News Scrapbook 1988

S n Joa , CA (Santa Clar Co. M rcury News (AM Edition) (Cir D. 243,078) ••

er cold first half, Santa Clara rout y Kim B tman i 9 S S Santa Clara San Diego didn't have ley and Gordon's three-point play were lulled back in their seats. And a player m double figures. In fact, made it 7-0 with little more than rtury N,w, Stoll Wrlt•r

SD 56-40

down, they couldn't score. Santa

ta Clara equaled its lowest first- haU score this season.

neither team could buy, charge or Clara went more than seven min•

B 2 0 1

m n

off th Loyola-P pper-

USD didn't hav

player with two

three nunutes gone in the game.

steal a basket.

utes without a field goal, until Ro- land H'Orvath muscled for a Jay- There wouldn't be another bas- ket until a three-pointer by USD's Randy Thompson with 27 seconds remaining. But thanks to steady free-throw shooting, Santa Clara owned a 23-13 lead when Thomp- son hit. The Broncos were 11 of 12 from the line in the first half. And they took a 25-16 lead into the locker room at halftime after Jeffty Connelly's tip-in as time ran It was a sedate pace that didn't catch Santa Clara by surprise. San- out. up with 4:09 remaining.

dine trip to play the University of field goals until deep Into the sec- The Toreros were the perfect tonight's • howdown between t. It's hard to believe St. Mary's, one Friday night. But the Mary's and Santa Clara at Toso. ft t hall to dt pose of San of the nation's top defensive teams, hrugged d a sl per m It t its rin Bron of a.n.Jlh:.&,o is ort of like being ond ~au. . drop d from nother planet to m II, l epy town. nta Clara awhll to get k

While

San Diego

futile!)

Karl Larsen scored on an offen- sive rebound. San Diego cut it to 9-6 on offensive rebounds from John Sayers, a freshman from Bel- larmine Prep, and Craig Cottrell. Weiss dropped In a pair of free throws, but Efrem Leonard's

launched 18-footers, Santa Clara didn't make much progress, either. and Weiss picked up fouls hitting Then the clock ticked for 4 min- utes, 40 seconds without a score. the offensive boards.

.llll,tt '• P c a 1, 1

SAN DIEQO (40) Thompon 1-8 lg..

BANTA CLAIIA (N)

la·•

ff•• Ip

ft•• Ip 3.3 15 a

3 H'O.Veth 1-3 • G0

0-0 2-2 0-1 0-0 3- • 1·2 0-0 0-1 • ·6 1-2

8-6 8•6 2-2 2-2 2·2 0.0 0-0 2·3

w nnup act for the rnaJn show, Gordon charged, and Nils Becker

S•rera Pelton

1-9 1...

7 I I 4 4 0 4

K MHn • 0-2 B Mean, 2-9 Leonard 3-tO Cotlrllll 1-2

,m Diego, CA (S,10 Di .o:Jo Co.) Snn Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089} (Cir. S. 341,840)

2 R11tk 5 Aaron • Larsen 3 Becker

2-3 0•1 1-2

Munn Colvin Bell Tol • l1

three-pointer - non-rebound basket -

San Diego's first brought the

2·11 0·2

1 go 56•40

t T

Pavilion.

can keep a tighter lid on the score, When San Diego senior reserve It looked as If Santa Clara would Marty Munn stuck in an offensive Toreros within 11-9.

t-1

Q. 1 0-0 O

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co .} Los Angeles Daily Journal (Cir. 5 X W. 21,287)

nta Clara hangs onto a thread

12-5811•11 40 Toi.lo 11-42 20-23 1141

o r hope In th

race for

econd

dissect San Diego quickly and cleanly. The Toreros missed their first 13 shots, and Gordon patrolled

rebound with 12:04 remaining, the

Larsen's free throws gave Santa

11 24- 40 25 31- 51

Bon Diego Sant• Clare

t Coast Athletic Th BronC

pl

in th W

crowd broke out in applause. And Clara a 13-9 lead. But SCU simply the Toreros, who shot 16.1 percent wasn't getting the job done offen- No doubt about it. This was a went through all the rotations in in the first haU, cut the gap to 7-2. sively. Even when the Broncos

ThrN-polnt goalo - Seo Dlego 5- 19 (Thomp.. 10n 1-3, Sayero 0-2. K. Means 0•1, O Meano t- •, Leonerd 2-2, Munn t-71. Santa Clara 0-3 (Appiah 0· t, Burley 0-2) Fouled out - no,,. lloboundl - San Diego 3 t (Munn 6), Senta Cle, • 42 (Go,. don 9) A11l1t1 - San O,ego 8 (Munn 2), Santa Claro 10 (H'On, • th 4). Total loul1 - San Otego 22. Sante Clatl 19 A - 3,011

EB 21 1988

nlcre

v r II, 7-4 in th WCAC. San Die-

the boards.

10-14 a nd 2•9,

I Appiah made a basket, Dan made a lob from Mitch Bur-

~/kit~

red 15 points for We

FE

' 2 1

G rdon

strange game. The scattered fans

their offense and ran the shot clock

I', C 8

t.1 IIU

Cold-shooting US alls to

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

Officials Oppose Sh ..). 'I'>- 5'

ting Discipline Cases

ons, 79-73

By PHILIP CARRIZOSA

don't get your response in by such-and-such a date, we'll proceed without you," Anderlini complained. "I understand they were anxious to pro- ceed, but we have to go about our order of business as well," he added. The Select Committee on the Internal Pro- cedures of the Supreme Court was selected by Chief Justice Malcolm Lucas last June to study ways to streamline the court's work- ings. In addition to recommending the trans- fer or lawyer discipline cases, the eight- member panel said appeals from decisions of the state Public Utilities Commission should also go to the Courts of Appeal instead of to the Supreme Court as they do now. Lucas indicated last Tuesday that the court's seven justices will consider the Rich- ardson committee proposals at the court's weekly conference this Wednesday. Wait for 'Bar Judges'? Both Anderlini and Fellmeth sympathized with the court's desire to reduce its work- load, but agreed that the justices should wait to see if the Legislature approves funding of Fellmeth's proposal for a model system of professional "bar judges" because that will reduce the court's work in reviewing the bar's recommendations for disbarment or suspension of a misbehaving lawyer. "There'd be far fewer cases that they'd have to look at," Anderlini said. Under that proposal, the bar would replace its current system of lawyers acting as vol- unteer referees. The new bar judges would be akin to administrative law judges, but bar leaders and Fellmeth ha e shied away from using that term because they insist their judges would be better. In addition to acting like trial judges on hearing panels, the paid judges would also sit on the Review Department, a panel that re- views the decisions of hearing officers. The judges would be paid at the level of superior court judges and Court of Appeal justices, Two homers help Aztecs beat To~ ros Nikco Riesgo~i1 Robbie Bailey hit home runs yesterday to help San Diego State (8-4) beat h~, in a college baseball game. Chuck Graham was 2-for-4 with a double and a triple, and Chris Bwy hit two singles for USD (5-7). More baseball - USIU (3-8-1) lost to the Padn,s' Class AA farm team, 6-3, in a n exhibition game in Yuma. Ron Sargent hit a triple, and Pat Rocko and Pat Cheek doubled for the G,llls . .. Catcher Mark Rob- ert singled and doubled, and right fielder Mike Miller had two hits to help San Diego Mesa (5-1) beat Ari- zona Western, 7-3, in Yum . Aaron e rich (2-0) won . . . im artinez hit a two-r I omer to lead host UCSD over Pomt Loma Nazarene, 5- 2. Gary Fessia was 2-for-4 with a run-scoring triple for the 1'ritons (5- 1), and Steve Toney was 2-for-4 for the Crusaders (0-9). Tennis - David Stewart beat Russell Myers 6-4, 7-6 in No. 1 sin- gles, and USD (6-3) shut out San Diego State (3-6), 6-0, in a men's dual match at SDSU. USD's Scott Pa- tridge beat Julio Noriega 6-3, 6-2 . . . The Mesa men's team shut out visit- ing San Diego City College, 9-0, in a Pacific Coast Conference match, with Kent Pachel beating Gary Breem 6-2, 5-7, 6-3 in No. 1 singles. Future book - Caliente's future book on the Kentucky Derby opens at its foreign book locations today, of- fering somewhat higher odds on sev- eral top contenders than a bettor could obtain in Las Vegas. Director of Racing Orlando Curzio, who made the opening line, installed Forty Niner the 8-1 favorite (6-1 in Las Vegas). Tejano is the 10-1 second choice (8-1 in Las Vegas). Mi Preferi- do, a Santa Anita Derby contender, is opening at 20-1 (12-1 at Las Vegas). Betting on the future book will be available Wednesdays through Sun- days until April 30. V San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

Fellmeth said. "You will have a quality of dee· IOl'l-mak- ing which is not onlr as good, but bet~r than you have from tria judges at large use you would have judges who know that a ea of the law better than the general trial or appel- late court judges," Fellmeth said. Also under the proposal, the Supreme Court would have the power to decide for itself which disciplinary proceedings to re- view instead of automatically reviewing all proc~dings as the court must do now, f'ell- meth said. The bar's determination of the punishment would become final in cases the court chose not to reVtew, he said. "It just solves the problem of their case- load " Fellmeth said. "From their point of view' it should t>e the best of all possible worlds: they retain control, they retain qual- ity and they don't pay for it because the lawyers would pay for it through their annual dues." "They'd really have to spend only about one-tenth of the time they spend now on these cases," he added. Sending lawyer disciplinary cases to the Court of Appeal would be duplicative since appeal court-quality judges would be sitting in the bar's appellate department, Fellmeth said. And since lawyers could still appeal to the state Supreme Court, sending bar cases to the Courts of Appeal would just add a fourth layer to the process, he added. Gil Olivarria, a public member of the bar Board of Governors who heads the Discipline Committee, said he was not opposed to send- ing discipline cases to the Court of Appeal so long as all the cases went to a single, desig- nated court. "One of the biggest concerns we ad in our committee was that cases would be bounced around amongst the various appeal courts and we would ~et inconsistency, not unifor- mity," Olivarria said. But even that would be redundant under the bar's model system, he said. Azt cs t orthr·dge in baseball ,;z

9

FEB 21 188

The president of the State Bar and the monitor appointed by the Legislature to oversee the bar's disciplinary system say they will fight a proposal by a blue-ribbon committee to transfer disciplinary cases from the state Supreme Court to the state Colll'ts of Appeal Both bar president P. Terry Anderlini and bar monitor Robert Fellmeth ai.d-last week they will wrin:!et ers o e Supreme Court opposing last Tuesday's recommendation by a committee headed by retired Justice Frank Richardson. " I think that proposal would be very much of an error. I agree with the State Bar on it," said Fellmeth, attending the Conference of Bar Leaders in Costa Mesa. "I'm disappointed that they took that posi- tion without getting our formal position on att ," d rli · · . en the position that the Supreme Court should retain the final oversight on our discipline process and we have some pretty good rea- sons for wanting it that way." " Historically, it's been the Supreme Court's ta k," the bar president said. "And we need consistency in the review of disci- pline cases." If different panels of appellate judges from the state's six appeal courts starting review- ing discipline cases, the results could vary and create unfairness, he said. "An offense in Northern California should be treated the same as one in Southern Cali- fornia," Anderlini said. The Discipline Committee of the State Bar Board of Governors voted last month to op- pose any transfer of lawyer discipline cases away from the Supreme Court and directed the bar's staff to draft a letter saying so. But the letter had not yet come to the full board for final approval when Richardson's com- mittee issued its report last Tuesday. "Nobody sent me a letter saying if you

Jl lkn '• ... C. •

far. " " 1 uso Ag~in Struggles Early and Loses :zqrr- The llfilm&tY~an Diego a 19-5 run to begm the second half.

basketball team got ofITo~nother slow start Saturday night, and the re ult was another loss, this one to the University of San Francrnco, 79 -73, at Memorial Gym m San USD, wlurh missed tts fi rst 13 shots ma loss Friday night to Santa Ciara, struggled early against USF and was behmd, 19-7, at the 11,5-4 mark c,f the first half. The Toreros rallied to withi.1 39-35 at halftime, but USF pulled away for good with Franc1 co.

Keith Jackson scored 20 points for USF, and Rodney Tention add- ed 15. Jim Pelton had 17 points and a career-high 15 rebounds for USD. USD (10- 15, 2-10) finishes regu - Jar-season play in the West Coast Athletic Conference with home games agamst Pepperdine and Loyola Marymount next weekend. USF, which snapped an eight- game losing streak, is 12-13 and 4-8. ,======~========~

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

Eric Newman scor d 11 to lead he G I and har gam high point hono with Gordon. hit a jump hot that gave them a 34-33 lead Th Bron o too the le d for good with 1 43 left when Dan Wei

LO

L AYOR TOM BRADLEY joined the fight to k P l,;n vers ty of San_Dle~ law1)roiessor BerllCU:d..£iegan off the federal ncli, saying his views would "wreak havoc" on efforts to protect !he environment and manage growth. Bradley wrote !o Josep~ Btden, D-De!., chainnan of the Senate Judiciary Comm_tttee, which is considering Siegan's nomination to the 9th U.S. C1rcu1t Court of Appeals. Siegan, 63, an acquaintance of Attorney General Edwin Meese, describes himself as a Liber- tarian and opposes zoning laws, minimum-wage laws and anti- trust laws. He is opposed by the AFL-CIO, the Mexican-Ameri- c_an Legal Defense and Education Fund, the NAACP the Na- tional Education Association, the National Organiz~tion for Women and the Sierra Club. ~----------'::l...e~L.!.~---- :::;,,__j

San Francisco, Cl (San Francisco Co.) Recorder (Cir. SxW. 5,346)

EB 22 1

,ux People by A.A. Cabrera ? q s-f' 4 Partners Narned at -~(g$"" • Fisher & Hurst 1n S.F. •- Thonrns A. Trapani , l't•lt•r 0. Clm•ssnl'r , Kenneth 1. a11d

Sacramento, CA (Sacramento Co.) Recorder (Cir. SxW. 2,150)

Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568) 2 19

FEB 24 1988

~~::.:::~~~~·:,;Q?n __ m,::,:";:!"f: ~:,E1$15__s professor Bernard Siegan from taking the bench on lhe U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, saying Siegan's Views are "iconoclastic." Writing to U.S. Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Bradley urged reJection of Siegan's nomination to the court Siegan, 63, is a professor of constitutional law at the Universi~ of an ~d longtime acquaintance 6f1T.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese. He has described himself as a Libertarian in his opposition to zoning laws, minimum-wage protections and anti-trust Jaws. "Mr. Siegan would nullify myriad decisiops made by elected representatives to protect the public's health, welfare and safety," Bradley wrote. Hearings on Siegan's confmnation were to reswne Thursday i...rnreJhe Judicial Committee. . S o·

Jl/~'•

I'. C. B

Est

1888

Varadley fights placing USO prof.,op the court LOS ANGELES (AP),?- 1'(.fafor saying Siegan would "wreak havoc"

l>t•nni, (;ildca have ll(:1:11 11,1111cd rm t111:1.s i11 thl" San 1-t;incis<.:o based lirtll of h shc1 & llu1 st. ·1rapa11i lws been with the 53 at101 ney firin since 1981 , when he graduated from the 111vcrsity of California at Uavis School of Law. I he \ I-year -old spcciali,cs in national to"r tort and products liability litigation C,lacssner, 32, has hccn with the firm ,inl'C l982 Aftc1 graduating from the University ol San Diego School of I.aw in~O, (ilacss~rkcd for two years as a re - sea1d1 altm ncy 111 San Bernardino for C.ilifornia Court of Appc.ils Judges Rohc1t (ianlner and Marcus Ka11l111a11 Glacssncr focuses his p1acticc 011 in su rat1re broke rage and cove1 age Ma, kowit,, J4 , is a defense allorney in ,I\ ,11a!ion und c111ploy111ent relntcd litiga 11011, I II: has heen with Fisher & llur,t srncc 1982, when he graduated fto111 ,olden ( iatl' \ln1vcrsity in San l'rancis<.:1> Ma, kowitt 1s u lor111er extern for State S11p1c111e Cmnt Justu.:e l·rank Nc,,nian. (,ildea , Vi , has been with Fisher & llu1st Im !wo years A 1977 Roalt llall Sd1ool of' Law gradu.itc, Gildea was fornwrly with the Oakland 1murnncc defense firm of Moore, Clifford. Wolfe, Larson & ·1nHner. lie spcdal1zcs in advising 111surancc companies on drafting and mterprcung policies and negotiating agrce111cnts. .. . l\1k h:tl'l J. Hurri ngton has been nam - l·d v1n· p1 cs1dent of Wells h1rgo Bank in San h,111<.:1sco . ,.___ l111111ngton, 39. is senior counsel for the 1he hank's trust department. llarnngton join d the bank in June I 98(1 . Ile had hccn handlinJ.! Wells l•argo's trust adn11n1strution, li1ig:i11on ,,nd cslatc planninr while he was a part m:r at the Pasa1k·11a linn of Ilahn & Il,1hn, wh ·re he practiced from 1983 lO 1986, I larr111g1on has also served as se111or rn1111si:I lor 'rocker N:11ional Bank"s ll:gal department in S.111 Francisco and Lm An ,cfcs . fle c.irned his juris doctor degree in 1975 from U LA . • t * Ronald B Friedman, a former pa n ncr 111 the San 1-t ancis,o tir111 of Jo rdan, Keeler & Sc l1g111an, has Joi ned 3 0 111 < ·01 111 Sanrn Clar,1

Tom Bradley has jo!ned a move- ment to keep San Diego law p ro - fessor Bernard Siegan from taking the bench on the U.S. 9th Circuit ~ourt of ~ppeals, sayi~g Siegan's Wntmg to U.S. Se~. Joseph B1- den, D -Del., ~h_e cha1rman ~f the Senate Judic ia ry Committee , Bra~ley ~rged rejection of Siegan's no~mation t~ the court. _S1e~an, 63, 1s a profes~or o~con - shtut1<;nal law at the _Umvers1ty of S{!n Diego .ind longtime acquain - ta_nce of U.S. Attorney General Ed- H e has described himself as a Lib~rta rian in _h ~s opposition to ~on~ng laws, m1~11mum-wage pro- te<;t10ns ~nd a nti- t rust la'Ys. 'Mr: ~1egan would nulhfy myri- ad dec~s1ons made by elected repre- heal th , welfare a!1~ safety," Brad- ley wrote, describing the profes- sor's views as "iconoclastic" and v1e~s _a_re 1conoclast1c. . wm Meese.

on local government efforts to pro- t ect t he environment and manage

growth.

Earlier thi s month

t he San

Francisco Board of S~pervisors v_oted to oppose Siegan's nomina- hon. A board resolution said his views were "hostile to the protec- tion of liberty and individual Hearings on Siegan's confirma- tion were to resume Thursday be- fore the Judicial Committee. Many observers likened the fight to the one that toppled Robert H . Bork's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Others opposing Siegan's nomi- nation are the AFL-CIO, the Mexi- can American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the National As- sociation for the Advancement of cation Assdciation, the National Organization for Women and the rights." Court.

sentatives to protect he public's Colored People, the National Edu-

DennisGildea

Kenneth Markowitz

Sierra Club.

'

Ludcn and Donald J. Smith have joined Moore. Clifford as associates K11lmn maintained his own civil liliga 11011 prncticc 111 Oak land from 1984 to 1987. Besides bringing his own clients to Moore, Clifford, Killian will work on expanding the firm's black bu. incss clientclc Killian .sard that, tradit1onally, larger firms have not actively sought to serve the black business community. "Now I have the resources of a large firm that I didn't have as a solo practi- tioner to bring w the black community," said Killian, the only black attorney at the 39 attorney ltrm . A 1983 graduate of UC Berkeley's Boall_l lall School of Law, Killian will practice primarily business, probate and real estate law. Ludcn, 35, is a 1978 graduate of the University of Miami Law School. Ile practiced general civil litigation with several private Florida firms before .1ointng the Florida attorney gene ral's of- fice. where he hand led criminal appeals from I982 to 1986. He spec1ali1.cs in construction litiga- ti on. Donald J. Smith , 36, is a graduate of

Oceanside, CA (Sa n Diego Co.) Blade T ribun e (C ir. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498)

...At~·.

Yachting - Mike O'Bryan of the San Diego Yacht Club, sailing in th~ A-Fleet, won the SDYC Junior Inv1- ' tational North Series Regatta on San Diego Bay. Erin Collins (Newport Harbor YC) won the B-Fleet, Kevin Telfer (Coro- nado YC) won the C-1 Fleet, a"? R~n Davis (Oceanside YC) finished first m the C-2 Fleet. Distance running - ~ark McMonigal finished in 30 minutes, 48 seconds to win the Mardi Gras 10K Run at Mission Bay. Lori Crisp ran 34:19 to win tlw women's division. In the over-70 division, Wayne Zook won in 43:16, and Judy Simon, the only finisher in her division, clocked in at 56:30.

I'. C. B

Est. 1888

r,,,a(!l~y opposes court nominee t7''°1 s LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mayor Tom Bradley has joined a

sit,y of San Diego and longtime acquaintance"1lt- U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese . He has described himself as a Li.!)ertarjan in his opposition to zoning laws, minimum-wage pro- tections and anti-trust laws. "Mr. Siegan would nullify myriad decisions made by elected repre titatives to pro- tect the public's health, welfare and safety," Bradley wrote describing the professor's view~ as "iconoclastic" and saying

Siegan would "wreak havoc" on local government efforts to pro- tect the environment and manage growth. Earlier this month, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted to oppose Siegan's uomina- tion. A board resolution said his vie~s were "hostile to the pro- tection of liberty and individual rights." Hearings on Siegan 's confir- mation were to resume Thursday before the Judicial Committe

movement to keep San Diego !av. professor Bernard Siegan from taking the bench on the U.S. 9th C_i rcuit 1 Court of Appeals, saying S1egan s views are " iconoclastic·. ' _Writing to U.S. Sen. Joseph B1den, D-DeL, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, BradleJ urged rejection of Sicgan's nomination to the court. Sicgan, 63, is a professor of constitutional law at the~

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