News Scrapbook 1988

Sn Diego, CA (San 01190 Co.)

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MA 1988 v4.ll£fl '• P. C. B

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

n Diego Magazine

(Cir. M, 20,3241

FEB! 81998

Est. 1888

Jl.llen

hr. 1888

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. ~all Mark Trafton ~1t. a two-run home run in the first mnmg, and USO beat visiting Penn State, 7-4. Trafton, who had three hits and scored twice, homered off start- er and loser Keith Bevenhower Be- venho~er had the third-best ERA (2.02) m _the nation last year. Claire- mont High alumnus Andy Roberts and Kearny High alumnus Chris Bwy each had two hits for the Toreros (8· 9). Penn State is 0-5. .,;;J... 'f 5' J/

Toreros' punch line scores a knockout ._zq5S- By Kirk &.enney ?be punch lme? Tribune 5portswriter USO 76, Pepperdine 74 P EPPERDI. 'E forward Tom Lewis showed up "Can't laugh this off," Harrick aid. lnd~d, it may for Wednesday's practice wearing a cast on his have ruined Pepperdine's chances of an at-large bid to foot and crutches under his arms. He told coach the NCAA Tournament. Jim Harrick it was a weight-lifting accident. The Remember, Pepperdine is the team that lost a pair waves trainers nodded m agreement. They were in on of track meets to 19th-ranked Loyola-Marymount last it. It wa a practical Joke. week by scores of 107-95 and 142-127 That pretty Lewis got a laugh. The trainers got a laugh. The much tells the story for the Waves' - and any other waves players got a laugh. Even Harrick got a laugh, WCAC team's - chances of winning the conference's "after I knew it wa n't true." automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament. For all practical purposes last night's game against "Last week was a very emotional week for us," said USD was supposed to be a joke, too. It was no acci- Harrick. "I just wanted to get through thi week. I ·dent r fie roreros nodded in agreement. They were all thought we could, but we didn't." 10 on it. Please see TOREROS: .E)-7, Col. 1 *Torerosh Ccntinucd From E·I .:Z,,~ freshmen on the floor at the same time.

.., (Z SANDOR SHAPERY

A former law clerk for Melvin Belli and a l..lli_D law school lum. 43-yeaToio Sandor Shapery broke ground down town 1n January tor the Erner aid Shapcry Center a full city block bounded by Broadway, C, State and Columbia streets that will contain a hotel-office complex lie describe!! as "a spectacular cluster of emerald crystals. with hexagonal tow ers r1s1ng to heights of 18 to 30 stories We believe these towers will give San Diego its own 'landmark' structure- landmark 1n the sense that San Francisco has lhe Trans AmElriCa Bu1ld1ng ' · The glass-enclosed struc- lure will surround a 150-foot atrium. with sunlight streaming into the plant filled center Ja- pan ·s Tokyu Corporation, which owns Bullet Train and MasterCard in Japan. is fund- ing the $100 million construc- tion cost. As sole proprietor of Shapery Enterprises, Shapery also is developing a 21 •story office § complex. City Center Develop- 2 ment. adjacent to the San 01 , ego County Courthouse As it that weren't enough activity, he plans to have frve hotels under construction through- out the Southwest by the end of 1988.

PATRICIA BENKE - --- Diligence. intellect and politi- cal know-how propelled Patn• c,a Benke through the 1udic 1al :'ranks in just four short years ·Benke, a finalist last year for a , seat on the California Supreme eourl. became Governor George Oeukrne11an's first fe· male appointee to a st 1e Court of Appeal: The 38-year- o d iudge now sits on San 01- ego·s six-member Fourth D1s- tnct Court of Appeal She also , a p ofessor of er :rnnaf pro- cedure al California Western School of Law and takes her Job as mother of two sons very senously Th s amb ous USO Law Scrool graduate's career 1s 1 ust beginning to take oil

Mission Valley, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Weekly News (Cir. 2 x M. 20,000) . ' 1988

..Alt..', P. C. B

should be ashamed of yourself. Wh~t a mess this is." A captam, Means IS the lightning rod for such comments. Egan didn't blame Mr.ans, exactly. He blamed everyou on the tean_i.. Means knew that. And he knew his coach was right. "We weren't executing at that point" said Means. ''Early in the sea- son 1' didn't take it so well when he said things. But rm the oldest player (in terms of experience), so it seems he's going to say things to me that he couldn't !.ay to a freshman because they might take it wrong. I knew what he meant." The Toreros went back out and got in the game. Then Harrick needed a timeout to regroup. During the break, Egan sp~ke plainly: "Don't Jet their reputaho!1 beat us. Make them beat you ••• if. they're going to beat you." USD went ahead 37-35 when Sayers hit a three-pointer with 1:25 to play in the first half. The Toreros ran off the court and 1mo the locker room with a 42-40 halftime lead. USD led by as many as seven points early in t~e second half, but Pepperdine reclaimed the lead 54-53 with l3:43 to play. Pelton took the lead back for USD when he scored at 7:08 to make it 66-65.

F.,t, 1888

/ March 5~ Fine Arts Department Pr~ents guitari&ts Lisa Smith, Anthony Lup1ca and Jot,n Lyon in concert at a p.m. in Sacred Heart Hall,_(,oom.J,D4 Info. 260 _4600 ex!.!~~6••• ',c"1 'S°"> z

The youngsters did some growing up last night at the USD Spo~ Cen- ter. Freshman center Dond1 Bell played his most aggressive gam_e of the season, finishing with 10 point;s. Freshman Kelvin Means had six points. Freshman John Sayers ~d five points. Freshman Keith Colvm had two. Freshman Randy Thompson didn't score, but he played defense. They all played defense. But, then, that"s a must at USD And veterans such as junior guards Danny Means and Efrem Leonard, who each scored 13 points, Munn and senior center Jim Pelton, reassured .....,,.naoct...-., v one displayed something that has been in short sup- ply this season: poise. Where'd it come from all of a sud· den? "In practice," said Sayers. From where? Behind the ball rack and water bottles. "Somewhere." What about it, Danny? "It came from a lot of losses.''. said Means. "We've been there qmte a few times this season. Referring back to early in tbe season!. w_hen things got tight, we'd lose. This time we got it done." . The poise wasn't apparent imme- diately. In fact, Egan had a few choice words to say to Danny Means during a timeout midway through the first half with USD trailing 23-12. The Toreros were letting things get out of hand. Egan looked _at Means during a timeout a~d said, "You're the team captam. You

Levy Middlebrooks scored a game• high 27 points and collected seven_ re- bounds, but there was more perspll'a• tion than inspiration out on the floor for the Waves. Even Lewis, ~ho scored 29 points when Pepperdme beat USD 92-77 last month in Malibu, was down. The conference's leading scorer finished with 18 points. Harrick may have seen th1S com• ing. In another sense, so did USD coach Hank Egan. "Coach said he could smell an upset in the air y~terday in practice and he said it again before the e" · forwar 1..:,--&>M-un,n, who scored a team-b~gh. 21 points, includi?g a ~ame-wmmng three-pointer with a rmnute left._ USD won't get an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as it did last season when the Toreros went 24-6, but vou should have seen Egan. He had this smile on his face.. •• ,, . "That's as good as it gets, ~aid Egan. "This is as good as an}'. wm I had last year. This is something we needed. It's something to build on. "Everybody ta~ about tea1;1s ?ot knowing how to wm. It w~sn t like we just put it away and left 1t ~ere. I was waiting for the youth tbmg ~o show but we never gave into the s1t- uatio~ and that was one thing that we've been talking about all along"

Mission Valley, CA (San Diego Co.) Sa~ Diego Weekly News (Cir. 2 x M. 20,000) M P 2 1988

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..AJt..~ P. C. B fo. 1888 · • ,unvroom at 730 p.m. Info 265'6244 ..,...-- March 4-"The One-Minute Manager A Question of Time or Timing," a sem na, at .USD's Manchester C~e,ce~e...Qenter at a am. Info: 260-4682 c ':> ) · / M•rr.lt 4-"'A1,...u,.,.1, ... ,., 11 ......_ ..._ .. -

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With four seconds left, Pepperdine still bad a chance. But a halfcourt pass went right to Thompson, who, for a moment, didn't know what~ _do with it. He wasn't in a very_fam1har situation, but he adapted quickly. He

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

Colle • CCSF, From A9

The "youth thing.' ~bat's .Egan's expression for the growing pams suf- fered throughout a season by a team that bas had three, and at times four,

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dribbled out the clock.

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them California Athletic Con- "-- ~-~~

ference tournament. SF State finished 8·4 In conference; U Davis 1s 7-5. The nner will pla the winner of the Hii¥Ward State-Sonoma State game Friday night. Hayward, winner of the conference, must be beaten twice. The winner of the tour- nament advances to the NCAA Division Il West Regionals. • * * The City College of San Fran- cisco women's team may have had a better record than the men, but it is the men's squad that Is still alive in post-season play. Seven-foot freshman Chuck Patterson from San Mateo's Hillsdale High scored 17 points and added 16 rebounds as the Rams took an 89-82 first-rounu victory Saturday night over visiting Siskiyous of Weed. Kevin Stafford added 26 point; and Jerry McIntosh 14 points and 16 rebounds as the Rams Improved to 13-17. CCSF now challenges No. 2 seeded Colum- bia College, 29·2, ·tonight in Sonora. The CCSF women, 20-7, were bounced from the Con· verse-California Community Col- lege tournament at Santa Rosa Friday night, dropping a 71·52 decision. College of San Mateo, however, has advanced to the quarterfinals tomorrow at Amer· lean River College in Sacramento after a 46-44 win over Kings River in Reedley. The CSM women, 25-6, play Southern California's No. 1 seed, Golden West, 31·2, at 2p.m. • * * Rex Manu of Coast Conference co-champion Skyline has a sister, Pauline, playing for Col· lege of San Mateo's basketball team. CSM doesn't have a·men's team and Skyline doesn't field a women's team. So that led to brother and sister attending dif- ferent local community colleges and being in the unique situa- tion of qualifying for state tour• nament play at the same time. Since Skyline had a first round bye In the men's tournament, the JC Athletic Bureau reports that Rex Manu was able to watch his sister's team upset Kings River. Manu, a 6-goot-8 center, was named to the All Coast Con- ference men's team along wtth teammate Nathan McKinney, 'i 6-foot-4 sophomore from McAteer. Carlos Myers and Shaun Wilson received honor• able mention recognition. Skyline coach Pete Pontacq and Al Klein of Canada were n~_pi co-coaches of the vears. 1. 0 --y _____ ./

@ LawBriefs by MartinKruming . 1 University of San Diego aw pro- an will mod· erate a "Privacy, Politics & The Press" seminar which George Brewster of Ault, Midlam, Deuprey, Jones, Danielsen & Gorman and others are puttmg to- gether at Cal Western on May 14. Among the panelists are Hal Fuson of Copley Press; Cathy Clark of Channel 39; S ig Mickelson, former president of CBS News; Superior Court Judge Richard Huffman; John Allcock of Gray, Cary, Ames & Frye; and former Congressman Lionel Van Deerlin. For more information call Brewster at 295-1202. fessor Hugli ne

R 2 - 1988

San Jose, CA (Santa Clara Co.) Mercury News (AM Edition) (Cir. D. 243,078)

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AR 1 - 1988

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1 , , 1888 To~l~~ut for the bench • 2 Nomination may be as close as Siegan S1egan has no judicial comes to the bench. Following a hearing • • last week, the Senate Judiciary Commit- expenence and som~ weird tee indicated that the majority nemo- . t tat· f th l crats are solidly against him. lil erpre lOilS O e aw Wisely so, although Siegan's legal writ- B ER.NARD Siegan is a constitution- al scholar short on judicial experi- ence and long on unconventional ings should not be overstressed. Law re- view articles or books are often intellec- tual exercises. Writing such articles does not mean a scholar would overturn prece- dent willy-nilly once on the bench.

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Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) T imes Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568)

legal theories. The Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, Siegan has written, does not preyent states from discriminating agamst women or minorities; the First Amendment prohibits only the federal government, not the states, from adopting an official religion. Those theories and his friendship with Attorney General Edwin Meese m have won him the Reagan administration's nomination to the federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

Siegan makes just this argument for his confirmation, saying, "I would follow the law without reservation or qualification." But because Siegan never has been a judge, he's asking us to take him at his word. Unlike Robert Bork, whose record as a judge left a more moderate impres- sion than his scholarly writings, Siegan can point to no assurances that as a judge he will conform himself to the law as it is, rather than as he would wish it to be. Surely the administration can find con- servatives we don't have to take on faith.

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far. 1888

~m ne-e In concert at 7:acfi?.nr.'March 22 at th e USD Sports Center. Tickets on gale at Ticketmaster outlets~

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Voice & Viewpoint News (Cir. W. 13,000)

La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W. 9,040) MARS

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La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W. 9,040) R3 1 8

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P. C. B

1888

iJs,o·s LINE.UP The Universiff !i~n Diego Is of- fering a summer sports camp pro- gram at its beautiful campus overlooking Mission Bay. Resident and day camps are available for girls and boys In basketball, soccer, tennis, competitive swimming, girls volleyball, baseball, football and an outdoor wilderness camp. Call 260-4593 or write USD Summer Sports Camps, Alcala Park, San Diego, CA 92110 for more / information. /

._Al/en's P. C. B ·w<;t: ,. . ~LL SCORES 18 AS TOR· · EROSTRIPPEl!f_ER~~NE:Sat- urday, 1§D j\'ill.ffiiji,f r eir con- ference tourna~l'IJrtl!l- upsetting· Pepperd ine a week ago with fo rmer Crawfo rd High ·st!1r, 6:09 fre sh- man center Dondi Bell scoring a career high I8 points. Bell . with some quality playing time should 1 develop into one of the West 1,, 1888

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P,ograu photo by Cieo

LINE~!. . The University%1;a~ D1ego 1s of- fering a summer sports camp pro· gram at its beautiful campus overlooking Mission Bay. Resident and day camps are available for girls and boys in basketball, soccer, tennis, competitive swimming, girls volleyball, baseball, football and an outdoor wilderness camp. Call 260-4593 or write USD Summer Sports Camps, Alcala Park, San Diego, CA 92110 for more information .

San Francisco State. which tted for sernnd with Stanislaus State, will host UC Davis tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the semifinals of the Nor• • CCSF, To AlO ...........

toum y's fir t round The Dons nd Bronco played two tough ames thl ye r, with SCU winn Ing both, 6 67 1 and 69 65. * • *

ast"s dominant big men in years come-under the guidance of ach H 1 ank Egan. : • 1/

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