point Loma Nazarene (0-3).

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) FEB 12 1988

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) FEB 1 19

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USD Business Update Seminars will be offered by USD's School of Business Administration Feb. 19, March 4, 11, April 8, 15, 22 and 29. Continental breakfast is served at 7:30 a.m.; talks begin at 8 a.m. Cost 1s $15 per session. Miriam Rothman will speak on "You're Fired" Fel>. 19. Darlene Pienta will address "The One- Minute Manager: AQuestion of Time or Timing?" For further information, call Kathie Hare 260-4585. '

/ "Goodall named to USD Board ofTrustee!j~ ALCALA PARK - J~on Wallace Goodall, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Foodmaker, Inc., has been elected to the University ofSan Diego Board of Trustees. A native San Diegan, Goodall has been with Foodmaker for 25 years. He joins 35 other business and community leaders on the USD board chaired by Bishop Leo T. Maher. Goodal is a founder of Fairbanks Ranch Country Club.

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LOS >-\ngetes CA (Los Angele; Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573)

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir . S 55,5731 f

San Francisco, CA (San Francisco Co.) Chronicle (Cir. D. 630,954) (Cir. Sat. 483,291)

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h pman Coll ge te mmates :Jes Walker and Ohv1er Amer- hnck will meet for the t tie in the No 1-2 singles dtv on today as mgle fmals and s David Jemb1th of Pcpp rdme Rick a- mv r 1ty of San 1 go meets Chico Bonner of Cal of U he on of th

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' anford, Cal Win in Last Seconds ~~65 Stanford and Cal both won Pac-10 Cal trailed with 23 seconds left in the games on the road in the final seconds last WEST COLLEGE BASKETBALL overtime, 82-78, but Smith and Hartmut Ort- night, but the Bears needed overtime and mann each sank two foul hots to tie the the Cardinal won ·ugly.' score with 14 seconds left. Smith grabbed In Pullman, Wash., Howard Wright's gu ," tanford Coach Mike Montgomery WSU <10-10, 5-6) came from behind in the subsequent inbounds pass from Mark , layin with 31 seconds left gave Stanford a said. ·We re.allly struggled out there - we the closing minutes to take a 5049 lead with West and fed Beeuwsaert. 51-50 w mover Washington State. The Cou- counted 19 possessions where we didn't get 50 seconds left. But Wright, wh.o led scorers d any points in the first half."' with 20 points and rebounders with 11, "It was a great come-from behind win," gars had a chance to win it, but John Ho - drove through the middle of WSU's defense Cal Coach Lou Campanelli said. "The kids ges' 15-foot jumper with three seconds left Stanford. in second p'lace in the Pac-10, to score the go-ahead basket. didn't get their head down. The.r kept in it." missed the mark. The lead changed hands se\'en times m improved to 16-7 and 8-4. and won for the first time in Pullman in 13 years. Col Beots Huskies

COLLEGES

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

BASEBALL Nonconforonco

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fllf,tt ~ P. C 8 IR/18 Legal lunacy wo ld make ork wince ') BERKELEY A n bony Kennedy, the third•time's-a- charm nominee of the Reagan ad- min tration, is safely tucked in at th Supreme Court. But now the battle over th future of the nation' judiciary is shifting on San Diego's Berna...._..i.u.:~i....n ho will come before the nate Jud1c1ary Committe at the end of F bruary To hi b ckers, iegan (a law pro- f or at t U · it of San Die o) repre- sent judicial conservatism at its mest· He 1 Ed M e without Wedt h To h cntics, though, S1egan' reading of the Constitution B DAVID KIRP I I to th federal appeals court The fight currently ceote

mg more Otten man tney-re wmmng. m sev- eral locales, affirmative action plans have been struck down. Earlier in the Reagan administration, wlien the Republicans controlled the Senate, he president's judicial nominees generally sailed throug But the defeat of Justice Bork and the weakening of the preSident's authori- ty generally has changed the equation. Now the Democratic-controlled Senate is looking much more closely at would-be judges. Bernard Siegan makes an inviting target for the senators. In his numerous books and articles - most recently "The Supreme Court's Constitution," published just last year - he has situateJ himself on the far- thest right-wing reaches of the law. The professor maintains that the 14th Amendment "did not apply to suffrage, ju- ries or schools." Translated, that means there's no plain constitutional right to school desegregation or an unbiased jury In preliminary Senate hearings last De- cember, Siegao contended that his personal beliefs are irrelevant to his role as judge. Appeals court judges have "no discretion whatever," he argued. That's plain wrong. If the law was as cut-and-dried as S1egan disingenuously suggests, no dispute would ever reach the appeals court: Knowmg the law, the parties would settle, rather than wasting time and dollars to learn vho's right. In Siegan's legal world, a world with- out discretion, there would be no need for judges. Clerks could fill in the blanks quite nicely. During some of the less-elevated moments in the Bork hearings there wa reason for concern that the Senate wa going to adopt its own liberal ideological litmus test for judges. But the recent unanimous confirma- tion of conservative Republican Anthony Kennedy should put those fears to rest. Unless the constitutional obligation to "advise and consent" means "roll over and play dead," senators do have a role in con- firming judges: They can fairly insis h a prospective jurist be in the main-.!llll'" • ,of the American legal tradition. Th Professor Slegan out in the cold.

Ryan Drew. who prepped at Blanchet High School in Seattle, scored 27 points for Cal. "Drew had a dream night here at home, and with five players in double figures, it See Page D4e,...

the second half: m the first half. Stanford w enl without scoring for nine minutes after taking a 7-0 lead. "That's known as winning ugly, I

Cougars guard David Sanders was held to just seven points. Sanders had 32 in last month's game at Maples Pavilion. Keith Smith stole an inbounds pass and fed Matt Beeuwsaert for the winning ba ket with eight seconds left in overtime as Cal nipped Washington,84-82,inSeattle. STANFORD WINS 'UGLY'; CAL NEEDS OT From Page D1 w-as llw finest l'ffort of the year," <'ampanPlll said. Tht• Bears impro\etl to 7-13 and ~- \\ a•l11ngton dropped to 6-14 and :HI. 'Cats Win Big !-itP1 e Kerr set a Pal 10 rareer tlw \ggll' s !l5~i. 10-21. The Gauchos, which have h1 aten l LV t\\ ice this season. dropped to 8-4 and 16-5. In Sto!'kton. Guard Virgil Har- ris :cored 25 points to lead , ew :\lc,irn State to a 84-75 O\ ertime win ll\ er Pari!ic. The Tigers (5-16, Q.111 lost their 14th straight game, while i\ew Mexico improved to 14- 11 and fi-!i. In Fre~no ,.lt•rYis Cole s<.:ared :l0 Sl't·ond tPchni<-al foul and ejPrlt'd from the <·on test. Whl•n Harrington refused to l<'a\e the court, the gamr v.a terminated by the officials. 6lsewhere Marty Munn 16 points and eight

rebounds to lead San Diego over \·isiting Portland, 61-4T;°ina WQC game The Pilots 1

n·rnnl for :1-point shouting and ,\n- thon~ Cook ~("ort•d 2:1 points as thinl-rankPd \rizona drubbed Orc- go11.8~-5,, in TUl"S0n ·1 hl' Du!'ks tlU-111, 5-m ta ec.l rd- all\ l'l~ clo~e for the first 'l.7 mi nut PS and pulled to within 55-46 with l'l.:59 ll'ft III th(' ganw. Eut the Wildcats 12'1. 2. 11 1l prol'eded to outsc:or Or gon, 'l.114 to put the l!ilinl' away. Kerr made five of sev1•n 3- pointers, and his serond of thl' night hrokP th<' league mark of fi!I, set by Heggil :\liller of l:CLA Ju other Pae-10 artiun, Trevor Wibon scorPd 'l.'l. points and lJ( LA pullt'

point• to !Pad Frc•,no Stall' 17-i:J, 4-iJ t11 a &l-7:i 11 in 01 er tong Beach Stall' (1:1-B, i !j) \\ ith fi\ P SL'COllds remaining, tlw game ,,as st pped bv the otfJ- nal, after Lon~ Beath Coac-h Joe llarri11 ton \\a slappld with the

BERNARD SIEGAN

and truly, h an- v n Robert Bork

nominee cannot write even a simple declara- tive sentence Yet, appellate judges are powerful figures: Because 95 percent of appellate rulings go unappealed, they have the decisive word on many i sues. These days, that word is in- creasingly conservative: That's because President Reagan has appointed nearly half of the present federal bench. Because these appoint are young, as judges go, the Reagan legacy will shape the law well into the next century. The new Judges have given the administra- tion new freedom to prosecute criminal ca es. Gone is some of the fretting about the rag of defendants. Prison sentences of tho convicted of federal crimes are longer; tale rules limiting abortion have been up- held, for the first time, the handicapped and those cla1mmg racial discrimination are los-

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

FE 131988 .,,, A debate on separation of church and state will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at University City High School, 6949 Genesee Ave., under auspices of the San Diego chapter of the American Jewish Committee. Speakers will be Maimon chwarzchild, professor at the Uni- vers1t7a of San.Diego Law School; and ambmove, AJC national legal di- ector. Admission is $3. ;zJ§ ./

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