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University of Digital USD

Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 USD News

2001-12-01

University of San Diego News Print Media Coverage 2001.12

University of San Diego Office of Public Relations

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Digital USD Citation University of San Diego Office of Public Relations, "University of San Diego News Print Media Coverage 2001.12" (2001). Print Media Coverage 1947-2009. 203. https://digital.sandiego.edu/print-media/203

This News Clipping is brought to you for free and open access by the USD News at Digital USD. It has been accepted for inclusion in Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 by an authorized administrator of Digital USD. For more information, please contact [email protected]. USD NEWS PRINT MEDIA COVERAGE

DECEMBER 2001 USD NEWS PRINT MEDIA COVERAGE - DECEMBER 2001 * r• I

Office of the President/ Board of Trustees San Diegans should hold themselves in awe (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... !

College of Arts and Sciences New orchestra unites the through music (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 2 The year's best U.S. Supreme Court books you've never heard of [Dickson] (Palm Beach Daily Business Review, Miami Daily Business Review) ...... 3 Catholic School Community Mourns Principal [Scherer] (Southern Cross) ...... 5 Spending a semester sailing the seas [Goffredo] (Glendale News-Press) ...... 6 The Two Gentlemen of Verona (The Reader) ...... 7

School of Business Administration Housing shortage may cast dark shadow (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 8 Housing here may fare better than elsewhere (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 10 Forum: Lack of Homes Will Hinder Future Growth (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 11 Season's meetings [Gin] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 12 San Diego Real Estate (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 13 Teachers With 'Real World' Expertise [Galuppo] (Metropolitan) ...... 14 Commercial real estate market helps local economy weather recession [Ferber] (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 18 Economic indicators down for ninth consecutive month [Gin] (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 19 Local index shows dip in job market [Gin] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 20 Economic Indicators Mirror National Figures [Gin] (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 21 Largest MBA Schools (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 22 On The Move [Ostrem] (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 23 Converse's deal with ACCD still only a pledge [Riedy] (San Antonio Express-News) .. .24 Summit discusses tough times (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 26 VP at Bank of America resigns (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 27 New specialist [Israel] (Standard) ...... 28

School of Law Paul Wohlmuth, 63; USD law professor who set up institute (San Diego Union- Tribune) ...... 29 Senate confirms U.S. attorney [Kobo] (Honolulu Advertiser) ...... 30 A Palestinian state and chances for peace [Rappaport] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 31 Lawmakers Eye Initiative Process For Tort Reform [Fellmuth] ( Daily Journal) ...... 32 Supreme Court declines to intervene in power case [Ramsey] (Argus Obsever, reprint of AP wire) ...... 34 Proceed with Caution [Caietti] (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 35 Online Legal and Financial Guides (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 37 Other USD Related News Metropolitan Movers [Lytle] (San Diego Metropolitan) ...... 38 The 1900 Wells Fargo team members (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 39 Saint Francis Seminary Celebrates 60 Years of Diocesan Priestly Formation (Southern Cross) ...... 40 Washington College looking for a few good 'Founder Families' (Chesapeake Business Ledger) ...... 42 Colleges And Universities (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 44 Largest Employers (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 45

Athletics Toreros can brag: Four straight over Aztecs (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 47 It's a rivalry in best sense of the word (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 49 USD's Davids keep beating SDSU's Goliaths (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 50 Sellout expected (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 52 Men: Aztecs at Toreros (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 53 Trojans escape by a hair (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 54 USD hosts USC tonight; Trojans seek consistency (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 57 Toreros show fortitude in narrow loss to USC (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 58 Radio: College (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 59 USD calls off dogs in victory over So. Oregon (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 60 Men: Southern Oregon at USD (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 61 Sidelines (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 62 USD vs Texas & San Antonio (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 63 USD gets date with Iowa State in tourney final (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 64 Nakamoto is hit beyond the arc (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 65 Bulletin Board (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 66 Short change helps USD to big progress (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 67 Aztecs face angry Bulldogs (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 68 USD too charitable at line (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 69 Laws leads Toreros to blowout of Boise State (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 71 Toreros prevail as Malich stars (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 72 Bland named MWC Player of Week (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 73 Color USD optimistic in match with Green (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 7 4 USD vs UC Irvine (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 75 Bruins women's star watches Toreros win (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 76 Toreros nip UOP in home opener (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 77 49ers overwhelm Toreros women (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 78 Balanced Toreros make it look easy against Hornets (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 79 USD beats Boise St. via Blaine (San Diego Union- Tribune) ...... 80 Women's vs San Jose State (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 81 Local Basketball (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 82 Athletes take youngsters on holiday shopping spree (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 83 Bulletin Board (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 84 USD signs two (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 85 Returning to Roots (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 86 O~C. - µO/ - r· ~ For The Record (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 88 Arkenberg among Spirit cuts before waiver draft (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 89 Bulletin Board (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 90 49ers team to beat in volleyball Final Four (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 91

TV/Radio Coverage IPJ Dedication & Conference [Aker] KNSD (Dec. 2) Local Economy [Gin] KUSI (Dec. 2) Impact of Middle East Terror on U.S.[Klein] KNSD (Dec. 3) Preview of IPJ Dedication & Conference [Neu] Fox (Dec. 4) Preview of IPJ Dedication & Kyoto Laureate event [Aker] KGTV (Dec. 4) "These Days" [Neu] KPBS Radio (Dec. 5) IPJ Dedication, KNSD, KUSI, KGTV, Fox (Dec. 5) USD Beats SDSU, KUSI, KSWB, KFMB,KGTV, Fox, KNSD (Dec 5,6) USD Choir Caroling at Children's Hospital, KUSI (Dec. 6) IPJ Dedication & Conference with Jimmy Carter, KPBS Radio, KNSD, KUSI, KGTV, Fox, KFMB, Univision, KSWB (Dec. 6, 7) WHBQ (Memphis), WAGA (Atlanta), KCRA (Sacramento) "These Days" [Larry Alexander] KPBS TV (Dec. 7) Alice Hayes Profile, Cox Channel 4 (Dec. 7) USD Real Estate Conference [Gin] KNSD, KFMB, Fox, Univsion (Dec. 12)

*Editor' s Note: Coverage from the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice dedication and conference, the Institute Art Gallery exhibit, and the Kyoto Laureate Symposium is being prepared in a separate report. (

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1 The Supreme Court in Conference (1940- BOO_&S 1985): The Private Discussions Behind Nearly 300 Supreme Court Decisions ing, in the context of a tobacco regulation case, Edited by Del Dickson

on which justices smoked cigarettes. How, he Oxford University Press, 11006 pages, $125 asked, could that possibly be relevant to the way The Supreme Court shows its most public the Court would handle the case? Many schol­ face at oral argument, but its real decision mak­ ars, by ignoring the personal lives of justices, ing is done at its private conferences. They'v seem to agree with Thomas that the justices' been meeting ever since Chief Justice John Mar own life experiences don't influence how they shall in 1801 ensured that all the justices to rule. lived gether in the same boardinghouse. Relentlessly, defiantly, the authors of "Court­ And from the beginning ing Justice" scorn that conventional wisdom. In , justices have taket:li tr_acking the court's decades-long interaction notes at conferences, for historical and opinion­ with gay rights cases, they give equal weight to writing purposes. Some are lost or discarded. how the justices themselves have inter But Del Dickson, a political science professor at with gay people. University of San Die~o. had the brilliant idea Some of their explorations and conclu ns of stitching together the notes available from - - that Justice Frank Murphy probably was gay, modern-era justices to create a narrative of how and that Justice David Souter probably is not - the court reached its decisions. gained brief attention earlier this year. But The patriotic press~res on the court during those headlines obscured the deeper merit of the the 1942 deliberations on Ex parte Quirin - the work these authors have done. military tribunal case that has taken on new sig­ They have brought the justices themselves nificance in· recent weeks - are abundantly into the story of the gay rights legal movement. clear. Dickson reveals the agonizing over the It was "gumshoe detective work," they say, but impact of Brown v. Board of Education in 1954 they talked to gay clerks and friends and family ("It will be bad for the Negroes to be put into members of the justices to come up with a white schools," fretted Justice Robert Jackson). meaningful portrait of how even an ivory tower Justice Lewis Powell's early wish to strike court can be touched by the real world - a j down sodomy laws in Bowers v. Hardwick - world in which gays and lesbians live. late.r abandoned - is charted, All of the justices' They relate Harry Blackmun's simpl_e "We sometimes cryptic shorthand is footnoted with love you," spoken after former clerk Chai Feld­ Dickson providing great context, so that even if blum revealed her homosexuality. Ruth Bader you are not familiar with the case described, the Ginsburg sent a crystal vase to celebrate a les­ dynamics are explained. bian former clerk's commitment ceremony to These woven conference notes may represent her partner. Sandra Day O'Connor handwrote a the l.ast of a dying form of record keeping. Con­ long letter of sympathy to a court employee ferences under Chief Justice William Rehnquist whose male partner died. are more efficient, with less point-and-counter­ Unimportant vignettes? Murdoch and Price point discussion, by all accounts. make ·the powerful case that they are very im­ Some justices, Dickson says, are telling portant, helping to account for the justices' be­ friends that their conference notes won't reveai latedly respectful treatment of gays in Romer v, much or won't be available. Evans and Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Les­ But for the period covered by the book, if the bian and Bisexual Group of Boston. co~rt's opinions are a form of storytelling, then When the Supreme Court in June 2000 up­ Dickson has compiled the story b~hind the sto­ held the right of the Boy Scouts.to exclude gay ry. men as scoutmasters, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote a remarkably angry dissent in which he Tony Mauro is Supreme Court correspon- struck a theme that animates this book. 1 de11t for American Lawyer Media "Unfavorable opinions about homosexuals have ancient roots," said Stevens. "Over the years, however, interaction with real people, rather than mere adherence to traditional ways of thinking about members of unfamiliar class­ es, have modified those opinions." If and when the court modifies its opinion about gay rights - perhaps even embracing gay marriages - this is the book that everyo 1e will I look to for the story of the interactions that got the court to that point.

4 SOUTHERN CROSS SAN DIEGO, CA 23-TIMES/YEAR 32,000 DEC 6 2001

I11111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle's l#,Ott•Ar,0'1 ~ElltllC'-S 581 CY .xzw.1 25 XX .. r. ( Catholic School Community Mourns1i'rincipal 11S1_ . By Vmcent Gragnaru in the spring of 2000 for health Richard Scherer, a former prin- reasons. cipal at four local Catholic "He was an outstanding educa­ schools, died of kidney failure tor," said Andrea Deebs, principal at Nov. 17 at the age of 56. St. Rita's School. ''He believed in Scherer was principal at Our children and doing the best and pro­ Lady's School in Sherman viding the best that can be given. Heights, St. Kieran' s School in El Born in Chicago, Scherer came to Cajon, Our Lady of Perpetual San Diego at the age of 3. He grad­ Help School in Lakeside and The uated from Blessed Sacrament Nativity School in Rancho Santa School and University of San Diego Fe in a career spanning almost 25 High School. In 1967, he earned his years. He left The Nativity School bachelor's degree in English from the University of San Diego. Scherer taught briefly at the University of San Diego High School before becoming a local principal. While serving as a principal in the diocese, Scherer served on the diocesan Family Life Commission and represented the diocesan Schools Office on the Western Association of Schools and Col­ leges. He was also a eucharistic minister at St. Didacus Parish. A memorial Mass was celebrated Nov. 26 at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in Logan Heights. The Southern Cross

5 _s~\)l~O~~

\\,\.UX,sd-O-Lj , Dec- ~ 1 20 0 \

drama and get on with this highly entertaining, if lightweight show. (Note: the original cast members have been replaced.) Wort/, a try. HORTON GRAND THEATRE, 444 FOURTH AVENUE, GASLAMP QUARTER, SAN DIEGO, OPEN-ENDED RUN: WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY AT 7:30 P.M. FRIDAY AT 8:00 P.M. SATURDAY AT 5:00 AND 8:00 P.M. SUNDAY AT 3:00 P.M. AND 7:00 P.M FOR INFORMATION CALL 619-234-9583.

The Two Gentlem.,n of Verona The Globe Theatres and University of San Diego present Shakespeare's comedy about "romance, spies, outlaws, and a dog named Crab." Jim Winker directed. CASSIUS CARTER CENTRE STAGE, SI­ MON EDISON CENTRE FOR THE PER­ FORMING ARTS , THROUGH DECEM- BER 8; THURSDAY AND SATURDAY AT 8:00 P.M. FRIDAY AT 7:00 P.M. MATI­ NEE FRIDAY, AT 10:30 A.M , AND SATUR­ DAY AT 2:00 P.M.

Th., View from Hu., PATH Theatre Company presents Margaret Dulany's comedy-drama about Southern eccentrics "and the pain that hope carries with it. " Al • Valletta directed, OLD MILLPOND THEATRE SPACE, 360 NORTH MIDWAY, ESCONDIDO, THROUGH DECEMBER 9: FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AT 8:00 P.M MATINEE SUN­ DAY AT 2:00 P.M. FOR INFORMATION CALL 760-480-7595.

7 SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION a

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fo homes, ass SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT 150,000 units expected this year, to keep up with explosive population SAN DIEGO, CA growth. FRIDAY 10,500 USD staff economist Alan in DEC 14 2001 said only about 15,000 units · have been authorired in San ego I I 11111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 County this year, or about the same Burrelle'& as in 2000, and suggested that 1 579 ''"o#MArto# J¥#lflCn X HB about 25,000 would be needed here txzwde 25 be ••• • annually to keep up with demand "We need more construction to deal with the affordability situation," Gin said Issue of affordability Gin said lagging construction continues to fuel the housing demand in the stat.e and in San Housing here Diego in particular. Douglas Thlncan, a senior economist of the L\ \ cl\ Mortgage Bankers Association of1 America, said the demaI].d for San may fare better Diego-area real estat.e has pushed the price of homes up by 30 percent in the past five years. The bad news is that makes San than elsewhere Diego even less affordable. The good news on the national front is that By THOR KAMBAN BIBERMAN been hovering at around 25 percent extra equity is expected to pump San Diego Daily Tronscript over the past two years or so in San $50 billion into the economy ove~ San Diego's housing market will Diego County. This shows that while the next year. fare better than the stat.e and the housing is being added, it is rarely in "Add that to what has been p nation in a downturn expected to the more affordable ranges. posed, and that's $200 billion · last until the middle of j2002, but "Most of the builders are profit stimulus; Duncan said that doesn't mean we'll be immune maximizers, and that doesn't do Duncan suggested that at th from the pain. much for affordability," she contin­ national level, at least, a gradu The health of San Diego's ued. improving economy, and a gradu~ economy - housing and otherwise With prices as much as $150,000 improving perception abQut it, will - and how it relates to the stat.e and less than the North County for fuel a record year for home sales. the Y!ation, was the topic of a similar product, the South Bay has Gin in contrast predict.ed sal University of San Diego Real Estat.e become the bastion for affordability, will be down, at least here, an Institut.e breakfast at the Llnda VISta but even with lower int.erest rates, prices will continue to climb. campus Wednesday. $300,000 homes remain out of "Things are not as good as they; "California is going to outperform reach for many. were here," he said. the rest ofthe nation, and San Diego As bad as it may be here, Like Appleton-Young, and Gin, is not only outperforming the U.S., Appleton-Young said it is still worse Duncan is deeply concerned about but the rest of the stat.e," said ~lie in Silicon Valley, where a couple the affordability problem, particu­ Appleton-Young, the Califorbia making a combined $105,000 a larly in San Diego - regularly the Association of Realtors' chief econo­ year is living in a homeless shelt.er. least affordable area in Southern mist. Appleton-Young was quick tQ California. The B_ay area continues to be hit point out that this is the aberration Also troubling is the fact that hard, but Appleton-Young said rather than the norm, and there is national mortgage delinquencies, regardless of where you live in the still some wealth out there. which had been at a 28-year low, state, "the high-end market has "Believe it or not, a lot of families have started to creep back up. pretty much-ground to a halt." · didn't put everything they have in Coupled with nonmortgage debt, ''All those purchases that were the stock market," said Appleton- · that could, Duncan warns, present a being driven by IPO funny money Young. "They have a good job and real problem for the country. aren't there anymore," Appleton­ they want a home.:" Still, Duncan said people will con­ Young said. Appleton-Young said about 59 tinue to buy new homes, though Upscale homes may stay longer percent of San Diego's families cur­ maybe not at the rapid pace of the on the market, but that hasn't rently own a home. While that isn't a 1990s. stopped people from building them, bad ratio, she said, it is about 10 points 'There were $2 trillion in mort­ which Appleton-Young said only behind the national average and is gage originations last year. This year underscores how San Diego County expected to get worse .over time. it is expected to be about $1.4 trillion is becoming less and less affordable'. Appleton-Young said some of this in production. While you might say Appleton-Young said the propor­ can be alleviat.ed by building more it was a huge drop, it still will be the tion of first-time homebuyers units so supply can begin to meet third biggest · year on record," statewide is the lowest it has been in demand. Statewide, she said this Duncan said 10 years. The affordability ratio has means 200,000 to 250,000 housing bibe upits annually, rather than the Source Code: Forum: Lack of Homes SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA urba~an~~~er WEEKLY 20 , 000 F~~~5?~?~., which is DEC 24 2001 investing more in the stock market, Hosts Fifth Annual why many people have refinanced their home loans. Economic Forecast Duncan said 2001 will end with a record There is a healthy level of home sales ac­ number of new home sales because of low tivity in California, but a lack of affordable interest rates. However, he predicted a 6 per­ housing will limit job and economic growth. cent decrease in new home starts next year. That warning was issued by Leslie Mortgage origination in 2001 totaled a Appleton-Young, vice president and chief record $2 trillion in the . Duncan economist for the California Association of predicted only $1.4 trillion in 2002, but noted Realtors, at the second annual Residential Real that amount would still be the third best year Estate Conference: Outlook 2002, hosted by on record. the University of San Diego's Real Estate ... Institute. The forum was held Dec. 12 on the ULI Forecast: The San Diego chapter of university's campus. the Urban Land Institute is hosting its fifth The number of annual economic fore­ affordable housing cast on Jan. 10. units is deteriorat­ The 7:30 to 9:45 ing faster in Cali­ a.m. event will take fornia than in any Real place at the Double­ other state, Apple­ ESTATE tree San Diego hotel ton-Young said. at Hazard Center. The New construc­ Mandy moderator will be Ted tion may mean Jackson Owen, publisher and 150,000 new homes president of the San in California in Staff Writer Diego Business Jour- 2001, but more than nal. Panelists will be 200,000 are needed, Lynn Sedway, presi­ Appleton-Young said. dent of the Sedwiiy Group, and Steve Blank, "A lot of the new construction you're see­ senior fellow of the ULI. ing is addressing the high-end need and not The cost is $40 for members and $50 for addressing affordability," she said. nonmembers until Jan. 7; add $10 to the price However, Appleton-Young said, "Califor­ after that date. For information, call (619) nia is going to outperform the rest of the 233-4706 or e-mail [email protected]. nation in terms of the recession, except for a few markets. San Diego is also outperforming Real Estate 2002: Beverly Hills-based Real the rest of the state." Estate Conference Group is hosting Real Es­ Appleton-Young noted home-sale prices in tate 2002, during which executives from more Southern California are either flat or have than 40 commercial real estate companies increased 6 to 9 percent over 2000. In the Bay throughout the United States will give their Area, prices have decreased 20 to 30 percent. outlook for the industry in 2002 in California In San Diego County, the number of sales and the rest of tqe country. in 2001 is about the same as 2000, according The conferen e will run from 7 a.m. to to CAR statistics. The median time on the 6:30 p.m. on J . 16 at the Century Plaza market is 27.2 days. Hotel in Los An eles. The cost is $275 on or The median home price in San Diego before Jan. 5 an $315 after. County as of October 200 l is $294,250, com­ To register o for information call (310) pared to $279,060 in October 2000. 271-1276, fax (310) 271-1996, or go to About 59 percent of San Diego County's (www.realestate utlook.com). population owns a home, which is about 10 ... percent lower than the national average. For 2002, CAR predicts 1.9 percent job growth in California, 1.7 percent population growth, a 2 percent decrease in the number of homes sales, and a 6 percent increase in the l median home price. CAR is predicting a slow first half and a j stronger second half in 2002. Douglas Duncan, senior vice president and chief economist for Mortgage Bankers Asso­ ciation of America in Washington, D.C., told the crowd of 300-plus a..!..!:&!?. that real estate is the one sector that has held up well in the country's recession. According to Duncan, property prices have appreciated about 30 percent over the last 11 five years in the United States. SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 458,527 DEC 2 2001

Illllllll 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle'S ,,,,,.o••AT1D• su,11,c«s 5800 QN ,UHi 25 ·•· .. n S.e~on's meetings ""l. .e .it's not certain. if. the pan- elists will bring tidings of joy, Wthis season's annual spate of re­ al estate forecasts is about to begin. On Friday, the local chapter of the In­ stitute of Real Estate Management pre­ sents its 14th annual economic forecast breakfast from 7 to 9:30 a.m. at the San Diego Convention Center. The program features economists Arthur Laffer and Rocky Tarantella, and Julie Meier-Wright, president of the San Diego Regional Economic De­ velopment Corp. Radio talk-show host Roger Hedgecock will moderate. For more information, call (619) 209- 2997 or register online at www:iremsd.org. Cost is $55. On Dec. 12, the University of San Diego's Real Estate Institute will hold its Residential Real Estate Conference: Outlook 2002 at the Hahn University Center from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Participants include Douglas Dun­ can, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association of America, Leslie Appleton-Young, chief economist of the California Association of Realtors, and USD Economics Professor Alan Gin. For more information, call (619) 260- 2256. Cost is $65. -C LLARSEN

12 ESTATE SAN DIEGO BUSINESS I San Diego REAL JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA to WEEKLY 20,000 ·s {;IhllittSeeks Clues DEC 3 2001 111111111111111111111 llllll 111111111111111111111111111111111 R.E. Market's Future Gin, economics profes­ X HB tion of Realtors; Alan • 5978 BurreJJe•111,0HuT1011 su~1cn bc .. . b a panel of USD economics exzw .e 25 USD's Real Estate sor at USD; and Residential professor Joan Anderson's students. Institute Hosts The cost is $65 per person. For information Institute at Outlook or to register, call the Real Estate Real Estate (realestate.san­ of (619) 260-2256 or go to The San Diego chapter of the Institute local com­ diego.edu). Real Estate Management wants the Up to mercial real estate industry to "Wake Where the Market's Headed." annual That's the title of the local IREM's will of­ market forecast breakfast, where experts in 2002. fer some predictions for local real estate on Friday, The event will be from 7-9:30 a.m. Center. Dec. 7 at the San Diego Convention Hedgecock KOGO-AM talk show host Roger will moderate the panel discussion. The panel of eco­ nomic and real es­ tate experts will in­ clude Arthur Laffer, founder and chair­ Real man of Laffer As­ ESTATE sociates of San Di­ ego, and a founding Mandy member of the U.S. Jackson Poli­ Congressional Sta.ff Writer cy Advisory Board; Rocky Tarantello, president of New­ Associates, a port Beach-based Tarantella & transaction real estate investment, finance and Wright, services company; and Julie Meier Regional president and CEO of the San Diego Economic Development Corp. person, The cost of the event is $55 per or $65 at the door. For infor­ pre-registered, or mation or to register call (619) 209-2997, go to (www.iremsd.org). o( Residential Outlook: The University will host its San Diego's Real Estate Institute Estate Con­ second annual Residential Real ference: Outlook 2002. The event will begin with a continental and the con­ breakfast and check-in at 8 a.m., a.m. Dec. ference will take place from 8:30-11 at USD. 12 at the Hahn University Center , se­ The speakers include Douglas Duncan for nior vice president and chief economist of America; the Mortgage Bankers Association and Leslie Appleton-Young, vice president Associa- chief economist with the California

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Attorney Louis Galuppo, who teaches real estate courses at USD, finds the classroom a nice transition from work. (photo/lambertphoto.com)

. 14 f you really think you know a subject, try to book- but it was old," she says. She researched to teach it," advises Roger Mandel, a business sys­ update the text material and first taught the course tems analyst consultant working with Spawar this fall. (Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command). Chapman Urnversity instructor Gary Brenner IGraduate business program adjuncts like Mandel began teaching while in the Air Force. He later - an instructor for the Keller Graduate School of earned an MBA and came to Califorrna to attend law Management - generally work full time in occupa­ school. "I got hooked on teaching - I wanted to tions ranging from strategic management to the law. teach part time," he says. A business attorney whose They teach part time and draw upon their experience area of law includes acquisitions, mergers, sales and to provide depth to course materials like textbooks. incorporation and partnerships, Brennan has been "Taking the value of real-world experience and teaching for 19 years. allowing a faculty to relate that to the theories taught At Chapman, Brenner teaches business-related from academia is where the real learrung takes courses like accounting and economics. "Lots of place," says Bruce Williams, Urnversity of Phoernx times when clients call, it's more about business vice president and director of San Diego campuses. (than law) - licenses, international transactions, In addition to bringing work experience into the employment and breach of contract," says Brenner. classroom, instructors find that teaching provides "It all has a direct application to class. Bankruptcy, off-campus career benefits. "When you teach, you're Chapter 11 issues - I've been there, representing always learning," says Mandel, who recently taught clients on the other side. I tell students, 'There isn't project management at Keller. In the classroom, he anytrung here you won't use."' regards students as his customers. At the start of a Brenner also learns from rus students. Because of course, these customers fill out questionnaires so that teaching, "I'm a better attorney, a better person," he Mandel can structure classes to meet their needs. says. "No matter how tough my day is, I get Mandel's involvement in teaching started on the recharged (in the classroom). Students generally job. Wrule in civil service, he taught Navy courses. work full time, have families and are in class. They He enjoyed the rrnx of working in business and the \ hunger for knowledge, and it gives me energy and classroom, so Mandel earned a teaching certificate enthusiasm." from San Diego State University. He also has a grad- Attorney Louis Galuppo's teaching started with a seminar he gave at his alma mater, California uate degree in orgarnzational management from ~e Western School of Law. He spoke about bow to be a University of Phoernx. Mandel went from teacrung sole practitioner. "I enjoyed mentoring rather than business courses like PowerPoint at East County lecturing. I thought it's not a bad way to earn a liv­ ( commuruty colleges to assisting at Keller in 199'.. ing," says Galuppo. That thought was reinforced by National University instructor Noel Haskins­ the fact rus wife, Kati, is a teacher. She taught at the Hafer knows that teaching enhances career opportu­ Sumrrnt School, a county court campus for at-risk rnties. After moving to the San Diego area in the mid- students. She persuaded her husband to coach a 1990s, Haskins-Hafer found a need for educators mock trial. with MBAs. She had a graduate business degree and computer experience. However, the campus w~ted "I thought maybe it's time to give something an instructor to teach computer security. So Haskins­ back," says Galuppo, who has taught at the Hafer researched the topic and ended up teaching it Urnversity of San Diego since 1998. He teaches a for 13 semesters. graduate course in real estate law with a land-use per­ "I constantly pick up new ideas and skills," says spective and an undergraduate course about the legal Haskins-Hafer, who worked until Oct. 31 as a con­ aspects of real estate. sultant at SRA International. She served as a systems Galuppo finds the classroom a nice transition requirements analyst for Spawar until that contract from work. ended but teaching could again lead to employment. "The practice of law is very grueling day-to-day," "My ~revious job I found through a student," says he says. "I re-examine an issue or a particular legal Haskins-Hafer. She was wrapping up work on a Y2K theory as a lawyer and a (former) real estate profes­ contract when the student asked for a job recommen­ sional," says Galuppo. ''They come out understand­ dation. They discussed the job, and Haskins-Hafer ing what the law is about. 'If you do trus in this case ended up working for the company too._ Ano~er and breach that contract, it will cost X amount of dol­ time a student impressed with her teacrung skills lars and cause this."' took' Haskins-Hafer's resume to National Urnversity. Not only legal professionals enjoy the transition Haskins-Hafer developed a data warehouse man­ from the workplace to the classroom. agement course for National's e-commerce program. "Sometimes it's a welcome break," says Mary "I looked at the textbook- it was a wonderful Ellen Dellefield, clirncal program manager of nurs­ ing at the Veterans Admirustration Hospital. She's see MBA page 24

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SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA MONDAY 10,500 DEC 3 2001

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Commercial real the local region was during the there for speculatiYc real estate," estate market helps last downturn in the early aid John Ferber, associate direc­ 1990s. tor for commercial real estate at local economy --4 54 They hold a number of reasons the Real Estate Institute at the weather recessio for this belief, including a diversi­ UniYersitY of San Diego. n fied economy, an increase in The stability of the market. par­ Nov. 26, 2001 defense spending here and con­ ticularly on the supply side. \\·hich As the nation's economy slides tinued investment in local busi­ is Yastly different from a decade in to recession, by the classical nesses. They also point to one ago, created a protectiw barrier of definition at least, market ana­ important sector, the local com­ sorts around San Diego. So, while lysts here don't believe the San mercial real estate market. Yacancy rates in other parts of Diego region will be hit as hard "Unlike the late '80s, early '90s, California climb as high as 30 as the rest of the country, or as where we had an oversupply (of percent, as in Silicon Valley, real commercial space), we're not estate investors, local commercial experiencing that now because we brokers and analysts here belieYe just didn't see the (desire) out San Diego is in a better position than other regions. Source Code: 20011121tba

18 SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT Economic indicators down SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 10,500 DEC 13 2001 for ninth consecutive month IC, I-'

111111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 By TIM COFFEY fRONT PAG nough to offset the negative San D,_ego Daily Transcnpt components. Negative growth Thr~e of six key components in was led by monthly unemploy­ San Diego's economy declined in ment claims, which soared to the October, leading the monthly highest level since July 1997. Index of Economic Indicators The even split by the coinpo­ down for the ninth consecutive nents indicated that "any weak­ month._ ness in San Diego's economy in The mdex was forced down by the months ahead will be rela­ declines in approved building tively mild," Gin said. "The ~e~its and help w~ted adver- outlook remains for some rough tISmg, and a sharp mcrease in spots in the local economy unemployment claims. through the first half of 2002 and The index has posted one a resumption of moderate growth month of positive growth since starting sometime next summer." October 2000 and now stands at Although Gin's views of the 137.2 points, compared to 148.3 local economy seem optimistic in points last year, according to Alan the midst of a national recession ( >Gin, an economics professor with a vital pmt of San Diego's stabilify the U9iversity of San Di~o, who - low unemployment - showed tracks the index. Gin released his continued weakness. findings Wednesday. More than 17,000 cpunty resi- For the first time since dents filed for unemployment February, the six components benefits in October, Gin said. were ~plit: A:iide from the three Local \lllemployment was led by ~egatlve 1_nd1cators, ther~ were the seasonal downsizing ofjobs at mcreases m the stock pnces of amusement attractions, down 4.9 local companies, and San Diego's percent, and by the impact of the outlook on the national economy Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on air and consumer confidence. transportation, down 3.2 percent. However, the positive growth of · / those three components was not See Economic Indicators on SA

Economic Indicators Continued From Page 1A elfce an inordinate number of positive, as was the outlook on the In October, the state's approved single-family housing national economy, despite a Employment Development permits compared to approved downward revision in the gross Department said the unemploy­ permits for apartments and domestic product. to -I.I percent ment rate grew to 3.5 percent, up condos. from -0.4 percent in the third marginally from September, but' The number of approved multi­ quarter. much higher than the 2.9 percent tenant housing permits declined The miscalculation in in October 2000. · so much it couldn't offset the pos­ September's help wanted adver­ At the time of the release, itive growth of single-tenant tising pushed the monthly index EDD spokesperson Cheryl housing permits. Through down 0.9 percent instead of 0.5 Mason said_ unemployment October 2001 the number of percent, Gin said. would be higher, but that authorized housing permits Gin also discovered an incor­ employers decreased work hours remained lower than the same rect formula was used to calculate for all employees instead of period last year. the change in stock prices since firing some employees. An indication that the economy the beginning of the year. The most recent index also may be ready to rebound was the "When that was corrected, showed the level of help wanted sudden increase in local stock there was no change in the direc­ advertising decreased in October, pric_:es. After a decrease in the tion of the changes - except that the eighth consecutive monthly share price oflocal public compa­ January was positive instead of · decline. A miscalculation in nies following Sept. 11, the sector unchanged - although the mag­ September incorrectly showed an rebounded to close up 0.36 nitudes of the changes were increase in new job advertising percent in October. affected slightly," Gin said. for that month. The index also showed that tim.coffey@scl•u ~- San Diego continued to experi- local consumer confidence was Source Code: 2001 19 LOcal index ► ECONOMY CONTINUED FROM PAGE Cl l-) shows dip in Analyst expects moderate job market uptick here next summer come out tomorrow. Gin, who compiles the USD index, said he expects a But USD's findings moderate uptick in the San Diego economy to start next summer. One encouraging sign was that Octo­ hint of improvement ber's index was the first since February for which a majority of indicators didn't decline. By Thomas Kupper Among the indicators Gin looks at, positive signs for STAff WRITER ~ \S-11 the local economy included an increase in local stock prices, as markets A San Diego index of leading economic rebounded from Sept 11, and an increase indicators showed signs of a deteriorating in consumer confidence. job market in October, as tourism-related The Conference Board's national index of leading industries shed jobs after the Sept 11 terror indicators, another component in the USD index, also attacks. rose in October. The index, released yesterday by the - In addition to unemployment claims and employ­ Universi of San Die o, declined for the ment advertising, the index included a drop in building nin mon m a row - though signs of permits. Gin said more single-family homes were au­ economic decline were not as pervasive as thorized but there were fewer multifamily buildings they have been for much of the year. approved. An increase in initial unemployment claims and a drop in newspaper help-wanted advertising accounted for much of the de­ Thomas Kupper: (619) 293-1037; cline in the index, while three of the six [email protected] indicators improved. "The outlook remains for some rough spots in the local economy," said USD busi­ ('--- ) ness professor Alan Gin, though he said the __ positive indicators "may portend that any weakness in San Diego's economy in the months ahead will be relatively mild." By far the most negative indicator was an increase in initial unemployment claims during October. Some 17,500 people filed for unemployment in San Diego County, the SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE highest number since July 1997. In part, that reflected weakness in the SAN DIEGO, CA tourism industry, which cut more jobs than THURSDAY 372,&43 usual at this time of year after the Sept 11 DEC 13 2001 attacks. While cuts weren't as severe as some initially expected, airlines, hotels, res­ taurants and entertainment businesses em­ ployed 2,000 fewer people in October than the previous month. Even with those cutbacks, though, San Diego County's economy continues to·hold up better than most other places in the face of the national recession. The local unem­ ployment rate of 3.5 percent in October compared with a national rate of 5.4 percent · for October and 5.7 percent for November. While the national economy has lost jobs for several months - one measure of a recession - San Diego continued to add them through October. That is a big change from the early 1990s recession, when it took the region four years to recover its job losses. Local employment data for November 20 ~ SEE Economy, ca SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 20,000 DEC 3 2001

1111111111111111 IIIII IIIIII IIIII IIIII IIIII IIIII 1111111111111

1 •5978 ~- HB exzw .e 25 bc . . . b ' E?.PJlOmic Indicators Mirror National Figures \ ~ Diego's economy continued to falter who compiles the index, said the local num- in September, according to the latest...lli.ll_ bers mirror the national econ my, with weak­ Index of Leading Economic 1ndicators, which ness likely for the remainder of the year and showed a decrease for the eighth consecutive into the first half of 2002. On the national month. level, the gross domestic pro uct dropped 0.4 The index, a measurement of six different percent in the third quarter a d is expected to variables in the local economy, fell 0.5 per­ contract even more during fourth quarter, cent in September, fueled by declines in the according to the USD report local stock prices index and additional claims "This weakness will m nifest itself in for unemployment insurance. Building per­ slower job growth and a hi er local unem­ mits and the national economic index were ployment rate, which is likelx to hit 4 percent also down, but only slightly. sometime in the first half of 2002," Gin said. Two components were up for the month: "Look for a recovery in the n~tional economy consumer confidence and the help-wanted ads. and a return to robust grmyth in the local Alan Gin, the USD economics professor economy in the second half of 2002."

21

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N N N N SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO , CA FRIDAY 10,500 DEC 7 2001

11111111111 11 11111 11 111111111 1111111 11 111111 111 11111 11 111111 BurreJJe• 578 1•,a•aA¥1011 SEIWIC.~ X H B . uwde 25 be .... Galvin New Head eyors Lucy Galvin will be installed this month as the president of the San Diego chapter of the International Right of Way Association. Other officers include Kayla Carol as president-elect, ajjOn The Move ffl By Richard Spaulding

Carol Brooks as vice president, Bill Busch as treasurer and Chris Neumer as secretary. • • • Bill Ostrem has been named to the residential real estate commit­ tee of the Universi · 's Real Estate Institute. Ostrem is president and chief executive officer of The EastLake Company. Mark Riedy, professor of real estate at USD is director of the 20- member committee. • • •

23 SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS SAN ANTONIO, TX WEDNESDAY 235,002 NOV 28 2001

IIIIIIIII Ill lllllll II llllll lllll 1111111111111111111111111111

47g IV .xzng 37 ·•· . . n Converse's deal with ACCO ·still only a pledge

enough to sway a majority of Their optimism, specifically he said. "Those kinds of things City hasn't ACCD board members, who vot- • for the Converse site, is based on don't generate much spinofI ac­ ed 54 last month to negotiate the a build-it-and-they-will-come tivity." committed purchase of a 125-acre site along mentality. If ACCD builds the The campus may attract book­ a two-lane stretch of Loop 1604. campus, traffic will increase, and stores, convenience stores and ACCD staff is expected to an­ that in turn will accelerate the fast-food restaurants, but "it's a any money nounce the final land deal at its widening of Loop 1604. sparse area," said Don Kirkland, board meeting tonight. Once that happens, businesses assistant city manager for Con­ BY LUCY HOOD "I have to take them at their will clamor for a prime piece of verse. EXPRESS-NEWS STAFF WRITER word, and believe they are sin­ real· estate along a new and im­ The 125-acre site by the Cop­ cere," ACCD board Chairman proved Loop 1604, Converse perfield subdivision is home to a A pledge of support from the Robert "Tinker" Garza said of Councilman Billy Schindler said. planned development that never city of Converse was a decisive the Converse resolution. "It would take something like took off. The land is owned, factor_/ or Alamo Community "They would not put a dollar a community college to get (the ACCD officials saY, by politically Colleg~ District trustees who vot­ amount on anything," he con­ state's) attention," he •said_ "And high-profile developer Rick Shel­ ed to put a new campus in the ceded, "but once we build, if they once 1604 is widened, I see it as don. city's back yard. can loan a hand, they will, and opening up business interests It opens on a nearly deserted But in terms of dollars and they rule committed." along that area." two-lane stretch of Loop 1604 cents, Converse has committed Garza was among, the five But community colleges are along the Salitrillo Creek flood nothing to the multimillion-dol­ board members who chose the not necessarily considered a big plain and is surrounded by two lar endeavor. · Converse site, pitting themselves draw for businesses, according to housing developments and a The City Council passed a res­ against four other trustees who Mark RiedY, director of ~ Real wastewater treatment plant. olution saying it will "strongly preferred a more centrally lo­ Estate Institute at the .u~ Across the road behind the support" an ACCD campus and cated site on Toepperwein Road. of San Di1¥0, sewf!r plant lies Judson High will consider a long list of incen­ Converse Mayor Craig Martin Community colleges are 1 School, known throughout Texas tives, including fee waivers, and City Council members have signed for adult education Converse Judson, the school street construction and a lobby­ been avid supporters of a North­ they're taking freshman t has won five state football ti­ ing effort on its part to acceler­ east campus, and the city is the sophomores to bring them up in the past 18 years. ate the widening of Loop 1604. only one in the area to go as far speed and make them eligible t That gesture proved to be as issrup.g a resolution. transfer to a four-year college," I )

24 Converse support for ACCD campus The Converse City Council passed a resolution saying it would 'strongly support' an Alamo Community College District campus in the city of Converse.and would consider the following incentives once ACCD chooses to lpcate within the city limits: W/\fYING FEES FOR: ■ 1/(tater acquisition ■ Water impact Water tap and connection ■ Bu· Ing permits ■ r'la ·ng CON SfRUCTION PROJECTS TO: Extend water mains as necessary to support campus construction and op~rations ■ Extend sewer mains as necessary to support campus construction and operations · ■ Extend non-potable water mains as necessary to support campus irri9ation ■ Provide non-potable water for campus irrigation Judson High School in Converse serves more than 4,000 students. If ■ Construct streets to support the its nine water meters were installed campus today, they would cost at least if Gr,;m~ eminent domain, $161,825. , necess'ary, to provide access to the meters: $4,564 campus from Thorton Lane though Installation of the the San Antonio River Authority Tapping fees: $7,600 property Water impact fees: $149,661 effort to move the ■ Concerted *The tabulations are based on current for widening of Loop 1604 priority fees, but do not include the cost for two five-year priority list up to the of the larger meters, which are EST.COST OF $750,000to determined based on the cost of hiring ALL JNCENTIVES $1 rgillion contractors to do the work. EXPRESS-NEWS GRAPHIC I\

25 SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 10,500 DEC 11 2001

11111111111111111111111111I 111111111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJes 578 J11Fotu,ur10,d € llVtCCS X GH txzwde 25 be .. , . Sumhiit discusses tough times _.\t the UniYersity of San .Diego Jan. 11. local busi­ ness and indust1~· leaders "ill di, n1-s \\'ays companies can prepare for tough financial times and a turbulent economy after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The Lead Together Through Tough Times ·western Summit "ill include more than 20 experts in his or her field of' finance. ecurity. leadership team building. recowr:·­ corporate turnaround and rapid response. Dallas Jones. the director of the California GO\·ernor·s Office of Emergenc:· Senices and chair­ man of the California Emergenc:· Council. the Gowrnor·s School \ ·iolence PrewntiQn and Response Task Force and the State Standing Comnuttec on Terrorism. Jones is actiw in national emergcnc:· respon e and recowr:· planning. and is a member of the Gilmore Commission. · a congre,sionall:· estab­ lished ad,iso1~· panel. examining the nation·s cmer­ gency response capabilities for terrorism. For more information and registration. log onto "''"''"·leadto0 ·ether.co111. Source Code: 20011210tla

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V1:? Terri lsJael was recently named sales STANDARD and marketing specialist for BOSTON , MA ProMutual 46 - TIMES/YEAR 5,000 Group, the lead­ DEC 14 2001 ing provider of medical malprac­ tice insurance in the Northeast.

Israel will be re­ sponsible for marketing functions in Massachu­ setts.

Israel obtained a bachelor's degree from Memphis State University and a master's degree from the }Jniver­ sit of San Die o. She has more than seven years of experience in the in­ surance industry and has previously worked for MAG Mutual Insurance Co. and Southern California Physi­ cians Insurance Exchange.

ProMutual Group provides medical professional liability insurance cover­ age to nearly 12,000 physicians,

surgeons and dentists as well as hun- / dreds of hospitals, health centers and clinics. The group's companies oper­ ate in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode Island and Vermont. □

28 SCHOOL OF LAW SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 372,843 DEC 14 2001

I11111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJe's SID t#,olfMArlO# s,u,~1cn QN .xznt 25 ., .. . x Paul Wohlmuth, 63; USD law professor who set up institute V, .,....u / . By Jack WIiiiams cations director for the USD tional Science Foundation STAff WRITER School of Law. The nature of grant for a multimedia 1,roject the illness was not disclosed. called "Infrastructure." Paul C. Wohhnuth had a pas­ A Point Loma resident at the In 1993, Wohhnuth served as sion for ideas that transcended time of his death, Wohhnuth faculty editor of USD's Journal the parameters of a college law joined the USD faculty in the of Contemporary Legal Issues. classroom and fall of 1975. The courses he Colleagues and students re­ added dimen­ taught over the years included garded him as inquisitive, sion to his contracts, constitutional law, eclectic and demanding ofhim­ teaching. negotiation, professional re- self and others, Decker said. As a profes­ sponsibility and jurisprudence. "His passion for ideas - in- sor of law at "While his core teaching deed, the very big ideas - and the University. subject was contracts, Paul's in- his indefatigable commitment of San Diego, tellectual interests and teach- to understanding how the he founded ing responsibilities spanned world works, are what his col­ directed will best remember and Paule. much of the curriculum," Ro- leagues the Institute of Wohlmuth driguez said. about him," Rodriguez said. Law and Wohlmuth and his col- Born in Philadelphia, Wohl- Systems Research to explore leagues at the Institute for Law muth graduated from the Uni­ the impact of legal rules, struc­ and Systems Research recently versity of Pennsylvania in 1960. tures and theories on a com­ served as co-hosts of the Mil- He earned his law degree at plex world. lennial World Congress of the Yale University in 1963. "Paul was a law teacher of Sciences in Toronto. Before joining the USD facul­ scope," Systems uncommon range and conference, he delivered ty, he taught at the University dean At the said Daniel B. Rodriguez, an address that was scheduled of Toledo and the Wharton of the USD School of Law. in Understand- School at the University of a 26- to be published Professor Wohhnuth, the commemo- Pennsylvania the USD faculty, ing Complexity, year veteran of He also had been a visiting of natural causes Nov. 30 rative volume of the congress. died at in a San Diego hospital. He was With his institute colleagues, professor during his career of Kent in Eng­ 63. many of them behavioral scien- the University He taught his last class, first­ . tists, he studied human activity land. year contracts, before becom­ patterns and applied them to Survivors include his com- ing ill the week of Thanksgiv­ workplace health and safety_ panion, Alice Anda. ing, said George Decker, publi- regulations. He received a Nif- No services were scheduled.

29 HONOLULU ADVERTISER HONOLULU, HI TUESDAY 104,960 DEC 4 2001

Illllllll llll lllll lllll llll llll lllll lllll llllll 1111111111111

6 BUf.I.~1.!'l.'!i! xz l .uni 71 XX •.. b ~ Senate confirins U.S. attorney ~\64 • From 1980 to 1990, Kubo was a fighting. gradu- Ed Kubo Jr. enJoyed d~Honolulucityp~. The Honolulu native is a nominated Kubo ate of the University of San Diego. R bli rt President Bush by epu can SUppO in Septemb~r to r~plac~ Steven His nomination was supported Alm, who ~gned m Ap?1- Alm,_ a many local Republicam. Dem~~~at, 1s. n~w a Judge m •Toe president made a good By Curtis Lum lot f Hawai'i s 1st Circuit cha" • minating" him. A 0 ADVERTISER STAFP WRml Kubo could not be reached for u:e m no . . names ~ent m to the pres1den~ of Honolulu at• commentyesterday. The nomination ~ I.. ~ Ed was velY well quali• Kubo Jr. as U.S. attorney Kubo has handled many high- tomey Ed cases as a prosecutor during fied, said state Rep. Barbara Hawai'i was unanimously con­ profile for been in- Marumoto, R-17th (Kabala, Wai­ last week. the past 21 years. He has firmed by the Senate "alae lki). Marumoto served as 47, is a career proseaitor volved in crackdowris on ~ Kubo, campaign ~hair- ~ as asmstant U.S. at­ parlors, aystal melliamphetamine Bush's Hawai. "'i and has setved woman. . torney in Honolulu since 1990. Jabs and murders, as well as cock· ·.•

30 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE A SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 372,043 DEC 7 2001 Palestinian state and chances for peace0 V )V By Michael Rappaport To begin with, the mere establishment tactics are standard operating proce­ of a Palestinian state cannot be expected dures for maintaining power in many s Secretary of State Colin Powell's to significantly improve conditions for Arab states. recent speech on the Middle East Palestinians. Based on the behavior of While the establishment of an inde­ A makes clear, the United States is the Palestinian Authority and other Arab pendent Palestinian state would not create once again pressuring Israel to reach an states in the region, we can confidently the conditions for peace, it would enhance agreement with Yasser Arafat establish­ predict a Palestinian state would be an the Palestinian's ability to wage war. The ing a Palestinian state. After the disas­ authoritarian regime, lacking democracy Palestinian state would not only have a trous results of President Clinton's and other political freedoms, and at best police force, but an army. It would pre­ efforts in this area, including an intifada would be run by a "moderate" strong­ sumably no longer be subject to Israeli highlighted by repeated acts of terror­ man like Yasser Arafat or Hosni supervision. When terrorism emanated ism, one might question the wisdom of Mubarak. from Palestine, it would be more difficult this strategy. We can also predict that it would be a for Israel to respond militarily, since its Defenders of this approach counter, poor country without the basic precondi­ actions would be viewed as invasions of a however, that circumstances have tions for wealth - free markets, the rule foreign country rather than as the super­ changed. The Palestinians will be more of law and government accountability. vision of occupied territory. receptive to an agreement now, because Finally, a Palestinian state would have a There is, however, a way that the their use of terrorism has weakened significant minority of Islamic extremists, United States could support peace, dem­ their bargaining position. An agreement and there would always be a risk that ocratic capitalism, and a Palestinian state. is also more important at this time, since they would seize power. America should condition its support of a it is needed for the coalition against ter­ There is also little doubt that most Palestinian state on a Palestinian commit­ rorism. Palestinians would continue to despise ment to democratic capitalism that is du­ Finally, the United States is now pursu­ Israel, since virtually all of the sources of ficult to reverse. The United States ing a more balanced approach that their hostility would persist Palestine should insist that such a state be formed allows Israel additional freedom to com­ would be poor and Mu lim; Israel would only after a five-year period in which the bat terrorism. Thus, after the escalation be rich and primarily Jewish. To the Palestinians have held free elections and of Palestinian terrorism over this past Palestinians, Israel would still represent a established the beginnings of a market weekend, the Bush administration Western imperialist creation occupying economy governed by the rule of law. If appears to have given Israel a green light the bulk of their land. Israel, no doubt, these conditions were met, there would to retaliate. would also have at least joint control over at least be a possibility that the new Although advocates of pressuring the Temple Mount, denying to the nation would promote peace and the gen­ Israel may be right that an agreement is Palestinians their role as exclusive custo­ uine interests of the Palestinian people. now possible, they are surely mistaken dians of an Islamic holy site. For the ordi­ Of course, they may be little chance that it would further Middle Eastern nary Palestinian, then, the creation of a that Arafat would accept this proposal, peace and the fight against terrorism. Palestinian state would mean mainly that but all that means is that it is unlikely Unless there are dramatic changes made they are ruled exclusively by unelected that the United States can broker a peace in Palestinian society, a Palestinian state Palestinian leaders rather than by both deal in the near future that actually would do little to address the Palestinian unelected Palestinian and Israeli leaders. results in peace. Nonetheless, if the people's grievances and only enhance The Palestinian government would United States stands firm on its princi­ their ability to wage war against Israel. also have an incentive to nourish this ani­ ples, it can avoid aggravating matters and The only way that the establishment of a mosity toward Israel. To deflect responsi­ increase the chance that one day the Palestinian state would increase the bility for poor conditions at home, the Palestinians will accept these terms. chances for peace is if the United States government could use its media to place In words and deeds, President Bush uses its leverage to induce the the blame on an external enemy. Even has often shown that he understands the Palestinians to adopt the institutions of more ominously, Yasser Arafat could unique accomplishments of the demo­ democratic capitalism. turn a blind eye toward Islamic extrem­ cratic capitalism that is America's great­ ists who might practice terrorism from est achievement and should be its most within Palestine's borders - in important export. His policy toward Rappaport is a professor of law at the Universitx exchange for the extremists refraining Israel and the Palestinians should reflect of San Diego. _ __,,,. · from attacking the government These that understanding as well. 31 Abuses by Plaintiffs WEDNESDAY, 17200 of ' ' EMBER 26, 2001· The broadly worded Section and Professions Code VOL. 114 NO. 251 the Business eEL.ES allows anyone to bring an action on behalf of the general public for unfair business practices such as consumer $2.50 fraud and false advertising. The ·statute has an advantage over class actions because plaintiffs do not have to undergo Eye the arduous process of certifying a class lawmakers to proceed with the litigation. In 1996, the independent California Initiative Process I.aw Revision Commission recommend• ed changes to the unfair competition law ~ p~otect defendants against repeated lit• For Tort Reform igation and to curb what critics perceive as abuses by plaintiffs and their lawyers. But the proposals failed. Sullivan said some lawyers have used Trial Lawyers Fight" the statute to generate fees through suits wi!hout obtaining clients and without any Move to Curb Claims evidence of harm to the public. The tort .reform group says it has been tracking Competition .such claims for four years. Of Unfair Examples of alleged abuses include a pet food company that was sued after it accidentally sold contaminated pet food. 'Territorial Battles' The company spent $3. 7 million in a recall campaign, reimbursed customers for veterinary expenses and reimbursed distnoutors ·for their expenses. An appel- By Linda Rapattonl Daily Journal Staff Writer See Page 8 - TORT SACRAMENTO - A tort reform group that repeatedly has failed in its leg­ islative efforts to narrow the state's unfair competition law is considering an appeal ' to the people through a ballot initiative in 2004. March Los Angeles Daily Journal H the Civil Justice Association of Cali­ 26, 2001 fornia decides to push ahead with its , December plans, the group probably would begin : collecting signatures from registered vot- ·: ers late next year to qualify for the ballot association President John Sullivan said. SAN FRANCISCO DAILY "Nobody should get ·away with sa~· , JOURNAL we are trying to cripple this law," Sullivan:­ "Businesses need to use it to protect· SAN FRANCISCO , CA said. 6,000 against shady operators. We are trying ~ WEDNESDAY stop a certain segment of lawyers ouJ: • DEC 19 2001 there who are legally trying to extort set--: tlements out of people." : :,,. Researching Options Sullivan said his group would conduct· polls and focus groups to determine whether the measure has a chance of success. "It's not practical to do this in the com­ ing year, and we want to do a very good job researching the options and viability," he said. "We don't want to be rushed" Previous legislative attempts have died in the state Senate aiid .Assembly judicia-~ - · ry committees because of the influence of trial lawyers, Sullivan said.

32 Tort Reformers Hope to Curb Unfair-Competition Lawsuits actions Continued from Pace 1 ments and to bar subsequent against the same defendant Caldera's, late court dismissed the suit however, would not have applied to was Another case cited by the group nonprofit groups. of chil­ brought against the maker Assemblyman Robert Pacheco, R­ the dren's wading pools for saying Riverside, sponsored AB2186 in 2000, in diameter pools were 64 inches which would have blocked lawyers when they sometimes were 60 inches. bringing unfair competition suits rec­ from The law-revision commission unless they had a bona fide client who be required ommended that plaintiffs had been injured. Last year, Sen. Dick to adequately represent" the general R-Fullerton, introduced of Ackerman, public's interest with no conflict which would have prevented notify­ SBl~, interest It also recommended lawyers from repeatedly suing a defen­ of any Section ing· state prosecutors dant over the same issue. 17200 actions and proposed judg­ Union supported the hear­ Consumers ments and requiring a fairness hearing requirement in is in fairness ing to ensure that the judgment Kopp'sbill public. The the interest of the general thought it was a sensible way to a ban on "We commission also supported this argument," Hillebrand the same address subsequent actions against said defendant. She said she doubts voters would Attorneys of California Consumer approve a ballot initiative that advocat­ legislation, saying the opposed the ed major changes to Section 17200. statute does not need revision. to me the general public to cur­ "It seems -nte courts have the power need for enforce­ said understands the tail those cases that are frivolous," said. "What we have Calcagnie ment," Hillebrand Sharon Arkin of Robinson, but not enough of who is is very high quality & Robinson of Newport Beach, right of action is of the con­ it. And a private secretary and a member to plug that hole." group's board of gov­ designed sumer-attorneys was critical of the tort reform [Section] 128.5 of the Arkin ernors. "Under group. ( Civil Procedure, they have _the Code of "They are trying to protect busi­ to weed out, punish and sanc­ power nesses that are operating unfairly," tion attorneys who bring frivolous Arkin said. -ntat's something the pub­ suits to court" lic dislikes as much as they dislike Moreover, Arkin said, the courts lawyers." determine whether attorney fees must However, Sullivan said the public should be granted and must make understands the basic concept of a law them commensurate with the public being ab11sed by lawyers who don't benefit a client and who "aren't address­ Hillebrand, a lobbyist for Con­ have Gail real wrongdoing." Union of United States, said ing any sumers something people would don't always see a direct "That's consumers and they don't want their from unfair competition suits. understand, benefit being used in that way," -nte part people don't always see, legal system . primary benefit to consumers, Sullivan said and the a law professor at for the rest of the indus­ Robert Fellmeth, is deterrence San Diego who said. "And it's hard to the University of try," Hillebrand and helped that because that's the hann helped write Section 17200 quantify Commission's ocarr. The most significant draft the Law Revision that didn't , faulted both the benefit for the consumer will be a recommendations [by the business.]" trial lawyers and tort reformers. change in practice Fell­ have made numerous "They've been overreaching," Lawmakers tort reformers' to narrow the law, including meth said about the attempts efforts. "The in 1997: SB1309 by Sen. unsuccessful legislative three bills improved Mountjoy; SB143 by Sen. system could be largely Richard . It's so Kopp (containing the Law without anyone losing ground Quentin many people in Commission recommenda­ very frustrating. So Revision are into tions); and AB1295 by Assemblyman [political action committees] . They don't Caldera. fighting territorial battles Louis that" Both Caldera's and Mountjoy's mea­ think of anything beyond sures would have required plaintiffs to e-mail address prove actual or threatened· harm, tcr · ■ Linda Rapattoni's _rapatt9f)i~dailyjoumal.com. comply with class certific_:ation re~e-.. 1s l(~a . ·>I .-.• · 'if't>. .. • h .....-. I ,'f°Y, ., ..... · ' ' •.1 -~ 1,; ....i ~ -J ·. 1.1 :~ ~WV 4,.__ -(

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. ( ( SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO , CA MONDAY 10 , 500 DEC 10 2001

ob Caietti graduated fro'!' USD ~ hoot of Law in 1985. After nine years as a partner ~t Ba local medium sized firm, Bob opened his office where he concentrates his practice in the ­ areas of employment law/litigation, business lit igation, insurance law and personal injury. Bob has tried in excess of 25 cases, and in zooo,became a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates.

Proceed with Ca tion: Classifying Employees as Exe pt Vs. Non-Exempt ful­ mance of exempt duties are unequivocally A $90 million jury verdict against filled. Farmers Insurance Exchange and settlements Requirement of $25 million, $13 million, and $7.5 million paid Compensation These fig­ by Rite Aid, Taco Bell, and U-Haul. The most prevalent exempt classifica­ class action litiga­ ures represent outcomes of tions are executive, administrative and profes­ compensa­ tion for overtime pay and related sional. All three exemptions have a minimum employees alleg­ tion brought by non-exempt compensation requirement, which is a month­ as exempt. Since ing they were misclassified ly salary, double the minimum wage. Because laws favor the California's wage and hour the minimum wage will increase to $6.75 from that litigation employees, it is expected $6.25 an hour as of January 1, 2002, an execu­ of employees regarding the misclassification tive, administrative or professional employer It is important for as exempt will proliferate. will need to earn $2,340 a month, which trans­ their employees as employers to properly classify lates to $28,080 annually in order to qualify or non-exempt, and at the outset as exempt exempt. If the employee is classified as exempt for an exemption, as know the requirements but earns less than the minimum compensa­ assessed on an ongo­ classifications should be tion required, he or she is non-exempt. ing basis. Although non-exempt employees are Orders The Wage paid for hours worked, an exempt employee's circum­ In California, the Industrial Welfare salary can only be reduced in limited ­ may be lost. Commission (IWC) is responsible for develop stances, otherwise the exemption be made from ing Wage Orders applicable to California For example, deductions cannot ­ for absences employers. Following passage of the "Eight an exempt employee's salary appearing as a Hour-Day Restoration and Workplace caused by serving jury duty, military Flexibility Act of 1999," the IWC developed new witness, or for taking temporary reduce an exempt Wage Orders effective January 1, 2001. The leave. An employer cannot in of a lack of avail­ Wage Orders classify all persons employed employee's salary as a result of the workweek. executive, administrative and professional able work during any part an employee a capacities as exempt from many of the provi­ Although it is necessary to pay to qualify as sions of the wage orders, the most important pre-determined salary in order for by itself is not provision being the payment of overtime exempt, payment of a salary can be paid hours worked in excess of eight hours in one sufficient. A non-exempt employee . However, an work day, or 40 hours in one workweek. by an hourly rate or by salary are paid on a regular Although the law presumes that employees exempt employee cannot be to by pre-deter­ non-exempt, the burden is on the employer hourly basis, but must be paid are prove the exemption applies. Exemptions mined salary. employer and narrowly construed against an Job Duties Requirement generally found only when the requirements, - A. Executive Exemption minimum compensation and actual perfor

IAWJOURNAL

35 By Robert M. Caietti 3~- "'-·· . -~ for this exemption, an employee tion are those licensed or certified by the state of must: customarily and regularly spend California and primarily engaged in the practice of more than half of his/her time engaged law, medicine, dentistry, optometry, architecture, in the management of the business or engineering, teaching or accounting. The head a recognized department or subdi­ licensing/certification requirement is significant. For vision; supervise at least two other full­ example, a certified public accountant is considered time employees or the equivalent; be exempt, but an uncertified accountant is not, even if indirectly or directly involved in hiring he/she performs the same duties. and/or firing other employees; exercise Notwithstanding the provisions of this exemp­ discretion and independent judgment in tion, registered nurses and pharmacists are not con­ the performance of his/her duties; and sidered exempt professional employees unless they spend less than half of his/her work individually fulfill the criteria established for the·exec­ time performing non-managerial duties. utive or administrative exemptions. However, nurses Some exempt executive activities certified as midwives, nurse anesthetists or nurse involve interviewing, hiring and train­ practitioners primarily engaged in performing duties ing new employees; directing the work where certification is required may be considered of subordinates; evaluating and prepar­ exempt professional employees. ing employee performance reviews and Potential Legal Liability recommending adjustments in compen­ The payment of overtime is the primary expo­ sation; and, selecting what inventory to sure confronting an employer for misclassifying acquire and sell, as well as coordinating employees as exempt. Because the failure to pay over­ its transmission and distribution. time to a non-exempt employee is a statutory viola­ Activities not considered exempt would tion, the statute of limitations is three years. Thus, any include performing the same kind of lawsuit for unpaid overtime can extend back as far as work as a subordinate, which is not part three years from the date the complaint is filed. of the supervisory function; making sales beyond doing so for demonstra­ In addition to overtime pay exposure, an tion or training purposes; and perform­ employer may face exposure for failing to provide rest ing routine clerical duties such as book­ periods. Employers who fail to provide non-exempt keeping, billing, filing or cashiering. employees a rest period shall pay the employee one B. Administrative Exemption hour of pay at the employee's regular rate for each Employees who qualify under this work day that the rest period was not provided. Non­ exemption customarily and regularly exempt employees are entitled to one paid ten-minute exercise discretion and independent rest period per four hours worked. judgment in the performance of intel­ Conclusion lectual work generally in an office/non­ Whether or not an employee qualifies as to manual nature directly related exempt is defined by law. A job description for a posi­ cus­ his/her employer's or employer's tion that includes specific reference to exempt duties tomer's management policy involving is beneficial. but actual performance of those duties is addition, general business operation. In key. Employee performance reviews should specifical­ he/she will regularly and directly ly address the employee's performance of all exempt or the owner or other exempt executive duties. If an employee does not fulfill the legal administrator employee, or perform requirements, he/she will be non-exempt regardless of that specialized or technical work any employment agreement, job description, job title or requires special training, experience or other documentation that attempts to classify the knowledge under general supervision. employee as exempt. Accordingly, employers are well­ under this An employee can also qualify served to consult their employment attorney if any special exemption if he/she performs questions exist as to whether an employee is properly general assignments and tasks under classified as exempt. supervision, and spends more than half of his/her work time performing these activities. C. Professional Exemption J Employees exempt under this sec- ----"\-=------WINIEl 2002 7

36 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 456,527 DEC 23 2001

SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SAN DIEGO, CA SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 458,527 SUNDAY 456,527 SUNDAY 458,~27 DEC 2 2001 DEC 9 2001 DEC 16 2001

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Berman & Walton, A ttys. Equity 1 Lenders Group San Diego County District Better Business Bureau Finkelstein & Finkelstein, A ttys. Attorney's Office Cassel Financial Group, Inc. James M. Provencher, Atty. San Oiego Mediation Center Century 21 Award Jennifer L Kammerer, Atty. Sauls & Semeta, Attys. Department of Lisa Kay Baughman, Atty. Stinson Financial Group Child Support Services Neill M. Marangi, Atty. Robert M. Garland, Atty Due Process Pacifica Mortgage Tabibian & Associates Freelrc.com Saad & Associates Consulting Thomas P. Matthews, Atty. Gerald I. Sugarman, Atty. -USO Paralegal Program For web site and advertising information, call (619)718-5245 'ibcfan 'Jkgo ltnion•ffibunt.

37 OTHER USD RELATED NEWS SAN DIEGO METROPOLITAN SAN DI EGO , CA MONTHLY 50,000 DECEMBER 2001

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ii\ . L/ METROPOLITAN MOVERS CONGRATULATIONS OR CONDOLENCES

amed new pre,iden1 of H.G . Fenton Co. Bydum as CEO. Byd,rrn is a 20-year veteran of ... N was Mike Neal. wh11 has hcen wi1 h the com­ heath care and was !·rreviously with American The Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison panner­ pany si nce 19XX. ( ;cuff Swortwood. wi lh the Healthcare Systems. ship has elected Richard L. Parker as firmwide firm si nce 1992. was promo1ed 10 head comme r­ managing panner to succeed Jaml'S E. Burn5 Jr. cia l building developmenl and acqui si1ions; and ••• Parker has served as the San Diego office manag­ Shelly Weld and Mary Day Dewar! are 1ogeth­ Wermers Corp. has hired Barry Weber as ing panner si nce May 2000. er managers of the company':-. commercial port ­ project manager. Weller previously was with fo li o. Harry Hunte remains CEO and board VCL Construction. chairman. Promoted to senior auditors in the San Diego office of Calderon Jaham & Osborn Certified Gerald Laflamme has joined Davidson Public Accountants and Consultants were Troy A, Frunzcn 1111., jolneu 1hc privutc bunk­ CommunltlcN us CFO, ~le spent the lust 20 yours Dor11 Domln11uc7, und Gcor11c Choi. Newly ini: depu11mcnt of Co mcrlcn Uunk-Callfornln u, with E & Y Kenn~t h Leventhal Reul Estute hired by the firm are uuditors Donald Sclw v. p. He comes to Comerica with e ight years' expe­ Group. Christy Brescia, Martha ricnc.:e in 1hc fir11111 c.:i: d !-il.! rvicc indwary, most Medina, Alejdro E. recently a~ a finan<.:ial ad viser in Irvine untl Duhart, Boovlna Beverl y Hill ,. specializing in ad vanceu estate Uob White recei ved an achievement in pub- Gorjian, Eric Martinez planning :ind wea lth managL·mcnt. 1ic service award from San Diego State and Alicia Molina. New University's Ambassadors for Higher bookkeeper is Davctte P. *** Education, in recogniti on of his suppon to col­ Cameron; audit manager . , Robert Rose joined the law firm of leges and universit ie,; throughout his political is Marcelle Voorhies Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP as career. He was form,·r Gov. Wilson ·s chief of Rossman; and senior aod a lateral partner in lht! husincs:-. crimes group in staff during Wilson'., tenures as San Diego information systems audi­ the firm 's San Di ego ot'fi ce. He formerl y operat­ mayor. state assembl yman, U.S. senator and gov­ tor is Don Lathus. ed Rose & Associate,. a boutique San Diego la w ernor. firm that opened in Fcbnrary 2000. *** ••• The Univ°&sity of San Diego named ••• Tiffany Lynn th.rrison was named escrow Gwendolyn S. Lytle as associate v.p. for human Mark Batten has closing specialist for Chicago Title's Southern resources. She was director of human resourc~s at been promoted to princi­ California Builder Services Division. She has Clark Atlanta University in Georgia, and before pal at Burkett & Wong five years of experience in the Southern that was assistant director of human resources at Engineers. He jo ined the Cali fornia market and most.recently worked with California Institute of Technology in Pasadi: na. fi rm in 1984 and will be Shea Homes Mongage and. Continental Escrow. Also new to USO is Jack Kelly, director of alrrm­ structurar project manag­ ni relations. He formerly managed business er for the Garden *** development at Silicon Space Inc. A USO gradu­ Buildings at the new Graham Downes Architecture Inc. ate, he earned a bachelor's degree in busir:ess Padres Ballpark. Mark Ballen appointed Dennis Roi.:ers as senior architectural administration in 1987. designer. He has mor~ than 20 years of experi­ ence. most recently with a Seattle firm. *** Gini Craig, manager of the executive search Patricia M. Boer has joined Spherion division of BancForce Staffing was installed as ••• Human Capital Consulting Group's San Di,·go president of the San Diego County Group of Judith R. Glickman has been named head office as a senior consultant. Most recently, Boer ,r~sancial Women International. Serving as of the La Jolla Country Day School. She joined consulted with Monster.com, where she served v. p.s are Sandy Norman, v.p./ compliance man­ the Country Day community in July as interim as the site's Career Guru, writing anicles, con­ ager for San Diego National Bank; and M. head for the 2001-2002 school year. She served ducting online chats and responding to message Catherine Wright, CFO of proposed Landmark for IO years as superi ,tendent of public schools National Bank; Donna Burch . secretary; for the La Canada and Moraga, Calif., school dis­ Melissa Smith, treasurer; and Jan English, tricts, headed the Americun School in London for Kathy Keith and Fran MeCrnckin, directors. six years, und spent the 2000-200 I school year in New Jersey as interim head at Princeton Day School. Pulse Metric Inc. has hired William 38 8 Q) 0, .....ro vi VI 0 ::, San Diego Performing Arts League ..... '- ""O 0 San Diego Regional Economic ::, Development Corporation o ro ...... San Diego· Repertory Theatre Q) C. 0 .c Q) ~ San Diego School of Creative and ...... Q) ro u Performing Arts Q) ~ San Diego State University ~ C. V'I .... San Diego Symphony .... Q) ~ San Diego Urban League t _ai San Diego Youth and Community ro ro Services, Inc. C. 0 ?;- C'I Scripps Ranch High School ·c -~ Second Chance / STRIVE ::, Q Secret Pal Volunteers E C E ~ Senior Community Centers 0 of San Diego u ~ aJ ro Shriners Hospitals for Children - £ E Los Angeles South Bay Community Services 6 -~ B 0 C ~ Spirit of Suzi Foundation N C'I .... N.... STAR/PAL - United for Youth Q.) ..Q Si Q) Q) Stephen -Museum E Q.) ...... u Stevens Cancer Center Q.) ""O ·cu 0 C .C ::,:. ro ..... Student Venture San Diego t'O C "C - V'I ..... TechnologyTraining Foundation C: :::, ...... V') - ta Q) 0 of America Q.)• E c. C: 0 C. Temecula Valley Rose Society :::, ~ ..Q ..... ::, ·.:: V'I V'I Tri-City Hospital Foundation t;­ ~ c: ::, 0 0 u ..... Truth Apostolic Community Church ·2 C :::, 0 .... 0 ro UCSD Cancer Center Foundation C' Q.) c 0 ~ United Way - San Diego C: ·- University of California - San Diego ~ Q.) University of San Diego - ~ Business Link °' ..... 0 UPLIFT ~ ""O Valley High School ~ C Vista Community Clinic Q) .Q ~ Wakeland Housing and ._, E Development Corporation ro ~ ~ Western Little League - Challenger Division 0 ~ Q) Q) YMCA - Border View E ~ YMCA - Jackie Robinson Family ·..:; ""O YMCA - Palomar Family - Escondido ro aJ u 32 YMCA - Peninsula Family Q) > C. 0 YMCA - San Diego V'I .... YMCA-Santa Margarita V'I C. ·- Q) YMCA - South Bay Family £~ Youth Tennis San Diego C'I.; C ._ .i:: 0 YWCA - San Diego County ::, C. Zoological Society of San Dieg0 Q C. ::, 39 V'I Saint Francis Seminary Celebrates 60 Years

of Diocesan Priestly Formation-~~-

SOUTHERN CROSS SAN DIEGO, CA 23-TIMES/YEAR 32,000 DEC 6 2001

By Ann Aul?rey Hanson ALCALA PARK - On Oct. 30, St. Francis Seminary celebrated 60 years of providing priestly forma­ tion for __men aspiring to the dioce- CELEBRATION: Msgr. Steven Callahan (top row, sec~nd from right), rec san. priesthood. A Mass a_t the tor of St. Francis Seminary, is joined by priests, se~manans and forme ( serrunk arydth' follo~ed by a ~er, rectors to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the seminary. mar e e anruversary. Serrunary rectors from the past 25 years and dents entered the six-year program \ priests from the parishes of San of philosophy and theology at Diego seminarians joined the semi­ St. Francis History Immaculate Heart Seminary after nary community for the Mass, cele­ The diocesan seminary, named in having completed a two-year liberal brated by Msgr. Steven Callahan, honor of St. Francis de Sales, was arts program at St. Francis. the current rector. opened by Bishop Charles Buddy, In February 1957, 90 students The priests attending the the first bishop of San Diego, on from St. Francis Seminary and anniversary fete included Father Nov. 3, 1941. It was first located in Immaculate Heart Seminary moved Bruce Orsborn, pastor of St. a large frame house at 2610 San into a newly constructed, five-stor~ Jerome Parish; Father Louis Diego Avenue in Old Town. building located in Alcala Park adj a Levesque, CJM, associate pastor of In the summer of 1944, Bishop cent to the University of San Diego. Blessed Sacrament Parish; Father Buddy purchased 80 acres of land On Sept. 8, 1962, St. Francis Semi­ Edward McNulty, vice-rector; in the El Cajon Valley. After a new nary returned to the El Cajon loca­ Father Michael Pham, director of structure was built on Madison tion because of overcrowding at priestly vocations; and Father John Avenue, 19 seminarians made the Alcala Park and became officially Flannery, O.P., director of spiritual move to El Cajon on Dec. 21, 1944. known as St. Francis College. formation, and the following for­ By September 1947, plans had In light of the updating of semi­ mer rectors: Msgr. Lawrence Pur­ been fulfilled for the establish­ naries recommended by the Second cell, pastor of All Hallows Parish; ment of a major seminary in El Vatican Council, proposals were Msgr. Frank Fawcett, pastor of Our Cajon·. Immaculate Heart of Mary made early in 1966 for the return of I Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish, Rancho Seminary was established as the St. Francis College to the campus of Penasquitos; Msgr. Richard Dun­ major seminary, while St. Francis the University of _San Diego, there­ canson, pastor of St. James Parish; Seminary continued as the minor by giving seminarians the oppor~­ Father Fernando Ramirez, pastor seminary, both staffed by priests nity for greater diversity in their of Good Shepherd Parish; and of the Diocese of San Diego. academic program by attending Msgr. John Dickie, pastor of St. In 19_48, Pope Pius XII conferred classes at the College for Men. At Mary Magdalene Parish. official approval on the minor and the direction of Bishop Francis major seminaries. Twenty-nine stu- Furey, the second bishop of San Diego, the transfer took p'----- ~ September 1966. 4 At the time of this move, and coinciding with its 25th anniver­ sary, St. Francis College became a four-year school, with Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary becoming a four-year theologate school. In June 1968, the Diocese of San Diego decided to close Imm~culate Heart Semina.ry but to continue to

operate St. Francis out of the same building. In 1970, St. Francis Sem­ inary moved to its present location with 60 students. The main seminary center was built in 1997.

St. Francis Today Today, St. Francis Seminary pro­ vides formation to 14 seminarians, ranging in age from 18 to 42, and coming from the Dioceses of San Diego, Oakland, San Jose and Las Vegas, and the Archdiocese of San Francisco. The seminarians do their academic coursework at Mesa Col­ lege and the University of San Diego. Some of the men are pursuing undergraduate degrees, while oth­ ers with degrees are taking pre­ theology courses in philosophy and religious studies in prepara­ tion for priestly formation at a major seminary such as St. Patrick's in Menlo Park or St. John's in Camarillo. The Southern Cross

41 CHESAPEAKE BUSINESS Washington College LEDGER EASTON, MD MONTHLY looking for a few good DECEMBER 2001 'Founder Families'

CHESTERTOWN Walhington Another recent promotional reward ut: • College is going back to its past to secure lizing Washington is moving ahead. This its future. will use a foot-high replica of the life-size That's the concept of a unique recogni­ statue of Washington that stands over tion program that could renew the col­ the mall at the corner of Washington lege's initial fund-raising canvass in Avenue and Campus Street m 1782, according to the college's vice pres­ Chestertown. ident of development Robert G. Smith. Sculptor Eliot Goldfinger has been com­ It started last month with the publish­ missioned by the college to create a ing of a list of more than 200 names of smaller replica of the cast bronze origi­ Eastern Shore residents who made the nal created by Lee Lawrie in the late initial donations that led to the estab­ 1940s. Smith said these statues should lishment of the only college in America be available next spring and will go to endorsed by George Washington. major donors - individuals or organiza­ "We're hoping that we can find the direct tions that give into the seven figures. descendants of those people so that we "So Washington himself will help us recognize them," Smith said, "and also to keep building a college," Smith said of seek new donations from these same this link to the past through the statue. families." He pointed out that the original donors, The Founder Families and Washington including Washington hirnseif with b0 statue initiatives come at an important guineas, have always been known time in the college's financial history, through a list that is stored in state according to Smith. archives in Annapolis. He pointed out "Through our $72 million fund-raising that this list is no longer on the campus, campaign we have reached the $100 mil­ probably destroyed in a 1916 fire. lion plateau for the college's enc;low­ "So we want to celebrate what we call ment," he said. Approximately half that our 'Founder Families,' " Smith said of campaign, completed two years ahead of this initiative. its five-year schedule, went to the endow­ And he realizes that this may not be an ment, he said. easy task, since that original list is rnorf' While the actual value of the endow­ than 220 years old. "We know that many ment may have varied because of market descendants of these families have kept. fluctuations after Sept. 11, Smith said track, but we are asking heritage organ.. that this puts Washington College on a izations to help, too." new playing field that includes such Smith said that there is some evidenct: institutions as Mount Union College, that many of these families have Wofford College, Univ'ersity of San Dieg_q, remained on the Eastern Shore or in this St'.' John's, N.Y., Siena College, Florida region in the intervening two centuries, Atlantic and Fairfield University. but he also realizes that some may have This places Washington College some­ left this area during the general west•• where in the middle of some nearly 600 ward movement of U.S. history. colleges and universities recently sur­ That original drive in the early l 780s veyed by Money and Management maga­ netted 5,000 pounds in less than a year. zine, but the Chestertown institution "And we think that good things happen would be among the nation's leaders in when good people come together,'' he said endowment growth. of the Founder Families campaign that "With a bigger endowment, you have a began in November. higher increased income for your institu­ While there are no clear-cut fund-raising tion," Smith said. "This is money that you goals with this new campaign, it is not don't have to raise every year." An ulti­ the first time that the college reached mate goal for Washington College's into the past to promote donations. endowment could reasonably be $250 While there is no real way to know the million to $300 million, he said. present-day value of Washington's 50- He said the current fund-raising cam­ guinea donation, Smith said that after a paign is not only a way to build new rela­ study by several noted economists it was tionships and create a "climate for giv­ estimated that amount would be in the ing," but it will ultimately lead to better range of $50,000. facilities, faculty, curriculum and admin­ "So we created the 'The Fifty Guinea istration. Club' for donors of $50,000," he said of that concept, which continues to the present.

42 These plateaus offund-raising are famil­ iar to Smith, who held similar ;ositions at Colgate University, Oh19 State University and the University of Maryland before coming to Washington College. "I realized what a gem this college real­ ly is, and its strong links to Chestertown after I moved here," he said of his experi­ ence. "And I will help the college look for another 'great person' for this job, too." Smith was retired when college presi­ dent John Toll asked him to come to Chestertown in 1997 - "and I decided to stay," he said. With his three-year com­ mitment nearly at an end, Smith said that he will retire for good this time. He first retired in 1990 after 15 years as the University of Maryland's first vice president of development, where he first met Toll and worked with him for 13 years. Smith will continue to live in Chestertown with his wife, the former Joyce Huber. Smith said he first met his future wife after he moved to Chestertown. Most recently she was a leader in fund­ raising and construction of the Sultana, a replica of the British schooner that sailed the Chesapeake Bay prior to the Revolutionary War. An Andover, N.Y., native, he received degrees at the State College of New York at Genesee and Ohio University. In between he served in the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean War. He taught at Colgate before becoming involved in the college's public relations and fund- raising campaigns. .. I...O

vice Sculptor Eliot Goldfinger, left, and Washington College model of president of development Robert G. Smith lo

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$39.0 $39.0

$159.5 $159.5

$23

$38

$41

$36

$18.3 $18.3

$78

$21.2 $21.2

enrollment enrollment

$960

$416

$29.6 $29.6 Total Total

Millions Millions

$464.2 $464.2

budget budget

Restricted Restricted

$ $

operating operating

Unrestricted Unrestricted

2000-2001 2000-2001

• •

• •

UNIVERSITIES UNIVERSITIES

total total

1 1

200 200

128 128

128 128

,

,

,

143 143

150 150

091 091

904 904

,

,

,

882 882

NA NA , 847 847

na na

na na

na na

NA NA

526 526

,

,

NA NA

NA NA

,

NA NA

854-

$287 $287

NA NA

NA NA

$400 $400

,

$288 $288

$264 $264

$3

$364 $364

2000 2000

$4

$264 $264

$16

$19

$2

$400 $400

$19

$3,384 $3,384

$3,900 $3,900

$4

$3

$2,832 $2,832

$3

$7,410 $7,410

$1,776 $1,776

$14

Resident Resident

Graduate Graduate

$7,410

$1

tuition:• tuition:•

Nonresident Nonresident

• •

• •

2000-2001 2000-2001

• •

fall fall

by by

time time

time time

73 73

of of

24 24

14 14

10 10

597 597

300 300

297 297

243 243

170 170

045 045

AND AND

368 368

487 487

119 119

198 198

,

350 350

135 135

485 485

739 739

545 545

194 194

549 549

232 232 ,

165 165

880 880

777 777

259 259

518 518

903 903

295 295

Total Total

877 877

1,013 1,013

1

1

as as 1,894 1,894

1,017 1,017

Full Full

• •

Part Part

Faculty: Faculty:

4/1/2001 4/1/2001

• •

• •

Ranked Ranked

1 1

.

526 526

time time

094 094

883 883 1 1

136 136

529 529

,

96 96

603 603 time time ,

.

96 96

,

17 17 ,

,

530 530 294 294

96 96 039 039

, 96 96

62

89 89

393 393

,

na na

,

, na na

NA NA

97 97

,

88 88

1

472 472

5849 5849

5

1

6,963 6,963

2

,

2

6

57.7 57.7

5

12

12,962 12,962

10

4,338 4,338

6,407 6,407

13,010 13,010

9

Percent Percent

18,970 18,970

19

22,137 22,137

Part Part

Full Full

resident resident

• •

California California

Students: Students:

• •

• •

: :

1 1

fall fall

173 173

858 858

602 602

3 3

685 685

650 650

175 175

716 716

,

,

403 403

566 566 ,

918 918

212 212

4 4

,

,

,

(4) (4) 1 1

144 144

701 701

, 3 3 5

,

,

,

2 2 , NA NA

(15) (15)

(3) (3)

1 1

,

,

6

6,943 6,943

8 7,412 7,412

9,324 9,324

9

change change

13

12 15,548 15,548

15,492 15,492 16

16

18

17

(loss) (loss)

19

20

22,710 22,710

23,308 23,308

•1999 •1999

•2000 •2000

25

25

31,413 31,413

31,609 31,609

Total Total

•% •%

enrollment

6609 6609

-

260-4600 260-4600

388-7902 388-7902

536-7800 536-7800

44-8123 44-8123

44-1150 44-1150

757-2121 757-2121

795

477-4360 477-4360

477-4800 477-4800

388-3579 388-3579

388-3400 388-3400

644-7956 644-7956

644-7000 644-7000

482-6413 482-6413

421-6700 421-6700

534-4831 534-4831

388-2682 388-2682

7 7

7 7

594-5200 594-5200

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(858) (858)

(760) (760)

(760) (760)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(619) (619) (619) (619)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(858) (858)

(619) (619) (760) (760)

(760) (760)

(619) (619)

Fax Fax

Telephone Telephone

COLLEGES COLLEGES

92126 92126

92020 92020

92119 92119

92069 92069

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91910 91910

92182 92182

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Science Science

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Ryan Ryan

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Sue Sue

Bob Bob

Carlos Carlos

Bernie Bernie

Rich Rich

Rogers Rogers

George George

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Weber Weber

Beyster Beyster

Platt Platt

Murphy Murphy

Dynes Dynes

president president

manager manager

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Jacobs Jacobs

Bersin Bersin

MUIJ)hy MUIJ)hy

Title Title

NA NA

NA NA

NA NA

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chief chief

Van Van

executive(s) executive(s)

mayor mayor

• •

schools schools

president president

John John

chancellor chancellor

WaltEkard WaltEkard

Alan Alan

Robert Robert

Irwin Irwin

Dick Dick

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chairman, chairman,

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Stephen Stephen

Robert Robert

president

president

district district

Michael Michael

J

Chris Chris

regional regional

superintendent superintendent

Local Local

administrative administrative

• •

and and

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sheriff, sheriff,

2001 2001

home home

lntemet lntemet

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programs programs

works works

1, 1,

services services

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including including

and and

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products products

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state state

services, services,

services services

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education education

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description description

hospitals, hospitals,

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government government

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services services

manufaclUrer manufaclUrer

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care, care,

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health health

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Higher Higher

education. education.

City City

Public Public

Telecommunications Telecommunications

services, services,

Company Company

as as

Research Research

Administration Administration

County County

services

Health Health

Telephone Telephone

Higher Higher

Commmunication Commmunication

probation, probation,

Administration Administration

social social

functions. functions.

of of

of of

2000 2000

2001 2001

900 900

NA NA

NA NA

800 800

,

409 409

386 386

NA NA

NA NA

271 271

250 250

,

150 150

150 150 NA NA

NA NA

189 189

200 200

NA NA

NA NA

employees employees

1,424 1,424

1,363 1,363

2

3,550 3,550

4,316 4,316

4,384 4,384

1

1,400 1,400

11961 11961

11.783 11.783

Number Number

Number Number

part-time part-time

part-time part-time

EMPLOYERS EMPLOYERS

of of

• •

• •

employees employees

employees employees

of of

of of

2000 2000

2001 2001

number number

983 983

740 740

050 050

900 900

,

,

NA NA

,

NA NA

,

NA NA

NA NA

NA NA

NA NA

2,366 2,366

2.419 2.419

3

7,000 7,000

4,183 4,183

6,700 6,700

6

6.768 6.768

6,400 6,400

6,000 6,000

7,024 7,024

5

6,464 6,464

6

9.856 9.856

10,500 10,500

10,172 10,172

16,500 16,500

16,800 16,800

10,146 10,146

Number Number

full-time full-time

Number Number

full-time full-time

-

• •

• •

total total

employees employees

employees employees

by by

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

00

3 3

4 4

184 184

0 0

780 780

392 392

569 569

4 4

2 2

011 011

018 018

4 4

1 1

,

,

4 4

17 17

,

(4) (4)

25 25

,

,

,

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number number

(4) (4)

2000 2000

(10) (10)

2001 2001

3,729 3,729

7,000 7,000

3,843 3,843

4

4

6,700 6,700

7

7

6,150 6,150

7,950 7,950

9,950 9,950

7,174 7,174

(loss) (loss)

12,784 12,784

11,500 11,500

10,361 10,361

10 11

13,000 13,000

21,929 21,929

• •

• •

21,817 21,817

17

18,600

35,800

37,300

41,200' 41,200'

42.900

employees employees

Ranked Ranked

•%change •%change

of of

Total Total

LARGEST LARGEST

4-0039 4-0039

594-1475 594-1475

826-6634 826-6634

594-5200 594-5200

826-6000 826-6000

651-2110 651-2110

587-1121 587-1121

67 67

275-8777 275-8777

23{}-{)864 23{}-{)864

678-6558 678-6558

678-7000 678-7000

236-5515 236-5515

236-6400 236-6400

722-2355 722-2355 499-4140 499-4140

499-4000 499-4000

293-8267 293-8267

293-8686 293-8686

5?5-4487 5?5-4487 531-5880 531-5880

534-2230 534-2230

688-9889 688-9889

(858) (858)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(858) (858)

(858) (858) (858) (858)

(858) (858)

(800) (800)

(619) (619)

(858) (858)

(800) (800)

(800) (800)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(858) (858)

(858) (858)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(619) (619)

(800) (800) (858) (858)

Fax Fax

Phone Phone

92123 92123

92199 92199

92121 92121

92121 92121

92101 92101

Corp. Corp.

92121 92121

92182 92182

Diego Diego

Diego Diego

92101 92101

92101 92101

Diego Diego

Diego Diego

Diego Diego

Diego Diego

San San

San San

Diego Diego

San San

92103 92103

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92093 92093

Diego Diego

Diego Diego

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San San

92101 92101

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www.sandiego.gov www.sandiego.gov 1200 1200

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Illllllll 111111111111111111lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 BUf.!'.f;,lJP..'§ 580 . "-' . QN .xznt, 25 .•. .. x - rei"os can brag: Four straight over Aztecs USD rallies from USD (3-3) overcame an eight­ Al Faux came off the bench to point halftime deficit and turned score 25 for the Aztecs, among Toreros 72, Aztecs 67 a -shooting weakness them two three-pointers 8-point deficit in the MORE COVERAGE that had cost it two games into a final 18.4 seconds that kept with 25 by Laws strength - making eight SDSU's hopes alive but couldn't • Game's atmosphere ranks a perfect straight in the final 47.1 seconds bring the Aztecs completely 10, even without top 10 teams. D6 By Hank Wesc~ , <"' to defeat SDSU for the fourth back. • Aztecs get commitment from highly STAFF WRITER \A_\") year in a row and the eighth time 'The better team won again," rated guard from Los Angeles. D6 in the last nine meetings, said SDSU coach Steve Fisher, • USD women SDSU fought the Laws and the Laws scored 25 points, top­ now 0-3 against USD. "I'm cruise to a 28-point bitter­ victory over visiting UCLA. Laws won. ping the 20-point mark for the ly disappointed in how we played D6 Or, to be more accurate, third game in a row. Lippold was in the second half ... My hats off SDSU fought the Andre Laws, an uncharacteristically strong to coach (Brad) Holland and his break. and the Tom Lippold, and the presence on the perimeter, hit­ basketball team. They played a A layup by Faux put the Aztec Jason Blair, and the rest of the ting three second-half three­ tremendous half and deserved to ahead 26-25, and he would con USD roster and USD won last pointers en route to 17 points win." tribute a three-pointer and night's renewal o th~ cross-town and six rebounds. And Blair had Faux scored seven of SDSU's jumper with 6.6 seconds left · basketball rivalry 72-67 before ll 13 points and a team-high seven 13 points in the final 3:45 of the the 13-4 Azt~c run. 5,100 sellout at the Jenny Craig rebounds to lead the one-point half as the Aztecs came from a Pavilion. underdog Toreros. point behind to a 37-29 lead at the t SEE Toreros, D

Aztecs' Brandon Smith dunks over Toreros' Ben Waldrop. USD, which trailed by eight points at the half, won 72·67 for Its fourth straight victory In the rivalry. Fred Greaves photo

47 four second-half attempts were CONTINUED FROM PAGE D1 '-,) crucial. 'Tom was big," said Holland. Laws scores 25 "He made big shots, got big rebounds. Tom did what se­ as USO wins 4th niors need to do." straight in series Two free throws by Laws with 8:27 to play broke a 52-52. tie and the Toreros grittily held SDSU at Faux had a bay the rest of the team-leading 11 way. like three points in the half, matching the of the last four meetings, it came total of Laws for down to mak­ the Toreros ing plays and and SDSU got more hitting free offense throws in the clutch. from its five other scorers than USD did from its four. "I'm very disappointed," said Faux. ''We had the game won, SDSU (4-3), which had but they beat us to every loose shown a tendency to start slow, ball. We didn't play our hardest quit the habit cold turkey last They made the plays in the night and played by far their second half and we started get­ best first 20 minutes of the sea­ ting stagnant on offense." son. The Aztecs fell behind 84 in the first three minutes, but got right back in it and either SUMMARY led, or trailed by no more than SAN DEGO ST. 11n FG-,\ R A F Pis two, the rest of the way. Hokomb 30 7.9 0-0 10 0 3 14 Epps 6 0-0 0-0 """ 2 0 1 0 Mackell 22 4-7 1·3 3 0 2 9 But the second half, from Moore 27 0-0 0-2 0 2 3 0 USD's Bland 38 3-10 3-6 0 2 2 10 7-0 opening run onward Johnson 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 1 0 was mostly a Torero show. Smith 15 1-1 2·2 2 4 5 4 Walton 14 1-1 1·2 2 1 3 3 They played good team de­ Faux 28 11 -20 0-3 6 1 3 25 fense against SDSU's Kovack 7 0-2 0-0 0 0 2 0 one-on­ Sanders 12 1·2 0-0 2 0 1 2 one offensive forays. They prer T~ 200 2M2 7-18 31 Z2 26 67 tected the ball better than the Pwc--,es: FG .538. TT .389. 3,f'alnl Galls: 4-13, Aztecs .308 (Faux 3-8, Bland 1·3). THIii Alllalnls: 4. llodled , committing seven turn­ Shots: 4 (Hokomb 3). T..-s: 22 (Hokomb 6). overs to SDSU's StNls: 8 (Faux 2, Smith 2, Moore 2). Tecmlul Fm 10. And they None. made key shots, grabbed key USD 11n FG-A FT,\ A A F Pis rebounds and got most of the Lippold 30 6-11 2·2 6 2 2 17 loose balls. Adamo 22 1~ 0-2 1 2 3 2 Blair 32 5-12 3-4 7 3 2 13 Laws 37 8-15 8-10 4 1 1 25 "I figured after 3 ½ years, McGrain 19 1·2 1~ 1 3 1 4 Morris 9 0-1 0-0 2 0 1 0 now would be a good time," Oelzell 16 0-0 2·2 2 3 1 2 Llppold said of unleashing his Boardman 12 0-2 0-2 1 2 3 0 Belser 6 0-1 0-0 0 1 1 0 perimeter game. "I worked on Hanson 5 1-1 1-2 2 0 0 3 it Hegarty 12 2-2 2~ 3 0 0 6 a lot this summer, my team­ T~ 200 mates 24-51 1~32 J5 17 15 n encouraged me to shoot, Pwc--,es: FG .471 , TT .594. )Nit Galls: 5-12, so I did." .417 (Lippold 3-4, McGrain 1·1, Laws 1·2). THIii Aellolms: 6. llodied Shots: 1 (Hanson). T..-s: 18 (Laws 6). StNls: Io (Delzell 3, Laws 3). Tecmlul Fm Llppold came into the game None. 2-for-7 on three-pointers for the SIii Dle90 State (4-31 -sr 31 - 67 USD 13-31 season and the three he hit in 29 a-n A-5, 100. ~Libbey, Scyphers, Bannowsky.

48 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,643 DEC 6 2001

111111111111111III IIIII IIII 111111111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJe'S l#,OIIMATIO# SEIIIIIC~:I 580 ON .rzwu 25 , I , .. X

[ CollegeBasketball rnGRANEv It's a rivalry in best t,;, · ( sense l$i of the word 'T here is no specific time and day, no out, with this kind of interest generated specific sport or season, but some­ from a city still not sure how to embrace where along the line athletic rivalries the major college game, you're thankful. became mean-spirited. Fans aren't them­ "Both teams couldn't have asked for selves a unless they are throwing objects or better atmosphere," said USD forward punches. Tom Lippold. "I know (SDSU) lost and And yet somrtimes, when you are fortu­ they played their hearts out, but I would nate, you just get a lot of passion. think even they would say it was fun com­ It doesn't happen often in these parts, peting in a game like this. when that universal connection for one's fa "It felt like we were two Top 10 teams vorite college basketball team grips an are­ out there. The adrenaline from the game na as it did at the last and the crowd ... there is nothing like night. Traditions and memories are devel­ that." oped when fans are given the forum to ex­ The final score shouldn't surprise, be­ SDSU's Al press their enthusiasm. Faux (right) Is guarded by They did so for cause talent and athleticism are checked at USD' s Corey ~ and Belser. Fred Greaves photo San Diego State. the door in even the most docile rivalries, The faces were painted and the balloons which this isn't The Aztecs are certainly were wrapped around necks and the man far better than in years past, but you still the scoreboard. Brad Holland has in his 50s wore a cut-out basketball on his spent must do things like defend and make basic eight years developing a team head. Red and black on this side, blue that plays to on entry passes to the post. You still must exe­ its strengths as well as most white on the other, 5,100 in all. at this level. If cute in the half-court and not allow your of­ there is a loose ball The eight or so miles between on the court, you can these two fense to become long stretches of one-on­ be sure it campuses is a far different is followed by the body of a Tore­ road from the one play. ro. Happened again one grooved snugly between last night, often to the Wmston-Sa­ USD doesn't just like the us-against-the­ cheers of all those in lem and Raleigh out blue and white. in North Carolina, world theme in this series. It lives by it But "(The atmosphere) worlds apart different. is what you need to But that's OK To­ you can only be perceived as the smaller have every bacco Road wasn't game," said Aztecs coach Steve rolled in one day, either program for so long, and when you have Fisher. Oh, yeah "It's terrific for San Diego basket­ . USD won 72-67. Won again. won four straight and eight of nine meet­ ball." Always, it seems. ings, it's a little harder to hold that chip on It's a lasting College basketball had memory for anyone who en­ always been a your shoulder and keep a traight face. joys the business, but game at its purest level. now it's more corporate, The Toreros are just better in these more cutthroat. So when you get a game games, is all. They are not the ones who like this, with players on both sides selling Ed Graney can be reached at (619) 293-2203 or play tight, who appear nervous, who watch [email protected] J 49 SANDIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 372,843 DEC 5 2001

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580 QN ,XZIII 25 , I .. ,X USD'sDavids ~eep beating SDSU's Goliaths . l--t\J'i . USD has dominated the series of "So whether they'll come with an 'us Torerosseniors are late, winning three straight, four of the against the world' mentality, I don't last five and 10 of 12. Realistically, only know. But we better have a controlled undefeated to date series lapses in 1988, 1993 and 1997, sense of urgency with how we play. when USO was either on or about to Our kids know the significance of this vs. cross-townrivals start a 3-0 run, have prevented a previ- game." Cross-townrivalry ous Toreros class from going 4-0. USD's Lippold, a 6-foot-5 forward, 7:30 tonight at USD'sJenny Craig Pavilion By Hank Wesch But this is the year, the third under concurred. STAFF WRITER Series record: SDSUleads 17-15. coach Steve Fisher, that SDSU's long- 'We here all have a chip on our stagnant program is projected to rise shoulder because the city, when it Division I only: USOleadsl0-8 (USOgained It was news to them. like the talent level on the roster and thinks about (college) basketball, Division I status in 1979-80 season). USO t,eniors Tom Lippold, Andre the degree of difficulty of the schedule thinks about San Diego State," he said. Lon9est wlnnln9streaks: SDSU,6 straight, 1979· Laws and Kevin Hanson were un­ already have. "My freshman year I didn't realize 84; USO,4 straight, 1990-92 and '95; USO,3 aware, until informed last week, that Despite the recent head-to-head re- that, but I've come to realize it, and straight, 1985-87, 1998-2000. with a victory tonight they could be­ sults, USO, a one-point underdog to- how important this game is to our come the first Toreros basketball play­ night, can't seem to shake casting as program." THELAST 10 MEETINGS: ers to go 4-0 against San Diego State in David to SDSU's Goliath. The series against SDSU was being 1987: USO76, SDSU53 1995: USO69, SDSU65 a career. That's not news to Fisher or the resumed after a one-year lapse when "Impressive," Lippold said, more 1989: SDSU85, USO75 1996: SDSU87, USO70 USO seniors. USD's seniors were freshmen in 1998. pensively than enthusiastically. "If we "I think (USD) feels as though they 'They weren't as good then and we 1990: USOJS, SDSU7 4 1998: USO52, SDSU51 win, we11 think about it then. This is play second fiddle to us unjustly, that pretty much knew we were going to 1991: USO60, SDSU57 1999: USO73, SDSU45 their best team, so we11 see." they feel they have the better program beat them," said Hanson, a 6-10 center. That's the essence of the 33rd meet­ 1992: USO85, SDSU60 2000: USO55, SDSU52 right now in men's basketball and why 'This year is totally different We ing of the cross-town rivals tonight at are we getting more press? I have D 7:30 at the Jenny Craig Pavilion. sensed that," said Fisher. -D SEE Rivalry, D3 played and it has come down to the better team." ~N~l~tt~~AGE 01 ~ Said Hanson: "It has come down to we've been the scrappi­ USD is underdog est team. I remember Tom div­ ing on those three loose balls despite winning last year to really help us win.· We were just grittier." 10 of 12 in series_ "We've been the better team and we've made the big plays know it's going to be a battle. down the stretch," Llppold said. They've got really good play­ Senior forward Myron Epps, ers, a good coach. As seniors the only SDSU veteran of the now, we've got to be sure that last three meetings, prefers to our freshmen are ready to step look toward tonight rather than up and be counted." dwell on the past USO won the 1998 game, 'This is a good USO team 52-51, when Dana White made we're about to play," Epps said. the second of two free throws "It's really important we come with 1.7 seconds remaining af­ together and get this win. ter being fouled on a drive to "My freshman season, I real­ the basket. ly didn't understand the rivalry. The Toreros routed SDSU But now, I have grown to di!r 73-45 in '99 with Laws scoring like them when we play. Off the 18 points, 13 of them in the court, we get along. We just second half, 10 in a 13-2 run owe them a lot from the last that expanded a four-point lead three years." and put the game out of reach. Tonight's is the first meeting Last year, the Toreros held between the schools at the Jen­ off SDSU 55-52 as Matt Delzell ny Craig Pavilion. The Toreros hit a crucial three-pointer to are looking forward to the break a tie with 2:48 to play, home-court advantage the sec­ then forced a turnover and ond-year facility provides. made two free throws in the 'When we play State we actu­ final 13 seconds. Laws was co­ ally get some fans out (to the high scorer with 10 points, and arena) early," Llppold said. Llppold dived to secure three 'That·feels good. Usually when loose balls in the closing min­ we come out (for pregame war­ utes. mups) we get nothing. But for The inevitable conclusion all the State game there's always three years was that USO was something, boos at their place the better team. No arguments and cheers at ours. It's a good from the seniors about that. "I atmosphere. think we have just been the "On campus, all the teachers better team," said Laws, who have been telling us, 'Yeah, I'm goes into tonight's game off a going to be at the State game.' career-high 36-point scoring That's probably the only game night Saturday in a loss to they'll.go to, but we11 take it." Washington. "It always seems So, let the game begin. that when San Diego State and "I've heard enough about USO are compared, USO has how good they are," said Ll1r all average players and San Die­ pold. "We11 see." go State has the better athletes. "We don't like that. And ev­ Staff writer Ed Graney contributed ery year we've- come out and to this report. 51 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 372,843 DEC 4 2001

Illllllll 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles lltl~OII/IIIATIO# Stt1tv1c•• 580 QN .xz,u 25 .... . x ... Sellout expected \.f t.:>'1' Approximately 175 tickets return­ ed from San Diego State's allotment remain but tomorrow night's USD­ SDSU men's basketball game~ 5,100-seat Jenny Craig Pavilion is expected to be a sellout, Toreros ticket manager Rachel Guerra said. Tickets are available at the JCP box office or by calling (619) 260-7550. -HANKWESCH

52 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 372,843 DEC 5 2001

Illllllll 111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles l#,-Ot111114Arl0# Stltlll'ICllS 580 QN ,XZllt 25 ,I .. ,X TODAY'S GAMES \-s'Vt Men: Aztecs at Toreros Site/time: Jenny Craig Pavilion, 7:30 Records: SDSU 4-~-3 TV/Radio: Channel 4 San Diego; XTRA (690 AM) Serles: SDSU leads 17-15 Outlook: An expected sellout (5,100) will watch two of the nation's top 16 scorers. SDSU junior guard Tony Bland (22.7) ranks 11th and USD senior guard Andre Laws (22.0) is 16th. Neither team is defending as well as its coaches would like, with the Aztecs allowing an average of 71 points and the Toreros 70.8. USD does a better job of taking care of the ball, as witnessed by its 67 turnovers in five games to SDSU's 97 in six. Something to think about in a close game: SDSU has yet to be outscored in the second half this season, holding a 250-205 advantage after intermission. SDSU hasn't won at USD since February 1975. • Matchup to watch: How USD defends the Aztecs. Athletically, the teams aren't close at several spots, with SDSU getting the edge. USD must control tempo and it will be interesting to see if the Toreros go zone. If so, SDSU is helped by the presence of senior guard Al Faux (15.5 ppg) when penetration affords him open jumpers. SDSU is 4-0 against teams that have played _.!rimarily zone. ----~- _ ED GRANEY

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By By Trojaris Trojaris TOREROS were playing the hardest They were SUMMARY getting to loose balls. They were get- CONTINUED FROM PAGE D1 USC 1,1n fir,\ R A F Pis ting to the offensive boards. They Bluthenthal 41 &-18 ""'0-0 12 2 5 12 were getting open looks. They were Clancy 34 &-11 0-0 10 1 3 12 sweat out Chanssis 9 1·1 0-1 3 2 3 2 Trojans getting everything they wanted. Granvllle 28 3-8 0-0 2 3 1 9 Craven 35 4-10 1-2 4 4 4 13 "I felt we did a better job the last Curtis 4 0-1 0-0 1 1 1 0 hard-fought victory Hutchinson 24 2-f, 2-2 0 1 2 6 eight or nine minutes of the game of Busterna 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 \\ closing them down than we were earli- O'Neil 13 2-4 1-1 1 0 2 5 overtime, it could be a different out- Oupree 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 more together the 3 3 1 12 come." er ... We played farmer 33 5-9 2-4 last 12 minutes than we have all year." Tolllls 225 29-68 6-9 40 17 Z2 71 USC's Brandon Granville hit a Pen:entages: FG .426, fl ,61,7. 3-f'oint Goals: 7-19, .368 (Craven three-pointer with 2:12 left in overtime The Toreros led 38-36 at the end of 4, Granville 3). Team Reboulds: 4. lllodled Shots: 4 (Clancy 4). nei- Twnoven: 16 (Bluthenthal 5). steals: 5 (Bluthenthal 3). Tectncal to give the Trojans (6-2) a 68-66 lead a hard-fought first half in which Foeis: None. and Desmon Farmer hit a heavily con- ther team managed more than a five- USD 1,1n FlrA R A F Pis point lead. The Toreros had the edge Lippold 31 &-8 ""'3-5 6 3 2 16 tested two-pointer with 34.7 seconds Adamo 33 5-14 0-0 3 1 0 13 left to key the USC victory. USD (5-4) 14-9 when Tom Llppold hit a driving Blair 38 5-10 1-3 9 1 4 12 layup with 14:15 remaining. Laws 38 &-15 1H2 8 3 2 21 had shots to win in regulation and tie McGrain 29 0-3 0-0 5 4 2 0 seconds of overtime, but USC needed only 1:15 to forge a Morris 4 0-0 1-2 1 0 0 1 in the closing Delzell 15 0-2 0-0 2 I 2 0 saw freshman Mike McGrain's three 20-20 tie, Clancy's slam providing the Broadman 13 0-3 0-0 3 2 0 0 final two, and the lead changed hands Belser 3 0-1 0-0 0 0 1 0 miss in regulation and the three-point Hanson 21 1·2 2-4 2 1 3 4 attempts of Matt Delzell and Sam Ada- seven times from then until halftime. Tolllls 225 23-58 16-26 42 16 16 67 mo carom off in overtime. Jason Blair drove for two layups and Pen:entages: FG .397, fl .615. 3-¥oirt Goals: 5-25, .200 (Adamo 3, Lippold, Blair). Team Reboulds: 3. lllodlod Shots: 1 (Delzell). Andre Laws scored 21 points, top- Lippold hit a three-pointer in the final Twnoven: 18 (laws 6). steals: 5 (Lippold 2, Hanson 2). Tectncal ping four Toreros in double figures. 2:15 of the half to give USD a 38-34 FOdS: None. to USC(7•2l 36 25 1().. 71 The Trojans were led by 13 from fresh- advantage with under 30 seconds USD(s-4) 38 Z3 6- 67 man Errick Craven and got a dozen go. But USC's Farmer found an open- A-4, 112. Olllcials-Llbbey, Wood, McAllister. each from David Bluthenthal, Sam ing along the baseline for a reverse Clancy and Farmer. layup that set the halftime score. USD led by as many as seven points Lippold had 10 points at halftime, in the second half. Laws and Blair nine apiece. Bluthen- 'They were outplaying us the whole thal had eight points for USC, four basketball game," Bibby said. 'They others counted six in the half. (

55 USO forward Tom Lippold (right) tangles with Trojans Desmon Farmer and Sam Clancy (left) in first half. SeanM.Haffey / Union-Tribune

56 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,943 DEC 20 2001

Illllllll lllll llll lllll llll lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJe's l #fo••Arto• s,~y,c,,1 QN l 580 ,XZWII 25 ,I,' ,I USD hdsts USC tonight; Trojans seek consistency By Hank Wesch mentagain. STAFF WRITER ·q -~ "Any time you have a good quarter­ back like Granville and a good big What was unthinkable for USD's man like Clancy you've got the mak­ basketball team before the turn of the ings of a very good team. Add in Bluth­ century - a home game against USC enthal and the rest and it seems like - becomes a reality tonight when the they're getting better and better." Trojans come to visit the Jenny Craig To Holland, maybe. Not to USC Pavilion. coach Henry Bibby. The Toreros' upgrade from the tiny "Right now, we're still playing below Sports Center Gym to the year-old, my expectations," Bibby said at his 5,100-seat "Slim Gym" produced a regular news conference on Tuesday. home-and-home agreement under "You can pick out spots where certain which USD went to the LA Sports guys have had very good games, but Arena to absorb a 78-67 defeat in De­ none is doing it consistently enough. cember 2000 1n return for tonight's "I still want to see more consistent date. play. We've been up and down. We've The USC team that defeated USD gone stretches where we haven't last year went on to a 24-10 record and scored for eight minutes, or scored advanced to the Elite Eight of the only once. I want to see more of an NCM Tournament before losing to offensive explosion. Duke 7%9. The team that visits to­ "Defense has been our mainstay night is 6-2 and features three of the and has kept us alive in games." top five players from last year - point Until recently, Bibby was on a new­ guard Brandon Granville and forwards starting-lineup-every-game streak. He Sam Clancy and David Bluthenthal. benched Granville, Clancy and Bluth­ The other two from last year's top enthal to start the Dec. 4 game against five, Brian Scalabrine and Jeff Trepag­ Rhode Island and was uncomplimenta­ nier, did little against USD - Scala­ ry about their collective attitude after­ brine had foul trouble, Trepagnier was ward. suspended - but went in the NBA They were back in the starting line­ draft at season's end. up two days later for what turned out And USD coach Brad Holland isn't to be a loss to Pepperdine on a three­ expecting anything less in USC than point shot at the buzzer and chalked it was evident in the first-ever meeting off to Bibby's motivational methods. between the schools. On Tuesday, Bibby met with the se­ "I think they're almost as talented niors and again harped on the need for offensively as last year, and they may leadership. be better defensively this year," Hol­ 'There's an urgency now for them land said. 'They'll be among the up­ to pick it up," Bibby said. 'There's an per-level teams in the Pac-10, they're urgency to take on the leadership of potentially a Top 25 team and I'd ex­ this basketball team and leave their pect they'll be in the NCM Touma- stamp." 57 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,943 DEC 22 2001

IIIIIIIII II 1111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 's BurreJJe/ltfOIUIAATIOII Sl/t~ICH 580 QN ,XZIII 25 .... . x Toreros show fortitude in narrow loss to USC

By Hank Wesch \~\) jans 42-40 overall. STAFF WRITER Leading by as many as seven midway through the second half, A victory would arguably have the Toreros began to falter on two ranked as the biggest in the history fronts: poor free-throw shooting (9- of the program. And senior forward for-17 in the second half and over­ Tom Lippold's disappointment at time) and offensive inefficiency USD's 71-67 overtime loss to USC when USC turned up the defensive oii'Tfiursday night ran deep. heat on senior guard Andre Laws. But in the aftermath, Lippold al­ Laws, the No. 16 scorer in the lowed that there was something nation with a 22.4 average, was dou­ important both he and the team ble- and, on one occasion, triple­ could take from the game and use teamed late in the game. USC for the rest of the season. coach Henry Bibby said the Tro­ "We know that this can be a jans were willing to take the chance special year now," Lippold said. "In that someone other than Laws my four years here this team has would hit a game-winning shot got more heart than any of the 'They got open looks, and others. We're tougher and we've they're a good shooting team, but got more guts than any team we the shots didn't go down," Bibby play against and any team I've said. played on here. Laws knows that in future "I think we're going to be tough games, espe<;ially when the West the whole year. I'm looking forward Coast Conference season starts, to the next game." he11 be every opponent's defensive Matched against an opponent of focus. superior physical talent to any the "I'm going to have to deal with Toreros figure to face the rest of it," Laws said. "It's going to be my the season, USD battled to a stand­ job to find the people who are open. off on the offensive boards (15 If I do, they're going to hit their each) and outrebounded the Tro- shots. I've got confidence in them." L--

58 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,843 DEC 22 2001

IIIIIIIII II 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

Burrellel#fOIIMMIO# SE/ttllCU's 580 QN , IZWII 25 ,I .. ,l

- \,\\)~ COLLEGE BASKETBALL Noon UCLA at Washington State 11!1NM 7:00 p.m. Dvs. S. Oregon 117NN HOCKEY 4:00 p.m. Los Angeles at Montreal 111NM 7:05 p.m. Gulls at Bakersfield 113NM 7:05 p.m. Sockers vs. Dallas PRO BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m. Sacramento at LA. Clippers 11!1NM PRO FOOTBALL 10:30 a.m. Miami at New England 690-MI, 107NN 2.'00 p.m. Philadelphia at San Francisco 690-MI, 107NN 6:00 p.m. Temessee at Oakland 690-MI, 107NM, 1540-MI XTRA-690, KS0(H130, KPOP-1360, KURS-1040, KCB0-1170, KNl-1070 (Los Anljeles), KSPN-1110 (LA.), KMPC-15«1 (LA.), KXTA-1150 (LA.)

59 ut e Toreros got team highs of 17 points from Jason Blair and eight rebounds from Tom Llppold - playing a little more than half the game each. They got career highs of 11 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE points and five assists from freshman point guard Mike McGrain. And Holland was able SAN DIEGO, CA to dispense double-figure minutes of playing SUNDAY 456,527 time to six reserves. DEC 23 2001 And the most important of those things was probably McGrain. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1111 Against USC, McGrain had an air ball Burrelle's three-point attempt in the closing seconds of lll'O•MMIOII 5800 SHt1ICH regulation with the score tied. Last night QN McGrain, who was 1-for-7 .n,u 25 .1 .. . n on three-pointers coming into the game, hit from behind the arc on USD's first two possessions. It got the Toreros off on an 11-0 run in the first four minutes and assured that the game USD would be nothing more than the formal USD calls workout it figured to be. "Coach told us that they had probably watched the USC game and saw that shot I threw up at the end," McGrain said. 'They off dogs in were sucking back into the key and not really guarding me out there, so I had to shoot them." And any worry about carryover lack of victory over confidence evaporated. Although McGrain said he'd already gotten over it. 'The next day's practice I came in and saw Sam (Adamo) and Tom {Llppold) with little So.Oregon smirks on their faces," McGrain said. "And \) \S'-5< right about then in terms of me being really upset about it, I kind of laughed it off and By Hank Wesch, STAFF WRITER moved along." ~ The Toreros played almost as intense de-. There's no place like home for the holidays. fense against an opponent over which they And for the S men's basketball team had the physical advantage as they had when there's been no place other than home for the they were the team at a disadvantage two six games this month leading up to the holi- nights earlier against USC. Toreros 81 day break. Offensively the Toreros pushed for and got So it was with a feel­ the quicker tempo that Division I teams han­ So. Oregon 47 ing of comfort that the dle and lower division sides don't The 6-7 Toreros (6-4) dis­ Blair outran his Southern Oregon counter­ patched NAIA Division II affiliate Southern parts for layups on several occasions but also Oregon 81-47 before 1,676 last night at the had good success setting up and muscling up Jenny Craig Pavilion to complete the home inside. stand 4-2. USD's next competition won't come until Saturday, against Troy State in the Mon­ USD 81, Southern 0re9(11'1 47 tana State tournament at Bozeman, Mont sounEIN OREGON .... Fin\ FT--A R ,. F Pis "We had a great home stand, competitive Olson 12 1-5 0-0 2 1 2 2 Zosel 19 2-6 0-0 4 0 3 4 games and now's a good time for us to go on Tacheny 19 3-8 0-0 1 1 3 6 the road," said USD coach Brad Holland. Barnes 29 3-9 0-0 1 2 3 8 "I Rodriquez 16 0-3 0-0 1 0 2 0 don't think anybody in our program is satis­ Caughell 18 1-3 1-2 2 0 2 3 fied with our won-loss record Lacy 11 0-2 0-0 2 1 1 0 , but what we're Sorensen 5 2-3 0-1 1 0 0 4 very pleased with is our competitive spirit. Knudsen 12 2-3 0-0 0 1 3 5 Coen 22 2-6 0-1 3 2 4 6 "Our four losses, we're in every one of Tharp 14 3-6 0-1 34 6 3 those games. We make a couple of shots and OeGroot 23 0-7 3-4 10 0 3 3 r.- (7 a couple of free throws and we could easily be 200 1H1 4-9 36 11 29 l'IRenla!Jts: FG .311 , FT .#1. 3Nd Goals: S-21, .238 (Coen 2-3, Barnes 8-2. But that's basketball, and we've just got to 2-7, Knudsen 1-2). THIii Rebolnls: 5. IIDdced Shots: 0. T..--s: 20 (Barnes continue to improve." 4). 5tHls: 7 (Rodriquez 2, Coen 2). Tedlnlcil Fam: None. Last U5D .... Fin\ FT--A R A F Pis night's game against an obviously Lippold 22 2-3 3-5 8 1 1 7 overmatched opponent coming in on a four­ Adamo 22 4-9 0-0 3 1 1 9 Blair 25 4-7 9-10 3 1 2 17 game losing streak was not without its pur­ Laws 19 2·7 1-2 2 1 1 5 poses for the Toreros. It was a test of the McGrain 20 3-3 2-4 1 5 0 11 Nevin 3 0-1 0-0 1 1 0 0 team's ability to rebound from an emotional Morris 15 2-4 2-2 5 2 3 overtime loss to USC two nights earlier. And it Delzell 18 2-2 0-1 2 1 1 ~ Boardman 15 2-3 1-2 2 2 2 5 was an opportunity to increase the involve­ Belser 10 0-1 0-0 3 1 4 0 ment of players other than senior guard An­ Komadina 3 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 0 Hanson 13 2-4 s-6 1 0 1 9 dre Laws, who came in averaging 22.4 points Hegarty 12 1-2 1-2 04 1 3 per game, tied for 17th in the nation. Kalemkeris 3 1 -1 1·2 4 0 0 4 r.- 200 25-48 2S-36 41 17 16 8 Laws played only 19 minutes, the least of P1run1arJn: FG .521, FT .694. 3N'II Goals: 6-14, .429 (McGrain 3-3, any starter, took seven shots and scored only Kalemkeris 1-1, Delzell 1-1, Adamo 1-4). T11111 Rebolnls: 4. IIDdced 51111s: 8 (Belser 2, Hegarty 2). T..--s: 16 (Delzell 3, Laws 3). SINs: 10 (Laws 2, five points. . Boardman 2, Hanson 2). Tedlnlcil Fam: None. Soulhem ar.., (4-8) Z3 USD(M) 4Z A- 1,676. Offldas-Bannowsky, Filson, Greenstein. 60 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,843 DEC 22 2001

IIIIIIIII II 1111111111111111 lllll 11111111111111111111 11111111 Burrelle's ,.,o,uur,o# $EIWICU 580 QN .un, 25 .... . x l \J\,S'l 1,.,.MtlffiMii-l 7 Men: Southern Oregon at USD Site / Time: Jenny Craig Pavilion / 7 p.m. Radio: KCBO (1170-AM). Internet: www.usqtoreros.com or www.KCBO.com Records: Southern Oregon 4-7, USO 5-4. Serles: First meeting. Outlook: USO concludes a six-game December home stand with an assignment against an NAIA Division )I affiliate coming in on a four-game losing streak. The Raiders' latest losses were to Cascade Conference rivals Northwest (59-57) on Dec. 18 and Evergreen State (87-68) one day later. Hamilton Barnes (5-9, Sr., G) leads a balanced SOU scoring attack with a 9.7 ppg average. Martin DeGroot (6-7, Jr., F) is at 9.3 and Matt Zosel (6-3, Sr., F) at 9.1 ppg. USO is coming off a 71-6 7 overtime loss to USC on Thursday that ended a three-game winning streak. With 21 points against USC, Toreros senior guard Andre Laws maintained his position at No. 16 on the Division I national scoring charts with a 22.4 ppg average. He became the 17th Torero in history to top the career 1,000-point mark with his 11th point, on his first basket of the second half. With 1,010 entering tonight's game, he needs 14 to move past Ken Smith (1972-76) into 16th and 30 to catch No. 15 Wayman Strickland (1988-92) on the school's career scoring charts. Junior center Jason Blair (11.4) and senior forward Tom Lippold (10.6) join Laws with double-figure scoring averages. Senior guard Sam Adamo (9.0) is on the verge. Matchup to watch: USO vs. the potential for a letdown following the emotion of Thursday night's loss. -HANK WESCH

61 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 372,843 DEC 26 2001

IIIIIIIII II 1111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 'c Bu H,o. ~ ,ffl' tr:G QN 580 ,I,, ,l ,lZllt 25

MOVING MOUNTAINS SIDEL NE earlier this month at Stadium renovation began By Mark Zeigler SD's ;r orero Stadium (home of the San Diego Spirit) that will widen the field to 70-plus yards division, and reportedly was averaging 5,000 in and increase seating capacity from 6,155 to just home attendance. The interesting part is that by over 7,000. The field was 66 yards wide last next summer, Veracruz could have another first­ season, about 5 yards too narrow for elite soccer. division team. The city's current club won the There also will be more room between the second-division lnvierno title and will play the sidelines and the stands, affording better Verano (summer) champion for a spot in the first slghtlines and allowing defender Kim Pickup to division next year. the perform her popular flip throw. Even with TARNISHED CUP seats, addition of nearl'i 1,000 Mexico coach Javier Aguirre announced that he will smallest venue (since still will be the wt,SA's take a reserve team to next month's C0NCACAF a new 8,000-seat stadium in Carolina is moving to Gold Cup at the Rose Bowl, a move not popular with south stands are being Cary, N.C.). The stadium's promoters trying to sell tickets to a discerning can shave back the removed so that workers Mexican-American fan base that knows the Vista Road. The increased hillside bordering Linda difference between Cuauhtemoc Blanco and Carlos east end zone. The project, seating will come in the Ochoa. The 18-man squad includes no players who removal of 11,150 cubic yards which involves the were on the roster for Mexico's final World Cup for completion in late March; of earth, is scheduled qualifier against Honduras and 13 seeking their first is·the second weekend in April. the season opener cap with El Tri. The only three who participated in forward JalrGarcla and MOVING VANS 2002 qualifying are Tomas Campos and Victor Gutierrez. Mexican first-division club lrapuato is moving 400 midfielders coach Bruce Arena, who is expected to miles southeast to the coastal city of Veracruz due U.S. his roster this we k, has indicated he will to a lack of fan support. The club, owned by Grupo announce European-base players. The United Pegaso, is also changing its nickname to the call several Mexico are in the same side of the Tiburones Rojos, or Red Sharks. lrapuato went 3-1(} States and and could meet as e rly as the 4 in the recently completed lnvierno (winter) bracket season, worst among the 18 teams in Mexico's top quarterfinals.

62 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,843 DEC 27 2001

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FAMILY NIGHT Tickets Four General $6-Reserved Seats Admission Genni Admission Tickets $5-Adults $4-Children ONLVS15 619-26o-7550

63 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE USD gets date SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,643 DEC 29 2001 with Iowa State in tourney final

.By Nicole Var9as Sophomore center Marta STAFF WRITER V\ <, Menuez led USD with 17 points and was one of four players On its own floor and in its who finished in double-digit own tournament, the USD scoring. Every player who women's basketball team want­ suited up for the Toreros ed to start the Surl 'N' Slam scored, and as a team USD shot Hoop 58.3 percent from the floor. USD (w) 91 Classic Junior center Erin Malich with a came off the bench to score 15 Texas·S.A. 42 convinc- with a team-high seven re­ ing win. bounds, while guards Kerri The Toreros did that, routing Nakamoto and Robyn Fortney Texas-San Antonio 91-42 last in each added 12 points. the second game of the tourna­ Senior point guard Melissa ment's opening doubleheader Glazebrook finished with seven at Jenny Craig Pavilion before points to go with five rebounds ( 2,139. and a team-high five assists. USD extended its winning The 48-point win was the streak to seven - its longest in largest margin of victory of the six seasons - and put itself in season, and it was the second tomorrow's championship straight game the Toreros won game. by 39 or more points. "We are just executing our Defensively, it was also a sea­ offense so well," said USD son-best for USD, as Texas-San coach Kathy Marpe. "We're go­ Antonio's 42 points was the low­ ing on both ends (offensively est score of the season for a and defensively), we have bal­ Toreros opponent, and the anced scoring and our domi­ Roadrunners' 28.3 percent nant post game is really open­ shooting was the lowest since ing things up for us UCIAshot 27.1 against USD in offensively." early December. In the title game, the Toreros Iowa State blew a l~point (8-3) will face No. 4 Iowa State, lead in the first half only to their second ranked opponent overcome a nine-point deficit in this season and first on their the second to tie the score at home floor since giving Okla­ 69-69 at the end of regulation. homa a scare last season in a After scoring only 10 points 65-63 double-overtime loss. in regulation, well below her Iowa State (11-0) kept its per­ season average of 21.7, two­ fect record intact after prevail­ time All-American Angie Welle, ing in an 8~75 overtime victory a 6-foot-4 center, finally came over No. 20 Auburn. alive for the Cyclones in over­ The previously unbeaten time, scoring six of the team's Tigers (11-1) will face the Road­ final 11 points. runners (3-6) in tomorrow's That happened only after Au­ consolation final. burn's Tia Miller, a 6-2 center Against Texas-San Antonio, who had shut down Welle, USD opened with a 21-2 run fouled out in the final seconds and outplayed the Roadrunners of regulation. Miller left with in every facet of the game. nine points and five rebounds.

. 64 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,643 DEC 29 2001

I11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJes 1•,a•••rto• SE•.,,c~, 580 ,XZIU ON 25 .1 . .. 1 Men: USDvs. Troy State J Site/Time: Bozeman, Mont./ 4:30 p.m. PST Records: USD 6-4, Troy State 5 3 Radio: KCBO-AM (1170). Internet: www.usdtoreros.com www.KCBO.com Serles: First meeting Outlook: It's the opening game of the Montana State tournament. Montana State (4-6) faces Hampton (8-3) in the nightcap, with the losers meeting in the consolation game tomorrow at 4:30 and the winners tangling for the championship at 7:05. USD has had a one-week break since completing a 4-2 home stand with an 81-47 rout of Southern Oregon. Senior guard Andre Laws, who scored only five against Southern Oregon, leads the Toreros with a 20.7-point average. Laws ranks first in the in scoring but is out of the national top 25 for the first time this month. Junior center Jason Blair is second on the team in scoring (12.0) and leads in rebounding (5.2). Senior forward Tom Lippold is next at 10.2 ppg and 4.4 rpg. Troy State, from the Atlantic Sun (formerly Trans America Athletic) Conference, is on a two-game winning streak, with the victims being Nicholls State and Campbell. The Trojans are led by Lamayn Wilson (6-8, Sr., F, 19.1 ppg, 6.5 rpg) and Robert Rushing (6-1, Sr., G, 17.5 ppg, 4.0 apg). Matchup to watch: Laws vs. Rushing, who is rated as the top defender in the ASC, and Wilson vs. Blair/Lippold - who have combined to contain some good big men offensively in recent games. -HANK WESCH

65 NakamotO is hit SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,843 beyond the arc DEC 27 2001 \). ;)\_,\ . 111111111111111111111111111111111111~~ 1111~1111111111111 Toreros guard ~:~~~~~~~~ ~a:::~h BUf.l'§... 'ff!.f!i! ! nets 56 percent matesaddedsixmoreasthe 580 QN • Toreros put in a season-high .um 25 .a... x On thre&pOlilters 12, a total USD matched against UC Irvine. By Nicole Var9as "We've had some solid STAFF WRITER games shooting from the pe­ rimeter," said Nakamoto, who t the start of the season, is averaging 14.7 points. "We're talk aroundJ.!SI4vas that moving the ball really well. Our AToreros guard Keni Nak­ team chemistry is so much bet­ amoto was one of the West ter this year." Coast Conference's most un­ Nakamoto credits theTore­ derrated basketball players. ros' post players, who have But after 10 games it's been been bolstered by the return of difficult for op­ senior Erin Malich from injury. ponents to un­ Malich, who has come off the derestimate bench in the last six games as a the 5-foot-6 ju- sixth player, is leading the team 1 nior. with 16.8 points per game. "She's been "People have to respect our playing unbe­ post game," Nakamoto said. lievable," Ter "Marta (Menuez) and Malich reros assistant do such a good job with their in­ Kerri coach Erik side scoring. They take every­ Nakamoto Johnson said. body's attention away from us." "A lot of people look at her and Nakamoto also credits her say there's no way this kid is fellow guards, who together are going to beat them, but she's shooting .383 from three-point proved she's the real thing. range, a close second to WCC She's a complete player." leader Santa Clara at .385. Despite a tumultuous start to Almost as impressive as the a season that began with only Toreros' perimeter consistency nine healthy players, the Tore­ is their perimeter defense. ros are 7-3 and riding a six­ USD's opponents are shooting game winning streak. just .153 from beyond the arc. Next up is the Surf 'N' Slam Next best in the WCC is Santa Tournament, hosted by USD Clara, which has kept oppo­ tomorrow and Sunday atJenny nents to .278. Craig Pavilion. The Toreros Johnson says that type of de­ playTexas-SanAntonio (3-5) t

1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1/li 1111 Burrelle's IH,-OlftM.-r/0# Srlf.,ICES 580 .xz,ae ON 25 .a . . . x I ~Board ■ SC~R-aTHLETES: USD placed four on the fall West Coast Conference All·Aca emic teams: Kim Croswell (3.23 GPA, Fallbrook), a sophomore on the women's cross country team; Steve Trudelle (3.41), a sophomore on the men's cross . country team; Tyler Cenley (3.82), a Junior forward on the ,, men's soccer team; and Ktlltn Hroto (3.47), a sophomore de· . fender on the men's soccer team.

67 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,843 DEC 8 2001

I11111111111111111 111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle'& 58 0 l#l'O•M.ATIOII .SH~ICH , IZWH QN 25 , I , ,, I Short change helps USD to big progress ~ By Hank Wesch, STAFF WRITER

A little downsizing went a long way for the USD men's basketball team in its victory W'eonesday over San Diego State. So look for the Toreros to continue to think small when they host }3oise State tonight and to hold that thought for the near future, at least. ( USD coach Brad Holland substituted 6-foot-7 junior Jason Blair for 6-10 senior Kevin Hanson at the center position in the starting lineup against SDSU. That left the Toreros with a starting front line of 6-4 Sam Adamo at small forward, 6-5 Tom Lippold at power forward and Blair. A rather small lineup by NCAA Division I standards. But it worked as Lippold and Blair combined for 30 points arid 13 rebounds, more than held 'their own defensively against taller Aztecs coun­ terparts, and USD won the battle of the boards 35-31. The decision, Holland said, had everything to do with Blair, a transfer from Southwest Texas State with a solid all-around game. It wasn't a reflection on Hanson, who had advanced from three years as a backup to the starting job but Jason Blair (left), fighting through Huskies last hadn't produced much in the first five games. Saturday, was a shorter center In Wednesday's ''We went with it because Jason Blair needs to win over Aztecs. Jack Smith/ AssociatedPress be on the floor more," Holland said. "He showed us with his play in games and practice that we shooter with perimeter range. Llppold needed to get him more minutes. took a We're going to step toward doing the same by going 3-for-4 go with that (smaller) lineup a lot more." on three-point shots in the second half to spark USD Blair came into the SDSU game averaging 19 from an eight-point minutes. halftime deficit to the 72-67 He played 32 against the Aztecs. Han­ victory over the Aztecs. son, who came in averaging 18.8 minutes, was 'ppold's outside game wasn't an overnight used for five against SDSU, scored three points development. and got two rebounds - two points and two All the seniors stayed boards below his average. here during the sum­ m r," Llppold said. ''We'd get up at 6 in "I was very comfortable using Kevin the at an m ming and shoot for two hours, then shoot important time in the game and he did a good a · job," in the afternoon. We shot 400 times a day, Holland said. s· days a week. Blair had already established himself as a 'It has paid off."

68 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 372,943 DEC 8 2001

I11111111111111111 111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle's l#FOffMMIO# SEll""C*$ 580 QN ,IZHI 25 .•.. . x - Aztecs face ailgry BulldOgs

By Ed Graney game, or it could get real ugly Aztecs play (and lose) to their STAFF WRITER \_\\S'~ in our own place," said Smith, a cross-town rival, the more the senior forward who's just now series means to them. Brandon Smith is not panick­ feeling confident after minor Fact Pride has sneaked into ing, because this is the time of knee surgery Nov. 6. 'We don't the equation for SDSU players, year when some still haven't want that to happen." who in the past considered a bought a Christmas tree, when So they have spent a majority game against the Toreros as grocery stores are just now of their post-USD nightmare they might one against Norfolk breaking out cartons of egg­ minutes trying' to improve ex­ State. It's different now. nog. posed weaknesses, on execut­ "It's not like we didn't under­ It's too early for desperate ing in the half-court and defend­ stand what we needed to do to thoughts. Well, almost ing for entire possessions and win," said Dutcher. "We 'There is a sense of urgency treating the ball like a rare jew­ needed to limit our turnovers in that we'd like to get on a little el instead of something infect­ and defend well against the roll and stay there," Smith said. ed by the plague. dribble-drive. We didn't do "But nothing is won in Decem­ The Aztecs have now played those things. It's disappointing ber. We want to be playing our three games with a full comple­ because that is a road game we best basketball at the end of ment of players, with Smith could have won and didn't. January and the beginning of back from his surgery and se­ "But our kids will be ready to February. We know we have to nior guard Al Faux from his play (tonight) and they will play • keep getting better each day. suspension. Still, flow is difficult hard. They always play hard. If 'We're a determined team." to find at either end. we execute and play our best Tonight, the Aztecs also 'We haven't played that well basketball, it doesn't quite mat­ must be very good to have a at this point, but it's still a new ter how (Fresno State) plays. chance. team trying to get guys on the We have to be less concerned Smith and his San Diego same page and working in the with them and more with how State teammates face by far same direction," said assistant we perform." their toughest opponent this coach Brian Dutcher. A key could be Faux, who young season when No. 21 "I think the players are sur­ has averaged 18.7 points in Fresno State visits Cox Arena prised we have three losses, three games, who has shown at 7:35. but they're all extremely confi­ an ability to play big in big The Aztecs have played sev­ dent and none of them is an games, who scored 28 in an en games and won four and not excuse-maker. upset of Oklahoma State last a player or coach is satisfied "By the time we reach season in Cox Arena with that. Worse, they are com­ () 'We have to put the (USD ing off a 72-67 loss ~t 1!?!1 in a play, this is going to be a good loss) behind us and move on," game they led by e1glit at half­ basketball team. The players Faux said. "Our morale is still time. Worse, they now play a want to learn. They want us to very good. USD made plays in Fresno State team that lost to teach them how to get better. If the second half and we didn't, Gonzaga by 10 on Thursday. they continue to listen and do but it's over. We play well at Two days ago, there might what we ask, the necessary im­ home and will have a big crowd have been a chance coach Jerry provements will be made." (tonight). If we do what the Tarkanian's Bulldogs (7-2) Fresno State is a good rea­ coaches tell us, play smart and would arrive here overconfi­ son for SDSU to quickly forget find a way to beat Fresno State, dent. There isn't now. the sting of a fourth straight no one will remember what 'We need to be on top of our loss to USD, but the more the happened against USD."

69 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 458,527 DEC 2 2001 USD too charitable at line

By Hank Wesch /U "We just wanted to finish s1!ong and STAFF WRITER \X..,\J _' the next thing you know 1t was a 7-point. 4-point, 3-point, 2-point game," The comeback effort in the final Laws said. 'That shows that as long as minute was furious. But the free throw we fight and play as hard as we can we shooting in the first 19 minutes of the can play with anybody. w_e have ~o second half was scandalous. play hard for 40 minutes like we did And all USD Washington 98 for the last two." . got for its effort Laws' point total was one be~d was Toreros 94 a 98-94 loss Mike Whitmarsh 's against Loyola m to Washington 1983 and Marty Munn's against Loyo­ before 2,416 last night at the Jenny la in 1988 on USD's single-game list It Craig Pavilion. topped Doug Harris' 35 against Cal Consolation, if there was any, for State Northridge in 1995. the Toreros came in the fact that they Before USD's final-minute fluny, summoned up the spunk to trim a Washington had shown good poise 90-76 Huskies lead to 94-92 in a matter and made plays whenever the Torero_s of 55 seconds in the final 1:07 of the threatened to seize control. Allen. hit game. two three-pointers, the last one J':1st And the fact that senior guard An­ before the buzzer, and the Huskies dre Laws went off for 36 points, the outscored USD 8-2 in the last 1:27 to second-highest, single-game individu­ take a 4M0 lead at halftime, the larg­ al total since the school gained NCM est margin for either side in the first 20 Division I status in 1970 and the most minutes. by a Torero in nearly seven years. The hard, cold facts that relegated USD to its second loss against a Pac-10 When USD rallied to take a 61-58 SUMMARY opponent in six days were that the lead with 13 minutes to go, the Hus­ WASIIIIGTilN ..., FG-A FT-A R A F Pis Wrenn 28 5-9 J.7 3 0 4 14 Toreros missed a bunch of shots that kies responded with an 8-0 run that Leep 20 2-3 2-2 1 I 4 7 were either lay-ins or very close-ins included three-point plays by the ~ Dixon 33 4-5 6-7 9 0 4 14 Allen 34 5-10 11-12 2 4 2 25 and also missed 11 of 16 free throws in Allen and 6-11 center David Dixon. Knight 9 0-2 0-0 1 0 4 0 the second half. The Huskies were 14-of-16 from the Massingale 23 5-8 9-9 2 2 1 19 Oay 20 3-5 0-0 6 1 5 6 'They had a bunch of uncontested free throw line from the 4:03 to 1:15 Conroy 9 0-1 0-0 2 1 3 0 shots and didn't miss many, and we mark of the second half in building the Barnard 18 J.5 1-2 1 1 4 9 Jensen 5 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 missed a lot," said USD coach Brad 14-poinl lead and were 37-of-43 from Hudson 1 0-0 4-4 0 0 0 4 Holland. "Washington won the game the line for the game. Totals zoo 27-49 37-43 Z7 10 31 98 with its play Percentages: FG .551 , FT .860. 3-4'oill Goals: 7-10, .700 (Allen in the first 38 minute , Right now, the Toreros only wish 4-6, Wrenn 1-1, Leep 1-1, Barnard 1-1 ). Team Rebolllds: 0. Blocked and we put ourselves in a position of Shots: 6 (Day 3). TLITIOYen: 15 (Wrenn 3). steals: 2 (Allen, they could shoot free throws that well. Massingale). Tedlnical FOlis: None. having to catch up by having too many 'There·s no que'stion that in at least llSD ..., FG-A FT-A R A F Pis poor defensive Lippold posses ions." two of our three losses the foul line 23 3-8 2-4 3 0 5 8 The Huskies (5-1) placed four play­ Adamo 27 5-7 6-6 5 4 3 19 has been the difference in the game," Hanson 15 1-2 0-0 2 1 4 2 ers in double figures, Laws 35 14-25 6-13 led by sopho­ said Holland. The cure, he said, is 4 3 4 36 more point guard McGram 18 0-1 2-2 1 1 0 2 Curti Allen's 25. plain old work. Morris 5 0-0 0-0 1 1 2 0 C .J. Massingale, Delzell 12 1-2 0-0 4 2 5 2 another sophomore "Kids don't try to miss free throws guard, had 19, four Boardman 11 1-3 0-0 2 0 3 2 of them on free or layups," Holland said. 'The only Belser 11 J.5 1-3 3 0 4 8 throws in the last 12 seconds after Blair 20 J.10 0-2 6 0 2 6 thing you can do is tell them to just put Lewis 2 USD 0-3 0-0 0 0 0 0 (2-3) had cut the lead to 94-92. more time in, shoot extra free throws Heqarty 21 J.5 J.4 8 1 2 9 Laws accounted Totals zoo 34-71 Z0.34 44 13 34 94 for six of his 36 so you have the satisfaction of know­ points in USD's 16-2 run that started Percentages: FG .479, FT .588. 3-4'oill Goals: 6-18, .333 (Adamo ing you've done the work and you feel J.4, Laws 2-5, Belser 1-1 ). Team Rebolllds: 5. lllodled Shots: 1 with Jason Blair's lay-in (Hegarty}. TLITIOYen: 14 (Adamo 4). steals: 6 (Laws 2, Boardman with 1:07 to confident about yourself. That's what play and ended with 12.8 seconds re­ 2). Tedlnical Fouls: None. we've got to do." Washi,gton maining on a three-point play by fresh­ (5-1) 46 52 - 98 San1 Adamo backed Laws with 19 llSD

70 USD's Kevin Hanson (53) drives between Washington's David Dixon (left) and Doug Wrenn in Toreros' loss to Huskies. JohnR. Mccutchen/ Union-Tribune

71 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 456,527 DEC 9 2001

111111111111111111 IIIII IIII 11111111111111111111111111111 1111 BurreJJes 5800 1111,ottll4Ar1o#Slltw1u~ QN ,IZIU 25 . 1 . .. n Laws leads Toreros to blowout of Boise State By Hank Wesch this season, Torero coach Brad knew that it's about us. How we STAFF WRITER Holland only laughed. "No, you play is the most important can't lay that on me," Holland thing, not how many people are It was a B.Y.OA-type game said. "I've been on Andre to get in the stands. for USO. Bring Your Own more aggressive since he was a "But I sure would like to get Atmosphere. And the Toreros sophomore." that atmosphere back that we turned it into a heckuva party. "He did, but I just didn't know had against State." Before 1,391 fans at the Jenny how to handle it," Laws said. "I The Toreros missed six of Craig Pavilion - 3,709 fewer was really young. I've learned a their first eight shots to fall than the sellout for lot from all of the coaches on dif­ behind 11-4, but regrouped fol­ Wednesday's victory over San ferent ways of scoring. It kind of lowing a timeout to go on a 12-0 Diego State - the Toreros hurts that it's only happening run and led 30-21 at halftime. motivated themselves to an 85- now, but I'll take it now." Freshman point guard Mike 59 rout of a Boise State team Laws went 6-for-7 on three McGrain got the Toreros' run that figured to provide much pointers and was 11-for-15 over­ started by driving the lane and stiffer competition than it did. all and added five rebounds, two Laws took it from there, account­ USO senior guard Andre assists and three steals. He got ing for the next 10 points on two Laws scored 29 points, giving primary support from team­ three-pointers, a follow of an him a total of 89 in games mates Jason Blair (13 points, Adamo miss and a short jumper. against Washington (36), San seven rebounds), Sam Adamo Laws had 12 points at the Diego State (24) and Boise State (12 points, 3 rebounds) and break and added 14 more in the in an eight-day period conclud­ Tom Llppold (12 points, 4 first eight minutes of the second ing last night. Laws' outburst rebounds, 2 as ists). And sec­ half as USO opened a 20-point has propelled him to 19th on the ondary support from six other lead. The Toreros didn't let up, school's career scoring list with Toreros, five of whom got into building the margin to 83-53 972 points. His next basket will both the scoring and rebound­ before Holland cleared the move him past Brian Bruso ing columns. bench in the final minute. Boise (1992-97) on the chart This in a game which had State ace Abe Jackson, who His current per game scoring extr~me "letdown" possibilities came in averaging 18. 7 points average of 23.1, if maintained, considering that it followed so per game, was held to four, all in would better the school single­ closely the emotional win over the first half, by a tag-team USO season record ofJohnJerome in SDSU and that the team came defense of Lippold, Scott 1989-90 by almost four points out for pregame warmups to a Boardman and Corey Belser. per game. sea of empty blue seats. The Toreros were relentless "It's a confidence thing," 'That's your biggest fear as a on defense, forcing 23 turnovers Laws said of his scoring spree. coach," Holland said. "How's while committing nine fewer "I've had the potential for a long your team going to react after a themselves. USO (4-3) had nine time I wanted to make it happen. big win? We verbalized about it. steals to one for Boise State (3- But now I'm out there playing We knew we weren't going to 4). The Toreros outrebounded with confidence and the ball is have as many fans. the Broncos 37-28. going in the hoop." "So we talked it through "I'm just darn proud of this Asked earlier in the week ifhe about not feeling sorry for our­ team and what it was about had "taken the wraps" off Laws selves and mad sure our guys tonight," Holland said.

72 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 456,527 DEC 9 2001

111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle'S 5800 lt"OftlttAr,011 SUt~IC* :I QN .xz,u 25 .1 .. . n r---· To!,-os prevail as Malich stars grabbing seven Junior forward Erin Malich scored a career- career-high 18 points while 21 points to lead tpe Universiu:.9.f ~ Diea:,o rebounds. high 36-29 at the half Jose State 73-63 yesterday in front of 877 at San Jose State (4-3) trailed over break to score eight Jenny Craig Pavilion. before coming back after the lead on a Cricket Malich is averaging over 17 points a game after straight points and take a 37-36 1 from a leg injury against the University Williams lay-up. returning 15 points com- Pacific on Dec. 1 Williams led the Spartans with of the added guard Kerri Nakamoto scored 12 points ing off the bench. Teammate Elea A'Giza Junior the field. and dished out five assists. 13 points on 6-12 shooting from posted a The Torerors host Boise State at 1 p.m. today. / San Diego's center Marta Menuez

73 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 372,043 DEC 4 2001

Illllllll 111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Bu11effe'S l#,O/fMATIO# SE/fVICl!:Ji 580 ,XZIII 25 .... •:N I Local Basketball Report Bland.named MW-c Player of Week l) San Diego State men's basketball tomorrow night at 7:30, and then playec Tony Bland was named hosts No. 21 Fresno State on Sa:"J ( Mountain West Conference Player day night at 7:35. of the Week after averaging 21 - ED GRANEY points, 3.5 rebounds and 5.0 assists -----~~ • in victories against UCSD and Cal State Northridge. "It's an honor, but it's an individu­ al thing," said Bland, a junior guard. "We have our eyes set on some pretty big team goals. Scorers will score, but I'm most proud of the assists. I've been able to get others involved." Bland leads the conference in scoring (22. 7) and is fourth in as­ sists (5.5). SDSU (4-2) plays at -USD (2-3)

74 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 372,843 DEC 11 2001

111111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles llff'0ltMArl0# Sl!IIVICI!~ 580 QN .un• 25 ,I,' ,l Color USD optimistic in match with Green

By Hank Wesch ~ STAFF WRITER ":J USDTONIGHT

His name is Jerry Green, and college USO vs. UC Irvine hoop-o-philes know who he is. Site/Time: Jenny Craig Pavilion/7:05 He's the guard from UC Irvine who Records: UC Irvine 5-2, USD 4-3 declared for the NBA draft last year but Radio: KCBO-AM (1170) didn't hire an agent and returned to the Internet: www.usdtoreros.com or Anteaters fold after going undrafted. www.KCBQ.com Of course, .l) SD., which hosts UCI Serles: USD leads 12-9 tonight at 7 at the Jenny Craig Pavilion, Outlook: USD senior is acutely aware of Green. guard Andre Laws was named West Coast Conference "Jerry Green is, obviously, an out­ co-Player of the Week, with Gonzaga's standing player," USD coach Brad Hol­ Corey Violette, after leading the Toreros land said. "He has good size, quickness, to victories over SDSU and Boise State athleticism. I think he's a future NBA last week. Laws averaged 27 points for guard. the two games while shooting 63.3 "But they've got a lot of very good percent from the field (l 9-for-30), 77.8 players to go with him. They were 25-5 percent on three-pointers (7-for-9), 75 last year, and I think they're going to percent from the free-throw line win 20-some again (9-for-12) and also collected 4.5 rebounds this year. We respect and three steals per game. Laws' 23.4 ppg UC Irvine, and we know we're going to scoring average is tied for 10th nationally. have to play very well in order to win." Meanwhile, UCI senior guard Jerry Green Green, a 6-foot-2 senior, averaged 19 ranks fourth nationally at 24.9 points per · points a game and earned Big West game. UCI hasn't played in 10 days, during Conference Player of the Year honors semester final exams. After tonight, USD last season as UCI claimed its first con­ has a nine-day break for finals before ference championship. Passed over for hosting USC. . a berth in the NCAA Tournament, the Matchup to watch: Green vs. Laws in Anteaters fell by four points to Tulsa in what could be a shootout - although both the opening round of the NIT. sides emphasize the team.concept. With starters Green and 7-0 center -HANK WESCH Adam Parada returning, UCI is off to a 5-2 start this season. Green is averaging 24.9 points with a career-best 41 in a 63-60 victory last season at UCL double-overtime, 96-93 victory over "That game was one of my favorite Pepperdine last month. wins last year," Holland said. Pepperdine is one of three West Point guard Dana White, who has Coast Conference allies of USD that since graduated, had the primary de­ UCI has already defeated. The others fensive assignment on Green last sea­ are Saint Mary's (74-61) and Loyola son. Holland declined to specify who Marymount (71-59). would be called upon for that role to­ 'Tonight was the Jerry Green Show," night, but conceded that a head-to-head •Loyola coach Steve Aggers said after matchup between Green and Toreros Green's 36-point performance. 'We did senior guard Andre Laws, who is aver­ a good job as a team defensively and aging 23.4 points, is possible some of shut everyone else down, but we the time. couldn't stop Green." 'That's the intriguing part, talking USD held Gree,,..n to nine points in a about this game," Holland said. 75 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA MONDAY 372 , 843 DEC 10 2001

111111111111111111 IIIII IIII 111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles 580 l1t,OIIIIAArtO# SUfVICIIS QN ,XZHI 25 ,I,, ,l

Men's Basketball at Jenny Craig Pavilion

All TickeJS Plus 5 5combo TKkets ~ Meal-Deals $12-Reserved Seats ~~ General Admission u JJ 'f.!t/L j at our Concession $j Q-Adults $?-Children Stand 619-26o-7550

76 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372, 643 DEC 6 2001

111111111111111111 lllll lllt 111111111111111111111111111111111 Butr.f!lJf!.,'§ 580 QN .xzne 25 • a ..• X 1lruins women's star watches Toreros win By Nicole Vargas talize on situations like that," STAFF WRITER said USD senior point guard Melissa Glazebrook. "But we It was not ~ ~'a' f game have to play our game and not the ~ J women's basketball worry about who is or isn't on team expected from UCLA, but the court for the other team." the Bruins could not have pre­ USD did just that. Post play­ ' Toreros 79 dicted this ers Erin Malich, playing in only kind of her second game of the season UCLA (w) 51 game from because of injuries, and Marta the Toreros, Menuez scored 17 and 15 either. points, respectively, With UCIA star Michelle Kerri Nakamoto led the way Greco on the bench, USD with six of the team's season­ cruised to a 79-51 victory at high 12 threes, :finishing with a Jenny Craig Pavilion last night game-high 18 points. Janeene before 512. Arendsen added three threes The win marks the second and 11 points. time in two years that the Tore­ The 5-foot-6 Glazebrook led ros (3-3) have defeated the Bru­ the team in rebounding for the ins (2-4), who had a seven­ second time this season, with game winning streak against 11, to go with 10 assists. USD before last season. Despite committing 17 fouls Not only was Greco, who in the second half alone, the averages 23.6 points, scratched Toreros built a 31-21 halftime because of an undisclosed med­ lead to 30 with 7:44 to play. ical condition, but UClA's No. Sophomore Gennifer Arrana­ 2 scorer, Malika Leatham, ga, who started for Greco, scored only six points, making scored 13, as did J alina Bradley. l-of-12 shots from the floor and UCIA freshman Brianna Wmn 4-of-12 free throws. (Bishop's) had four points and -"Of course, we need to capi- two rebounds in 14 minutes._ f

77 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 45&,527 DEC 2 2001

11111111111111111I IIIII IIII 111111111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJe'S '"'OflMArlO# 51UltllCl!li 5800 QN ,UHi 25 , I,,, n Women's Basketball Toreros nip UOP in home opener FROM STAFF AND NEWS SERVICES each scored 13 points to lead v\ \ :S-'1\ San Diego State over Prairie View A&M 68-46 in the Aztecs' After opening the season with four straight first road games, game of the Cook Children's TCU Hoops Classic the ,USQ. women's basketball team in Fort Worth, Texas. won its home opener by holding off University of Atitn Otii had 12 points the Pacific 64-63 at the Jenny Craig Pavilion. and Jamey Cox added six point and six assists Junior guard Kerri Nakamoto hit a three-point­ for the Aztecs. DSU (3-2) will face Texas Christian today. er with 1:56 to play that gave USD a 64-62 lead and ended up being the game-winning shot. Gillian d'Hondt hit the second of her free-throw omen's Top 25 attempts with 1:32 to play pull Pacific (3-3) within ra Braxton had 19 points and nine rebounds to one, but neither team scored the rest of the way. 1 ad No. 13 Georgia over UNLV 77-62 in the first Nakamoto finished with 23 points and five r und of the Oakland Tribune Classic . . . Brandi rebounds to lead Toreros (2-3), and sophomore cCain scored 23 points and Vanessa Hayden had center Marta Menuez chipped in with 15 points. 2 points, 18 rebounds and five blocked shots as o. 19 Florida beat Creighton 78-67 in the opening SDSU breezes in Fort Worth r und of the Tulane Invitational ... Elisa Inman had 2 points and 13 rebounds, Claire Swinbank powering unbeaten and Ashonda Williams 'ce over No. 22 George Washington 67-54.

78 I SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 458,527 DEC 2 2001

Illllllll 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles 5800 QN ,11111 25 . 1 ... n 49ers overwhelm Toreros women By Steve~~~ert fer Roy said. "Even if I did, I 4-1, S4 and 10-5 leads before alive by tipping the ball over a SPECIAL TO THE UNION-TRIBUNE could see the ball go over me." Petrie called her first timeout 49ers double-team and Robert- Long Beach State (30-0) fin- The Toreros slowly nar- son followed with a kill, pulling WNG BEACH- USD had ished with a .403 hitting per- rowed the deficit, but the 49ers USD to within one at 29-28. no answer for Long'""Beach centage, improving each game. continued to hold the lead until With Hurst serving, Long State's ~foot-7 senior middle The 49ers hit .278 in Game Ashanti Taylor's hitting error Beach State closed out the blocker and outside hitter One, .424 in the second and tied the score 20-20. game on a Cheryl Weaver kill. Tayyiba Haneef in its NCAA .594 in the third. The Toreros pulled ahead The 49ers "just took over the Division I Women's Volleyball Conversely, USD (22-9) 21_20 on Keri Nishimoto's set- match" in the second and third Championships second-round weakened each game. opening ting error, only to have Long games, Petrie said, adding: match last night. with a .265 kill percentage, fall- Beach State tie the score on the "We had a hard time stopping Six inches taller than the tall­ ing to .093 in the second game ensuing serve on Taylor's kill. them at that point," Petrie said. est Torero, Haneef had a and minus .028 in the third, 49ers Coach Brian Gimmillaro "I know they're on a mission. match-high 18 kills as USD's with seven kills and eight er- called a timeout after USD took They're 30-0 now, and we were season ended with a 30-28, rors in 36 attacks. a two-point lead at 24-22_ in their way. I think they're go- the next two 30-16, 30-13 loss to the top-rank­ 'They have a lot more op- ing to roll over ed 49ers. tions than we do offensively," The momentum then teams." said Toreros coach Jennifer Pe- shifted. Long Beach State The Toreros have never ad­ "Being 5-10, supposedly, it trie. scored seven of the next nine vanced past the second round was pretty difficult to get a USD was at its best during points, taking a 29-26 lead. To- in their five NCAA Tournament against them," Toreros the 25-minute opening game. reros freshman middle hitter appearances. freshman outside hitter- Jenni- Long Beach State broke out to Kristen Hurst kept the game 79 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,043 DEC 20 2001

I11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJe l#,OHAATIO# Se•t11c1s's 580 QN ,IZIII 25 ,I .. ,l Balanced Toreros make it look easy agai~st Hornets '-\ \ ~'-\ The USD women's basketball team pulled a major lialancing act last night, as five Toreros reached double scoring figures en route to an 84-60 nonconfemce win over winless Sacramento State at Jenny Craig Pavil­ Toreros (w) 84 ion. It was the fifth straight Sac. State 60 victoryforUSD (6-3), which scored its season high thanks to 13 assists by senior point guard Melissa Glazebrook. The Toreros shot 54 percent from the field in the second half against Sacramento State (0-9) . Brandi Collato, a freshman guard from Santa Fe Christian High, scored a career-high 17 points to pace USD. Erin Malich added 16 points and junior guard Kerri Nakamoto and sophomore center Marta Menuez combined for 27. Nakamoto added eight assists as USD totaled 27 assists. The Toreros claimed 46-31 advantage on the boards, and Melissa Padgett led the way with 10 rebounds. The Toreros have won five straight at home since returning from a season-opening road trip on Dec.1. USD travels to UC IIvine tomorrow night before returning home to host the -n-Slam Tournament on Dec. 28-30.

80 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA MONDAY 372,643 DEC 10 2001

illllllll llll lllll lllll llll 111111111111111111111111111111111

580 QN ,IZWII 25 .•. .. x

Women's Roundup USD beats Boise St. via Blaine ~ ,✓01.. FROM STAFF AND NEWS SERVICES

Freshman Cassidy Blaine - who attended Boise Oda.) High School - came off the bench to score 16 points to lead USD past Boise State 73-61 yester­ day at Jenny Craig Pavilion. The Toreros (5-3) jumped to a 204 lead and never looked back in handing Boise State - (2-5) its second consecutive loss. USD also extended its winning streak to four games. Blaine, a Boise native who was Boise High School Player of the Year, finished ~f-7 from three-point range. Juniors Erin Malich and Ker­ ri Nakamoto (10-of-13 free throws) had 15 points apiece for USD, and sophomore cen­ ter Marta Menuez added 10 points and five rebounds. UCSD beats S.F. State Katie McGann hit clutch three-pointers in the closing minute of regulation and in overtime to lift UCSD (3-1, 1-1 CCAA) to an 80-71 victory over San Francisco State (4-3, 1-1) at RIMAC Arena. McGann, a freshman forward, led UCSD with 18 points.

81 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 372,843 DEC 7 2001

111111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle'& '"''0•114.AttCJ• Se•t1,CEI 580 QN ,XZIII 25 ,I., , I

® ~h~ Women~ BASKETBALL at Jenny Craig Pavilion _ WOMEN'S vs SA Sat.Dec.8-2 m RECYCLE DAY bring 10 or more re~e items ( PRE-GAME PANCAKE 8RE 1PM by

$5 FRENZY all tickets $5, plus $5 COMBO MEAL-DEALS ot woMEN's vs so,sEsrA Sun.Dec.9-2 m 2-FOR· 1 NIGHT all tickets 2 for the price of 1 (lesser priced ticket 2-FOR· 1 SODA at our concession stands!

82 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO , CA

SATURDAY 372 1 843 DEC 22 2001

IIIIIIIII II 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle's ,.,o••ArlD# SEl/ftllCES 580 QN ,XZIII 25 ,I,, ,X Local Basketball Pepperdine too much for lowly PLNlJ for the UNION-TRIBUNE \ S''\ each added 13 points Waves. MALlBU - Terrance Johnson scored 24 points to lead Pepperdine USD wins sixth straight to a 98-55 win over Point Loma USD women's team won its sixth Nazarene last night straight game with a 92-53 road Matt Enloe led PL.NU (1-12) with victory at UC Irvine. 16 points, but needed 15 shots to Cassidy Blaine led the Toreros reach that total. Francis Ireifej, the (7-3) with 21 points, making 5--0f-8 Crusaders leading scorer at 13.3 three-point attempts. Erin Malich points per game, managed just 1 had 19 points, Keni Nakamoto point. chipped in with 10 points and 10 Johnson scored 12 of his points assists, and Marta Menuez and during a 14-3 run midway through Melissa Glazebrook added 10 the first half that gave Pepperdine points each for USD. (5-5) a 31-14 lead and control of the San Diego finished the game game. Pepperdine shot 55 percent shooting 59.6 percent from the field from the field in the first half. (31-52) and 63.2 percent (12-19) Boomer Brazzle and Craig Lewis from beyond the three-point line.

83 SANDIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,643 DEC 6 2001

Illl lllll11111111111111111 1lilll 1 111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJe'S 1,-raRflllATION su,.nc,J 580 QN .XZIII 25 .•.. . x _AtWetes take youngsters on holiday shopping spree Sean Foundation program helps kids By David E. Graham themselves but for others, or­ STAFF WRITER ganizers said. "This is the easiest charity It wasn't always clear which event to say yes to," said Dar­ was the greater attraction: the ren Bennett, the Chargers chance to spend $100 shopping punter who is a veteran of the or the opportunity to spend shopping event that was held at time with a sports star. the Sports Arena Mervyn's. Both were possible Tuesday "It's a pleasure to do it" night for more than 200 young­ He shepherded Jessica Bar­ sters from around the county ry, 14, of Oceanside as she who teamed with professional bought items for her mother, and college athletes for a father and grandparents. Christmas shopping spree. Brandi Prieto, who is train­ The Shop with a Jock event ing in the triple jump at ARCO is sponsored each December Olympic Training Center, was by the Junior Seau Foundation among Olympic hopefuls who to benefit underprivileged chil­ came out dren. The kids buy gifts for Jason Treter, a sophomor family members - and maybe left tackle on the USD football something for themselves. team, said he volunteered be­ About 150 athletes including cause it might be a chance to some from the San Diego Char­ be a role model, if only for a gers, the University of San Die­ short time, to children who go, San Diego State University might not have such figures in San Diego State University soccer player Gina Salinas signed an autograph for Lucero Camacho, and a few Olympic hopefuls their lives. 12, of the Boys & Girls Club of City Heights Tuesday night during the Shopwith a Jock event held at gathered to share the evening "If you can somehow touch the Mervyn's store near the San Diego Sports Arena. K.C. Alfred I Union-Tribune with the children. their lives for a moment . . . ," "Hopefully, it's a gift of giv­ Treter said. her brother's girlfriend. SDSU soccer player Maria the children had dinner and ing'' that the children receive, He wandered through the SDSU basketball player Montoya, a sophomore, en­ had the chance to decorate said Seau, the Chargers' star department store with Jennifer Randy Holcomb spent time joyed the event enough last cookies, have their faces linebacker. Pearson, 13,oflemonGrove,a with the children, too. 'This year that she return~d this painted and dance. The children came from area student at the School of Cre­ sticks with kids when they see year. "I think it's really good to Boys & Girls Clubs and were ative and Performing Arts, as people who are bigger than help the community," she said. 00 chosen from among those who she shopped for members 6f life," said Holcomb, a senior DavidGraham: (619) 542-4575; ,&;,.. wrote saying they'd buy not for her family, including a gift for forward. Before the shopping spree, [email protected] SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA MONDAY 372,843 DEC 3 2001

111111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrefle'$ l#l'OttM,ArlO# S,unncri 580 QN ,UHi 25 ,I , , ,X

Bulletin Board l\\:rV\ ■ TENNIS: After being involved on Saturday in a 51/z-hour match, Tracy Houk of San Mateo summoned sufficient re­ serves yesterday to capture the women's singles title in the USTA Men's and Women's 40 Hardcourt Championships at the La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club. The No. 5 seed, Houk defeated Moira Gandy of Santa Ana 3-6, 6-1, 6-1. The men's slngles crown went to Todd Nelson of San Diego, who is only five years removed from playing on the ATP Tour. Nelson's 6-3, 6-2 conquest of No. 1 seed and defending champion Val WII· der of Euless, Texas, represented the first defeat for Wilder in 10 years of age-group competition. The father-son event is an annual feature of this event. It attracted 69 teams, with Brian and Andrew Cheney of Scottsdale, Ariz., defending their cham­ pionship by defeating Brian and Bret Joelson of Portland, Ore. 7-6 (7-3), 7-6 (7-2). Bret Joelson is the current national boys 16 champion. A San Diego team, Robin Ot)INn and Tracy Thompson, took the women's doubles with a 7-5, 6-2 victory over Tina Karwasky of Glendale and Carolyn Lane of Phoenix. ■ HONORS: To celebrate the 50th year of the West Coast Con­ ference, the league has selected its 50 greatest student-ath­ letes, including six from USO. Toreros singled out are Susie Er­ peldl119 (women's basketball), GuHlenno •• and ROC)el' Llndqvlst (men's soccer), Zuzana Le.....-ova (women's ten­ nis), Jose Luis NoriecJa (men's tennis) and Petla Yanchulov1 (women's volleyball).

To have your free listing published, send it to us via mail at Bulletin Board, c/o Sports Department, San Diego, Union-Tribune, P.O. Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112; fax at (619) 293-2443; or e-mail at [email protected].

S5 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,043 DEC 20 2001

I11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 's BurreJJel~IUITIOII .SH-,,iU 580 QN .nn• 25 .•.. . x 'uso si,ns two ~ ~ '\ USD has signed two high school seniors who wilI7oiii the program for the 2002-2003 season. Colorado Springs Pine Creek's Ttara Harris and Anaheim Esperanza's lindsay Helvey have signed national letters of intent, USD coach Kathy Marpe announced. Hanis, listed among the nation's top recruits, was a 4A All-Colorado State second-team pick as a junior. The 5-foot-10 shooting guard is not only a capable scorer, lout can also run the point Helvey, a 5-10 wing player, earned All-CIF Southern ~ction first-team honors last year in Division I MA

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Returnin VOLLEYBALL CONTINUED FROM PAGE D1 Cornhuskers' Cook left mark in San Diego

Jeth and Poway's Lisa Sarver-Reis. As he learned, he improved the visibili­ ty of San Diego while guiding his team on the principles he learned as an athlete: teamwork and discipline. In his seven years at Parker, Cook led the Lancers to five CIF-San Diego Section titles. Parker also became the first San Diego team to win a state volleyball cham­ pionship, winning in 1986 and 1987 with ·cook at the hehn. "In volleyball, the team that makes the least number of mistakes wins," said Eve­ leth, who competed against Cook before retiring from coaching in 1994. "He had his team very prepared and well-trained. That would kill us. "But I admired his enthusiasm, his dis­ cipline, his consistency and the prepared­ ness of his players. He brought San Die­ go's name up there (with his state titl~s). San Diego owes him a lot" ,John Cook was a UCSD assistant when the Trltons finished second In the nation In Cook c~founded the San Diego Volley­ 1983 and won the NCAA Division Ill title In 1984. NelvinCepeda/ Union-Tribune ball Club in 1986, bringing to prominence the benefits of club play. During his tenure, the club won two Cook said he and his wife, Wendy, Southern California regional champion­ Rule changes in 2001 packed up a U-haul and drove to Nebras­ ships and its 18-and-under team advanced Some rule changes made this season in ka. to the USVBAJunior Olympics Fmal Four NCAA women's volleyball had an impact After four years as a Cornhuskers assis­ twice. on the way the game is played. The most tant coach, Cook knew he was ready to Cook was also responsible for coaching influential: become a head coach. But he wasn't ready for the head coach­ ~ team thatincludedJenniferToms, Car~ ■ Rally scorln9: Unlike in sideout scoring, 1yn Taeatafa and Andrea Rldmilovich. wherein a team can score only when it ing position he received after being hired Toms, now Jennifer Petrie, is head serves, a team may now score a point by Wisconsin to replace Steve Lowe, who coach of the USD women's volleyball whether it is serving or receiving. Now, had died. team, which advanced to the second every time the ball is put in play, each "The program was in complete disar­ round of this year's NCM tournament ., team has an opportunity to score, and the ray," Cook said. "Several players left; sev­ Taeatafa-Hudson led Bonita Vista to the first team to 30 with a two-point lead wins. eral players graduated. There was no re­ large-division high school state champion­ The only time this changes is in a cruiting done for a year. Nothing could ship in 2000 behind national Player of the five-game match. In that event, the final prepare you to replace somebody like Year Jennifer Saleaumua rally-scored game is played to 15, with a him, who had become a very popular two-point lead. Radmilovich-Montgomery turned out a coach." number of Division I recruits, including ■ Serves touchlnCJ the net: Previously, Despite the challenges Cook faced as UC Santa Barbara's Casey McFarland, any ball served that hit the net was a dead the Badgers coach, Cook turned the pr~ ball and resulted in a sideout. Now, served during her coaching days at La Costa Can­ gram around in one year. After going balls that ttuch the net and continue on to yon. She's now an assistant principal at 14-17 in his first year at Wisconsin, Cook the opponent's side remain in play. Balls guided the Badgers to six straight post­ West Hills. that strike the net and fall on the serving "He taught me to be a better person team's side or out of play result in a point season berths. overall; not just a better volleyball player," for the opposition. In Cook's final match at Wisconsin, his Badgers fell to Nebraska in a three-hour, said Taeatafa-Hudson. "He put his time in­ ■ Play outside the antennae: When an to us, and now I am putting my time into attacking team hits a ball that crosses five-game battle in the 1998 Pacific region- my players. I learned a lot of my coaching over the midcourt/netline outside of the al championship at Nebraska. - style from him, and the importance to give antennae - which go up vertically at the Within months, Cook was hired back back to these kids." end of each side of the net - a teammate by Nebraska, first as associate head coach Added Petrie: "For him to go from high is able to hit the ball back to her side if she and then beginning last year as head school coach to national champion is phe­ can do that while still passing outside the coach. nomenal. He has a presence that de­ antennae. The attacking team will then Through it all, Cook maintains his San mands a lot of re~pect He created a high­ have an opportunity to continue the play Diego roots, bringing his wife, a tw~time ly disciplined atmosphere and has the and rally. All-America setter at San Diego State, and ability to motivate players to produce at a children for a few weeks over the summer high level." and sometimes over Christmas: Cook was an assistant at UC San Diego But while Cook maintains his roots ar.e when the Tritons finished second in the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona here, in his heart, he sees himself and his nation in 1983 and won the NCM Divi­ It was during a club competition family as Huskers. sion ill championship in 1984. against Nebraska that Cook went out to "We're very happy there, but we love to - He also served on the staff of the U.S. dinner with then-coach Terry Pettit That come to San Diego and we have great men's national team as an assistant, helJ>­ conversation later turned into a job offer memories here," Cook said. 88 ing the American team win bronze in the to become Pettit's assistant "It does feel great to be here." SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 372,043 DEC 4 2001

Illllllll 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 BurreJJes 580 QN .IZIII 25 ,I,, ,I RECORD q,s THE • USD women's volleyball player Jocelyne Roy was incorrectly identilled as "Jennifer Roy" in a story Sunday on the Toreros' match against Long Beach State. The Union-Tribune regrets the error.

89 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 372,843 DEC 4 2001

I11111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burre11e'B /1,U'OltMATIOII SE•VICES 580 QN ,lZIII 25 .1 . .. x Arkenberg among Spirit c~~ before waiver draft . The San1 iego Spirit ven- player m particular. The Sprr­ tured into the garage and it's roster currently stands at cleaned it out yesterday, 17. wai$g four players as part of In all, 4 l' players were a WUSA mandate to trim ac- waived by the WUSA's eight tive rosters from 20 to 18. teams. They included three - Gone are Traci Arkenberg, players with local ties: Sher-. Karissa Hampton, Missy Wy- ice Bartling (Grossmont cinsky and Holly Broome. High, USD) by Boston, Char­ The Spirit also agreed to part ( ry Korgel (Poway High) by ways with Norwegian goal- Atlanta and Linda Kurtyka keeper Bente Nordby, al- (San Diego resident) by San though Nordby was not offi- Jose. dally waived and thus enters - MARK ZEIGLER tomorrow's league-wide waiv- er draft. Of the four pfayers waived, Arkenberg is the most promi­ nent. A forward, she was one of two players to appear in all 21 Spirit matches, starting 14. She had one goal and three assists. 'We needed to make room under the salary cap," coach Carlos Juarez said. "Another reason was that rosters have to be cut to 18 players, and I was carrying six forwards." By dropping Nordby, the Spirit opened one of four spots for foreign players. That figures to be a forward, and Juarez confirmed the club is negotiating with one

90 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 372,843 DEC 20 2001

I11111111111111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 's BurreJJell!WO//UtjATIOII IIHYICU 580 QN , IZIII 25 ,I .. ,I Bulletin Board -.X\'S~ ■ : For a second year, SKILLIT camps, featuring the baseball coaching staff from USD, will conduct a holiday camp in five locations: East County, North County Coastal, North County Inland, Coronado and the South Bay. Two sessions are planned, one for Dec. 26-28 and the other for Jan. 2-4. Both will run 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Tuition is $110 per camper. Boys and girls ages 6-12 are welcome. Call (858) 674-5861 for infor· mation or go to www.Skillitcamps.com.

91 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA MONDAY 372,643 DEC 10 2001

111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle'B 111,0••-IOII SUWICH QN 580 ,I ... l .UHi 25 49ers team to beat in volleyball Final Four

By Nicole VarCJH tournament, sweeping all of its Die-' ( STAFF WRITER ) opponents, including San go State and USD. , The field for the 2001 NCM Perhaps t:Iie'nation's most Volleyball Final Four at Cox physically intimidating team, 1 Arena is set, and what a field it Long Beach State features re­ has shaped up to be. gional MVP Tayyiba Haneef, a "It is going to be a war," said 6-7 middle blocker, and two­ Nebraska head coach John time All-American Cheryl Cook after his team fought off Weaver, a 6-2 middle blocker. No. 7 Florida in a five-game The 49ers will meet Arizona regional final Saturday. 'There (25-4) in the semifinals, mark­ Four San Dlegans are featured on Arizona's team, Including are going to be four great ing the first meeting between Stefani Saragosa (Francis Parker), scoring last week against teams out there." the two teams this season. USC, and JIii Talbot (Mt. Carmel) at left. Associated!7ess No. 1 seed Long Beach State, After upsetting No. 4 USC in No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 Stanford the regional final in five games, and a four-time champi­ and No. 5 Arizona have sur­ the Wildcats are making their The defending NCM cham­ ments Olympian and vived four rounds of tourna­ first-ever Final Four appear­ pion Comhuskers . (31-1) are on, is led by 2000 MVP Logan Tom. ment play, and will open the ance. trying for their third champion­ regional kills in the re­ semifinals Thursday at San Die­ The team brings a local fla­ ship behind Cook, whose re­ Tom had 20 final match sweep of No. go State. vor to the tournament as four sume includes coaching at UC gional At that point, only one match Arizona players hail from San San Diego, Francis Parker and 15 Texas A&M. separates them from the big­ Diego: senior Jill Talbot (Mt. co-founding the San Diego Vol­ gest contest of the year - Sat­ Carmel) and juniors Lisa Rut­ leyball Club. urday's NCM volleyball cham­ ledge (Vista), Stefani Saragosa Nebraska, coming off its first pionship. (Francis Parker) and Shannon five-game match of the season, NCAA Division I "I'm thrilled," said Comhus­ Torregrosa (University City). is led by Metcalf, who averaged Women's Volleyball kers senior Nancy Metcalf. "I In fact, it was the play of this 4.38 kills per game and had 25 Final Four the Gators. have been waiting for this for­ quartet that sealed the' against At Cox Arena ever, it seems like. I am excited Wildcats' spot in the semifinals. The Comhuskers, whose Thursday's semlflnals for this, and I know our team is, With Arizona down 12-9 in the only loss of the season is to No. 1 Long Beach State (32-0) too." final game, Rutledge served six Long Beach State on Sept. 1, vs. No. 5 Arizona (25-4), 6 p.m. Probably no one is more ex­ consecutive times, including an will meet the Cardinal in their No. 2 Nebraska (31-1) vs. No. 3 cited than the top-seeded 49ers ace, while Talbot added two semifinal match, their first Stanford (31-2), 8 p.m. · (32-0). The nation's only unde­ kills and Torregrosa drilled the meeting of the year. Saturday's championship feated team and three-time final kill of the match. Talbot Stanford (31-2), one of only Winners play at noon 283-7378. NCM champion cruised also earned All-Region honors £ ur teams to have competed in ■ Tickets: (619) - through the early rounds of the. for the second time. ~ 21 NCM volleyball tourna- 1 92 Compiled by The Office of Communications & Marketing