Jim burr referee biography

1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game

American college basketball final

See also: 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

The 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game was the final round of the 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. It determined the national champion for the 1988–89 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, and was contested by the Southeast Regional Champions, No. 3-seeded Michigan Wolverines of the Big Ten and the West Regional Champions, No. 3-seeded Seton Hall Pirates of the Big East. Both teams were seeking their first national title. The game was played on April 3, 1989, at the Kingdome in Seattle, Washington.

Michigan defeated Seton Hall, 80–79 in OT,[1] to claim their first national championship in basketball. It was also the first title for interim head coach Steve Fisher. Wolverine senior forward Glen Rice was named the NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player (MOP) as he established the tournament scoring record with 184 points.

Participating teams

Michigan Wolverines

[ed

HOOPS LIT: HITS AND MISSES

A biography of Mother Teresa could hardly be more adoring than Bob Knight: His Own Man (Donald I. Fine, Inc., $17.95) by Joan Mellen. Then again, Mother Teresa has never won a national championship. As the author of books like Big Bad Wolves: Masculinity in the American Film and Voices from the Japanese Cinema, Mellen, an English professor at Temple, might be expected to offer a fresh perspective on the man considered to be either the god or Godzilla of college basketball coaches. Instead, she is so full of praise for Knight, winner of three NCAA titles at Indiana, that her portrait fails to capture his complexity.

After Knight's allergic reaction to A Season on the Brink, John Feinstein's account of the Hoosiers' 1985-86 campaign, why would he allow another writer access to him? Perhaps he could read the author like a book and knew what the result would be for him—a public relations coup Under Mellen's purifying pen, Knight's profanity becomes "salty" language, his tasteless jokes mere "ribbing" and "needling," his on-court antics "boyish intransigenc

James Burr Shields

Biographical

Represents both employers and employees in regards to employment law matters. Representation has included almost every facet of employment law, other than workmen's compensation. This includes jury trials, bench trials, arbitrations and administrative matters representing governmental employees and professionals in front of licensing boards.

Advice and litigation matters have included discrimination, wrongful discharge, overtime/minimum wage (Fair Labor Standards Act), Family Medical Leave Act, National Labor Relations Act, contract breach (particularly compensation disputes and post-employment restrictions) and various employment-related torts, defamation, intentional interference with contract, etc.

Mediation and arbitration practice is focused, solely, on employment-related disputes. Privately arbitrated disputes during the past 20 years, and began mediating cases in 2019. Very extensive experience as a party in mediations, well in excess of 100.

 


Case Experience

  • ADA Disability
  • Civil Rights
  • Contract Disputes
  • Discriminatio

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