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Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 USD News

1986-10-01

University of San Diego News Print Media Coverage 1986.10

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 1986.10" (1986). Print Media Coverage 1947-2009. 169. https://digital.sandiego.edu/print-media/169

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~ Author Hughes, President Boyce, Vice President, Financial Affairs Dr. Ray Brandes, Dean, School of Grad~ate & Cont. Education Thomas Burke, Vice President and Dean, Student Affairs Dr. James Burns, Dean, School of Business Dr. Ed DeRoche, Dean, School of Education "i Sr. Sally Furay~- Vice President and Provost She 1don Krantz, Dean, School of Law Fr. Mike McKay, Director, Campus Ministry Dr. Irene S. Palmer, Dean, School of Nursing NJ i c. h ~ -t f

Dr. Joseph Pusateri, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences \ Dr. Pat Watson, Dean of Academic Services Fr. Cahill, Director, Physical Education, Recreation, Athletes Malachi Rafferty, Director, Continuing Education Tim Willard, Director, Development

Alcala'Park, San Diego, 92110 619/260-4600 Cabinet Book

October 1986 -~ '8 /~ 5✓ / f'/,'P

·Politics,. artdthe •• California

Bench of President other·has tried to find a W!-Y to guarantee the extreme displeasure Congress _ If Rose Bird is·voted out, the independeilce of the judiciary. The Thomas Jefferson·. Believing Jefferson, British legal s.ysterri,. the basis of ours, should make such decisions, will it set off a chain , prqbably would historically has 'been considered the had he had the power immediately reaction, threatening the model of an ~depend~nt court system. .have removed Marshall to Yet, Sir Thomas, More, believing the ·fr~m the Supreme Court. freedom of judges of indepen- · English couns would not be influenced by This first major declaration .independent · judiciary, which make . Henry vm·s.persuasivc personality. dis: dence by the American their own power decisions? · covered ~ wrong 'he was, Josiog not created for the courts review, only his case but als" his head. base in the doctrine of jul1icial was As Harvard By Evan C. Mc~e There is a very good reason why · itself partly a political &ct. Tri~ has and Michael Lee Bo"-1.a judges often have fallen a bit short from Law School Professor Laurene; Constitu- time to time of the lofty ideals ID wtiich. noted in his_book, American doubt Marshall had a ~ they aspuc. Somebody has tod~who·_ tional l.Aw, "No political~ ap- .· pe"i:sonal interest in· increasing his own · TIIE DIS.?UTE whirling am11&1-Califor- tl_ie judge will be . If a likeiy ~ wil~ power, No doubt also, Marshall's_politics • nia Sµj,moe Court Chief Jwtjce _Rose points the JUdge, it's most ally. If the people elect were r elevant .. . the idea that legis~atures Bird ~ began a long time igo· when · appoint a po&ical on the basis of ·. 'WOUid ignore principle in order to please • two Neandl:rtha1s fought C'Ner .the rights !O the judge, they will elect sbort,judgci are controlling 'factions' was widely shared, a cave. Jug before the pair came b blows, an election cimpaign. In the idea that c;ourts were similarly po­ the issue to a neu- almost aJ~ politicians, by necessity. . _ but they deciditd to submit (although it The Unitql States Constitutioh reflects .: !itical ~as not yet current tral third party for a binding ruling. As 1 the Leg- · · would be.within a few de_cades)." soon as_tbtjudge was chosen, ('llle·part)'. ·this fact. 'The framers described Executive BraJlch Fortunately, these hard facts oflife have · immediatel3/ tried to influence tis deci- · islature in Article I, the Judiciary Arti'.:le never dimmed our hope iliat judges will • _sion by ofl::ring him a matched set .of in Article Il ·ud the fu" these.:c~equal liveuptoourhighexpectations. "~ninde- mastodon tusks. ~ . - - _ UI, and gave: each of balances over ~h pendent judiciary," says Professor Robert . · Since then, one civilization after an- branches checks and .. ~immons of the University of San _Diego -·. . . other. If they bd.iev~ any one oflthe three 0 resist the im- School of Law, "is the crCJ\\~ng glory of -Evan C. McKenzie is a &J!} Diego attor- . could keep itseUhonest and ,power, our legal system. And genera11y, we have ney in privati practice -.vith the Jaw 0.ffices pulse to be corrupted by political charge of t!)e · been,able to obtain it." · .· is p they would have put it in • - ~ of C. · Bradley Ballen. McKenzir ' l;. • • ,r • '. · The· avepige citizen, although well graduale ofthe University ofCalifornia at other two. in~ . aware thafjtidges areoniy human, still ex­ 1.f,s Angeles School ofl.Awandrecei.ved a · No se>oner ·was the Constitl.!tio~ scti~s of . pects that w_!1.en he goes to court fpr a di­ Master ofArts degree, in political science - ~orce tl_ian the first. of-~ lengthy Pres1~ent vorc~ O! a traffic tick~t. he will receiye a from the lfniwrsity of Southern Cal!(or- conflicts dev~loped ~~n the failed~ fair hearing before ajudge ·who is· free nia. Before m1ering priva1e.practice, he -~·and _the courts. The. C~nstituti?n - · from-..influence and isn't worried that a· spou folfr ~ars as·a tkpury district am,,-. state w~ job it~ to decide ifa partic in conform: : wrong decision will ali_enate a particular ney: in th.e Sa11 Diego District ular piece.of legislation was •famous po1itical action co~~ (PAC)~ harm~ .Anomey's Office. Michaef Lu Bowl~r ity w!th ~ C_onstiru,tion:· In the M_adi!on (1803) ; Chief ing the judge's i:eelection: chances. We all tkg,.;efrom 'University . ~ oJ Ma,_:bury v, 1 ' rrreived a Jaw '¥ ·~ neither a ~publican _ _and_is a San Justi~e John Marshall _decidcd...:..!-'ith no expest 8 judge to ' ,: ofSan Die§o Schoof oJLAw _but a fair . Heisa pr~ei:it to guide him-that this ~eter- judge n~r a Dcmocniticjudge, Diegoatiomeyinpri_vatepradice. . · _ . - • minati~ri WOU;)g be_made by the ~~~rts,. to- and capa~le judge. fonner joumali,st. • ) ~ - ~ ~ , , , .i ➔• • - . .. r- ~ c-. • U/' •. 4: ...... ).. . .. - .

. : I • ~ • • Illustration by Lamben Davjs • - -:~ ll ,.. - ., • • ~ • • • . ' ·;, . $' in California "If this attack [ ~n Bird] wirtS, eyery trial judge about its ·. will be concerned, ·when he makes a decision, . ' Simmons of th~ effect:S ori reelection," says Pro!f~r,Rob~rt San Diego School of Law. · -· • University of -:t,: • ' C • Crime Vic­ Bird but not LIKE MOST associated with this, William --~iberals w~o want ~re~in be- , BY THE TIME you read who tims for Court Reform, Stickel also will have been elevate Rehnquist, and consuvatives ·. · • Rehnquist undoubtedly but lieves Bird's unbroken stri'ng of votes Senate as are trying to run Bi[d out of office confirmed by the against the death pen~lty is an example of Stat.cs are outraged at the liberals who oppose the new chief justice of the United soft-on-crime stance. "She is a sym- Rchnqui~. ~-:. · · her Supreme Court. 'His confirmation hear- "of the frustration that vic­ California ·governor Edmund bot." he says, were a highly publicized ordeal for Former they believe the courts ings who· appointed Mosk, tims have because because of his legal ability, G. "Pat" Brown, him-not Citizens Commit- are slanted toward the defendant." question--:-but solely set up the Independe':it motive · which is beyond Courts to He admits there is a political His chief · tee to_Keep Politic- -·~·=,:-.-\: ':J-,.'~ ':, . i /. :· ·> ,: ./·.-:::. ._· , the chi~ justic; of the-.- will of the-people ~ -r _for ·: - _. WHY SHOULD of the _NATIPNS OFTEN look to each -be- Judged by~; ~{ •.'She determines the ·wiJI peo- .- · , · · · California Suprime Court -pr~ent. -_~omp~~::~h~t hap-°"; says former' b~.!l~e~ T~~ ·stic_kcl_,~-j-judi~. different' standar~. than the_ _chief jus:_.;'°pte;• with Propositio~) 4:.;._;;~ -:-- ~_ . .- .:· -:: _ ·.any _runs :rst _Enterprises from Old . ~·:--~d m·~ifomia lice of the \Jnitid States Suprcmc-C~urt? ;].wh.~t ~~_the ~~e~tii_n_~~l J::~~t~JS -~ppe~~g m_~ -~t_!_!.tfn~... ~ ~ ~<~/_f.: !:?:l_~ .:-;"_.~1~er~~J tha_nk.~}.3! .~}!,~~!~to !:ga_~la~ -~·\:·)>n;n:,c ~~rt ~~S~l~~-~!!~~f -~~~k_ l_cg~ ~yste!D -=th~!,C ~~~~~ ~~~ ... ~t-: ;/-::---~- \.:' tJ~t;ea~_.o!fol)~~~~ !1)! 1~.~ ~t~~n_~f! -~'TTi~ co3e-la"'. and · :;.;0;=. m_a _!~en~ _co!'!.~n •_!!~: _If>~ :inieif follow the will of - ·odd hybnd of Roman-Dutch ~;;:::: i>:=::,.=:'- a· ;~1lhe books. She doesn•t 0 ;. ·-.: ·_,,,,Tunes. Mosk, a labeial who has been ~.'-:. t"=~-·, .,.- ~h~_ii~~~f - E~jt~.t1 .-~__<>~on)~~:€J ~_c1fE€_~~ ): ~]~)uf_~~-~C?~g-·~n~~jh j~j ~ri~dii~~~ ~ p§,!f.••~fji<{i !a~~) .F-1!~~!!-~~ -~~~[_,,.~-~ fi1Vis-;J . ~ ~ ~,fJJ!i.:-~J~ ,£!1~-Y~--!>~}°~~~~ ~·y~'i,t~~ ·-f.:;!2J..l!~IJ.:ri£,t~£-OID'!J,Oni .~EJ!9U•s~ .{:.. oM 7~,!cJ. ... :·:·1·.~.-:~~r.~_.... ;:-4~~.. ~~-...... ~1"- • :t:-.,. 1: ?. ' ~ :1-.; . -"-- J.:~·:.;.,t.~'!..i;;~• revicweabv the R, rrf ~ L l • ,n,n •1,m'lilI continued from p e 156 ~ . ions, which create precedent f:t. future decisions. · · · South Africa Prime Minister P.W. Bo­ tha enacted ."state of emergency" laws and accompanying regulations that in: creased ·the power of the police to almost life-and-death control over the blacjc ma­ jority population. Botha failed to present 1 .,P- · the measures to Parliament in order to le avoid embarrassing public debate. The it courts; noting under South African law e ( , that Botha was required to present the ~, measures to Parliament; declared many of ti the "emergency.laws" to be illegal. In fact, jn South Africa today there is a . movement to·gi~e even more power to the courts, which would take the tough deci'­ sions on apartheid ouf of the hands of el~ -~fficials _The polftici>nS ~ . COURTS

realize they cannot solve the problems Standard Oil, the white paper accused the says Steve Glazer, a Bird. spokesman. and stay in power. But a non-el~cted judi­ court of upholding a jury verdict of pu­ "She does not feel it appropriate for her_ ciary could do so. As a result i a bill of nitive damages when. in fact, the court to go to special-interest groups and malcc rights giving the courts the power of judi­ reversed on that issue and set aside the appearances for the'ir· support." · cial review is fast gaining support. punitive damage award. Bird's supporters have attempted to In South Africa, many, such as Minis­ Many in the legal field arc asking ques- , compensate for these limitations by form­ ter of Justice Hendrik J. Coetsee, feel that t ions : How did atto rneys from such a ing the Independent.Citizens Committee a truly independent judiciary, such as we highly res~cted law firm, which hires · to Keep,Politics Out of the Courts, headed are in danger of losing here, could help only the top law students from the top na- · by former governor Edmund G. Brown. · solve many of South Africa's problems. It tional law schools, make such obvious Harold Meyerson, the committee's exec­ would help prevent charges being brought · and egregious errors? And_why would the utive director, said recently in the Los against innocent p·eoplc who arc then Crime Victims for Court Reform distrib­ Angeles Daily Journal, "The justices arc jailed-or worse::_ without tr.ial. The ute a research project that does not dis: in ·a bit of a mess." They can't talk·about court would be able to stand for human cuss a single criminal case? The cases the decisions the court has reqdered. But rights against an oppressive government. discussed were in the areas of tax, torts, we can and _we will. The justices are The question to ask is this: Would Califor­ contracts, real property an9 political re­ . forced to fight with one hand tied behind nia be living in a state of apartheid if the apportionment. their backs." Supreme Court had never declared Prop­ osition 14 unconstitutional because the A HIGH-RANKING local Republican THE FUTURE looks grim for Bird. Al­ justices were fearful of public sentiment points out, "If you look at who is really though it looks like l!1l other justices will in the next election? .. running the campaign against Bird, be retained, a recent Field poll said 57 . Reynoso and Grodin, it becomes cie·ar percent of the vote~ wanted her out ofof­ THERE IS a great deal more at stake than · George Deukmcjian wants to determine ficc. This was true even though 52 percent_ whether Rose Bird stays on the bench for • the flavor of the Supreme Court. Ifhe un- : believed she had the integrity and qualifi­ another 12 years. Bird and her supporters seats all three, he will be. able ~ ·choose, cations to sit as a Supreme Court chief have said repeatedly the death-penalty . all totaled, six of the court's justices. In · justice. The public made its decisjon on issue is a highly charged emotional red · San Diego, Sheriff John Duffy, Toin . the basis of her .alleged softness on crime herring. They claim ~he and her fellow · •Stickel and Tom Ha~omc arc running and criminals, and on ·her obvious ideo­ justices consistently ·- have stood for the the local .movement. All arc in the logical viewpoint. If Bird does lose, rights'of the poor, minorities, women and _ Deukmejiarr kitchen cabinet. On the state which looks likely, she ,will be the first consumers. Many ofthe.ir most important level,'Bill Roberts is cal.ling the shots, and California Supreme·court justice to lose decisions have expanded the rights of citi- he· -is an old friend and adviser to a retention election. If the relatively _- zens against large corporations, insur~ Deukmejian .- The Crime \t'.ictims are unknown Reynoso and Grodin go down · __ · ance companies and iµ torf cases.for merely trotted out in fro,u of groups and with her, Los Angeles office·. As of late August, Bird had raised - as ab(.)rtion, race relations and sexual law firm of Q'Melveny and Myers, and $ 1.1 million. But her_oppo~ition, ,the -equality? . · ·,. · - issued by Cr,ime Vi.ctims for Court Re- - Californians to Defeat_Rose Bird a~d . · "It's all'very depressing to watch," says form, attempted to answer Professor Sim- the· Crime Victims for Court Reform, Dr. Larry L. Berg, professor of political mons'.question . The 26-page report listed together have a~~embled 'f- \Var chest of science at the University of Southern Cal- m or~ than 20 decisions in which" the $4.6 million. · -. . - . ifomia and director of itS instirute of Poli- : . authors claimed Chief Justice ·Bird and · In her campaign, Bird has been sty- tics and Go'vernment. Berg is a leading -; fellow justices Grodin and Reynoso con- l}'lied· by the Cano_ns o( Judicial Ethics, _authority on po~itic"s and the Judiciary - sistently° ha.d volced anti-business senti- ihich say she cannot ·go to special-. - and has been studying judic!a} elections . 4

_ments. ··' · •• • -. • • interest groups to make i>!cas for financial -· and their financing since the mid-19705. ·_ · Justice_Grodin reacted ang'rily, ·stating ·support.and s~e :cannot promi~ to-rule _a , In February ·t98S he; conducted a public ., that 14 ,of the ':ases, were ~sued !Se fore h_e . , partkular way to s~ pqbl\c sentiment. . opinion Sl!TVCY: that showed that; while ~ joine~ the Supreme- Court and 11 before · __ In short, she cannot make campaign Bird was trailing, there.was ·a· large un- ~ ·~ Julitice Reyn~~o was appointed. - _ · ·. - promjses,: a seemingly" n.ecessary comPQ- . 4ecidcd .~ote, _am~ t~e respondents by a _ · . ln addition; there ,were ·~ubstantial f~c- nent to' all political elections. · two-to-one margin valued an independent • · . , tual in~c.curacies. For _c~~mp~e. _in one - "We have a judge y.h_o,is limited in ~- judi~ia·ry ovcr'orie that :,vas accounible to ~~ _c, _Sea~ ~! q~;~t ~~!in~ -~~~e v. , :- ~ ~a~!he :~~ ~o in an et.~~i~n_-~ainpaig~,", _- .. : ~ ., t ~NT~N;~~~ o~ ~- ~ 2~ ._ -. @ - • ,. ..- ~ • • • ,_ • " • - :"';' • ~ ! • :,- \ - • •Z ~ • ~ -. • • • • I -~ .. . , ~ · ;;) COURTS continued from page 196 --··· i12 . ' l fb~ ·. appeal• . . ' . ' :J . campaign with a positive message . Besides, you don't see moderate have ·Based on his find- ' penalty to this basic value. "She should the win of the people. and Democrats taking this · ing · defeat would Republicans commercials on by 1985. This ings, Berg believes Bird's not conservatives who had TV throughout tl1e approach. They're a great opportunity toed- / not start a chain reaction they'_re radicals, _could have been and Grodin. believe in institutions, on what the courts are all ' judiciary-unless Reynoso near a majority." ucate people and they're nowhere have won two years ago were to fall with her. ' · about. She could education cam­ they don't defeat the othq Justices," if she had ~tablished an "If ON EVIDENCE of strong public off." . anti-Bird forces will have BASED paign before the conservatives took says Berg. "the an independent ·judiciary, · keeping the public support for ,part ·or Bird's problem;· he an awfully tough time could have been ahead · A :targe have that Berg believes Bird on their side. The one issue they is she.insisted on ,0t•kir@y .:• the death if ~• had ron •. bctte'. . feels, th•; keeps the public on their side is in 'l'°,·polls today ,. • O CTORF. A 19,86· SAN OIF.G

Jl.lk11 '• P. C. B 1§!!..Jlistinguished Speakers Se2ies Marjorie Blanchard speaks on ··sir alancing a Complicated Life," Oct. ~ akfast seminar series at University of San Diego·s Manchester Conference Center. William F. Baker speaks on "Freedom Isn't Free:· Oct. 22 in same series. Continental breakfas t at 7:30 a.m., seminar at 8. Reservations: 260~585.

Business 1.:pdate Fall '86~~1 of Busi- ness breakfast semina~~ t. with Law- rence Barry speaki~·: uilding Skills for Managers," Oct. 3. Charles Holt speaks on "How's Business?" Oct. 10. Jacqueline Brown speaks on "Could Marketing Research Help Your Organization?" Oct. 17. Miriam Rothman speaks on " Fired! " Oct. 31. Continental breakfast at 7:30, seminar at 8. Reservations: 260-4585. __...... ,,,,,,-,-- - - · ---- I601 A lunchc:un anJ fashion show 10 benclil All Hal­ Hoed in low, Church will be hdd at the Marrion Diego, CA Fashions will be from Saks Fifth San at noon . Diego Co.) Avenue . For more inli.,rmation and rc:serva1ions (San call 260-0030. San Diego Magazfne (Cl_r._M. 20,324) October JO . The 30th annual Bishop's School fashion show and luncheon , sponsored by lhc parents' associa­ tion, will begin al II on the school campus. Fash- · ions by May Company. For re servations and more inlormaliop c~II Marsha Shanon, 4.56- 00811 . . October U Apropos in Fashion Valley will hold a seminar at 2 featuring fa,hiun coordinator Phyllis Sullivan and bu}er Jill Wa.w.man . The new personal shop­ by European .-ilf be.~~ at _ fashions . will ti:a1ure Jii ping service shoe salon itvenue, Mission call ~ey._in the and American designers. for information i>nna11on and a irst level. For in- ~SHION SHOWS - Phyllis Sullivan , 296-7 337 or 280-1.516 . 0030, ext. 3SO. persona a intment call 260- ­ Wejg!i~hers of San Diego will hold its an 0cto~r U fashion show list­ at 11 :30 at the For details on how /J slbm)t nual fashion show and luncheon h. from A mother-daugliter fa ings. see the first P£¾;' J/w{uu'.s Doing. San Diego Halton , with women's fashions COMB() will be held s ion show benefiting High­ Gladys Scott and men's fashions from the land East a1 ll· a1 the_Sheraton Harbor Is- J fro th October 2 and lander Models will be Weight Wa1chc:rs mem- , i>IJow· .30 a.m. Fashions will be Cocktail dresses and gowns by Victor <:;osta will mg stores: Antonio da Pe m e bers who have auainc:d their goal weight. Fur . Jaeger, Ap­ be modeled informally from 11 to 3 in Galleria/ ~. Graf Furriers Rod ' Pa~ n:sc:rvations call 560-887.5 . Silvcnhorn .... _~ ' ier- ns, Anna Rodea R.S.V.P. at Neiman-Marcus. °' (..,.l - ,: of ""-' n,cu, Golden Door Bou . ' October II & 18 "wte, Boutique Dainti tJque, Shades J & 4 ~ ::; ' October Spedal occasion and glamour we;r will be high­ more information call Li ~sShi~d Wagener. For Glamour Focus debuts at Nordstrom, · ringing n rer at 2~79 lighted in a fashion shuw 10 benefit the Rancho ~-I_ . the pages· of Glamour to life with tips on fashioo .,.__r 17, 18 and 19 . Verde Guild for United Cerebr.il P-,dsy. On the · .:, - and beauty trends and career and lifestyle- S 10. A collection of · · des. II th at North Cou111y Fair, 740-0170; on the 18th • Imported and Ame Call for details. On the 3rd at North County Fair, ~ gOWns will be shown at ~can . igner at Horton Plaza, 239-1700. $.5 . Call for details Fifth Ave­ 740-0170; on the 4th at Fashion Valley, 29S-4441. nuc, Mission ¼IJey in th De . and reservations. information Cltll 260-{)()e signer Salon. For . more October 5, 19 and 26 • 30, CXI. 344 Cafe Express, October 14 ·I -r18~-I_ - · Enjoy brunch in the Nordstrom will hold its 30th by infor­ The Un~csil)' of Sap Diego · Fashion Valley. while being entertained to benefit the . Sharon Johnson oi'fwnbow annual fashion show and luncheon •bopper Peggy Du s ~ Sharon and per­ mal modeling_a t II. hour begins at IOllal SD financial aid progr.im. Social and wardrobing CXperti mas will share their color Octobu6 & 7 II al 1he Town & Coun1ry Hotel in 1he Mission ' _, maximiu se, emphasizing new and ways There will be a trunk show of fashions from Ballroom. Fashions by JW Robinson's, Fashion satile ..,....,_~lor choices for a complete . Seminar be . vcr- B with informal modeling at Neiman­ informution cull 291-5800, e.\l. --uiuuc: Chetta VJllc:y. For more strom, Fashion Valle· . SS g~s at S:30 at Nord- Marcus in Galleria from 11 to 3. l -~ 60.5 . 1't':ill bc·scnoed. For~ ·. Light refreshments and information Octob,r 16 call 295-4441. rvatJons of Fendi ready-to-wear The complc:te collection ~rJO . . and furs will be modeled inform.ally at Neiman­ To help )'OU disc . . ' . 1 tu 4. Marcus in the Fendi boutique from Jool: anc:1-CTCate :'~~ colors can enhance your . unage, wardrobe and I October 17 & 18 • bs. nal color consultants w·u be pro- 's ,o I There will be a trunk show of Norma Kamali Hordsuom, Fash.ion Vall on hand at new couture line with inform.al modeling at Apro­ rescn-ations and . fi ?• from 5:30-7 p.m. For pos in Fashion Valley from noon to 5. Refresh­ m °'.""""""'" ,.,.... , . I ments will be served. Octobtr 18 A, part of Women's Opportunity Week ut Saks Faflh Avenue, La Jolla, psychologbt Dr. Sally Hale will speak on building conlidencc:, and fash ­ ion director Juanita Rutemiller will ofli:r sugges­ tions on how to enhance your personal fashion; from 10 tu noon. For more informa1ion ca1(459- 4123, e.w.t. 317. Local designer Ann Fegelson will show hc:r . beaded silk dresses from II lo .5 at Saks F.ifth Ave­ nuc:, Mission Valley, in the Designer Salon on the second level. · The Liz Claiborne collec1ion will be mudc:led in­ fomllllly at Nords1rom, Fashion Vallc:y, from I 10 3 in Individualist on 1he ,second' level. · ., ◄ October 21 A trunk showing of Ferr.1gamo shoes will be held at Saks Fifth Avenue, La Jolla, in the Designc:r Salon from 10 10 6. For an appointment cait 4.59- 4123, ext. 391._ Octobtr22 , 1 Tho F,,n,g,mo f<><><=., """''\ \' ,p,iog .. , San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Senior World (Cir. M. 50,223)

OCT 1986

Jlllm'• P. c. e F.s r. 1888

~ . ------· ------I Plan ahead on appointments Legal~ssistance available from two to three days leg'1r~ces may Office, 112_2 4th Avenue, Suite . ~e made Although m advance. be available if you know where 709, San Diego, 234-2331. Society of San in the August Appointments for legal aid, Legal Aid to go, as reported ., San Diego office, knowing when to available on Tuesday and Diego, Inc Senior World, South Euclid Avenue, San be a problem for some Thursday mornings, must be 110 go may Diego, 262-5557. older adults who, because of the made two or three weeks in ad- Appointment date depends nature of their legal problem, vance. type of legal service re­ not be able to wait several Uru,yersity of San Diego on may , quired. weeks for an appointment with (USD} Law Clime, AR'aia Park Beach Area Legal Clinic, 3690 a legal counselor. 260-4532. Mission Boulevard, 488-3011. Senior World contacted Appointments must be made Appointment date depends several legal services agencies at least one month ahead. on type of legal service re­ in San Diego County to find out Senior Citizens Legal how far in advance ap- Services, North County Re- quired. which r C itizens Legal must be made for gional Office, 820 Williamston sen i O pointments Services Lawmobile - Alpine ' legal services. Street, Vista, 941-3186. , 445-6233; Bor- is a list of legal Appointments must be made Senior Center Following Springs and Ocotillo available in San Diego at least two weeks in advance. rego services Wells, 767-5555. County. Senior Citizens Center, 928 Broadway, San Diego, Appointments may be made two weeks in advance. ~ ?or Downtown Regional 239-7751 . Appointments must - - • • . ..,.. . - - - -. .. -- . r-----r "T"-;- --- B .Refµgo Policy rtpp~ars Headed For A Test. criminal law· When 1 year-old Raad:, said Grei. "II doee not aay drink tlon or tho onlerl7 operation or tho ry; r...... il.nad, f -Ion Genocblo ubd hia dod if the dla- Corona Extra."V ochool." · Joyce Wll ■ -a, la,;. Aallwonll, ram11J, law'. !rict coul~ prohi~it him from wear- Ho contendo that a otudenl could The U.S. Supreme Courl in and Katlay ia from 11-11 a.m. at tng T-ahirto with beer IOIOI lo waaraT-eblrtwithaForraricaron Bethe/ Schoo/ DiJICrlct No. 403 "· The -■m Law~- ochool,, allomo7 O.nocblo it and not ad,ocate breakini tho Fraer hold tbla awnmer that Cal w....,, o,.. • • • couldn t come up with a aoocl , apeed limit; a, a ahirt with a South "Nothln, in tho Conotitutlon pm- Attomoy huk , . ,. African l0tr0 and not moan that he hi bill the atateo rrom inaiatlni that Deputy Diatrict re.~n. lallt about juftDilo _I don t think they can, G..., aupporta apartheid. certain moclea or •-ion an In- ~ will at a brown bq aaml- l&ld. ''Tho ahirta thomoolv"" have an appropriate and aubject to aanc- delinquency on Oct. 80 In the Del Greg believaa that tho policy or inherent and uotbotic •aluo," aaid ' tiona." nar al noon Prado Room the Union Bank t~e G.--mont Union Hlib School . Grei. · Eddy reren to Education Code or B SL The Lop) S. D,otrict not only m.. In tho r... of Ho Ukena it to tho' balr iaaue In ooctlon 44807 which te.lb about Buildin,, 636 the duty or ochoola concernb11 olu• · ' cretarl• ANeciatlon la .-,Inc. dent conduct, 1pectneaU7 the • • • ~ LawBriefs health and wely u well u "pro- The 11:ul B. Gllllaa Bar Aaao- per and appropriate condltlona elation bu Toted to retain a­ J.).l., ~ by Martin Kruming conducive to learnlnr." I Bini, Crua Reynooo and J-la ' · It wu oomo 20 yaara arc,....,...' GrodlaontheSupnmeCowt. 1 , •• 1 ding lo Eddy, that the diotrict bad • • • a provi■ion or tho atate Education Bimop Y. ·eo1 ..., an Eiiht Circuit a policy :.. perhapa implied - The Lepl Aid Society ~ _. Code, but rai■eo conotltutional Court or Appeala cue In I 971 in \ mini okirta wboaa lon,tb ed an Clfflee at 268 W■- Park Aft~ iaeuee u well. , ,1 which a atudent and hi■ parenta againot "wentfar beyond the limill." San Yaidro. 1 I, , ' Michael F. Eddy, a Cal . oou11bt to O>'arturn a ochool draao , "Yee, we did enforce it then," be • • • Weatem L■w School graduate code i'egulatin, hair length and · aaid. Pacific Cout Colle.., will hold a . who'• director or adminiotrative otyle. Greg 1aid he plane lo me a claim free Hminar entitled •:court oerviceo for the diatrict, focuaaa on That cue elated that " ... the re- . with the diotrict -kin, il\iuncli•e ., Reporting Careen and the Court,. • oimilar iMu• but f"rom a dill'orent cord conte.lna no evidence 1ug- relier and doma,ea. 1 • room or the Futun" at 8 p.m. on penpective. geating that Stephen'• haintyle 1 For now "Randy ia playl"I the NOY. 6. • ' "It's a balancing or intereeta repreoented a aylnbolic eapreoalon 1 - aomething • • • under the Fint Amendment venue of any kind." game under protelt" which may prove particularly in- On the M-, Da't'ld llladne ' the etete'a (in the ra,m or the di• It went on to aay that "Stephen lereatin11 u he ia enrolled in an hoo joined Wilea, Circuit 6 trict'1) interest.a," to imun the i t poeleN9d. a comtitutionally pro­ American IIO•emment clua which Tremblay u an ueociate. A pad- ' ..rety end welrare of the otudent■ ,' · tec:ted right to go'Yem hla penonal iaoludyin,theU.S. Conatitutlon. uote or Georp Wubin,toa Uni- . appearance while attendin, public 1aid Eddy • • • veraity Law School, be prrriouly It's the district'■ reeponaibility - high ■chool." 1 0 An You a Lawyer too, Honey?" wu atafl" attorney witli tbe De,. u loco parentla, he added, lo "pro- Thi■ wu unlike the 1969 U.S. will be diocu-.1 today at 12:15 partment or the Interior In Wub­ vide an educational atmoaphera Supreme Court cue of Tinter v. p.m. at USO School by ai• ■ t- in,ton, D.C., and p-■l -1 that i1 free rrom the advocacy of Dee MoinN Independent School Law torneye - Ellubeth Eldriqe, to Firot Intantate Bank oro.n .... drug or illicit w,e of alcohol." Diwtrict in which st.udenta wore Dearin( Encll ■ b, Loraine Patent atlomoy Drew HIIIIIIJ. Eddy view■ the ahirta which black arm bend■ u a form or ea- ■, Debra MacLarty, Ion i ■ tho now chairman or tho Randy wore to Mt. Mipel High preooion ■rainot the . Pedowlt Cbrutine Pate anil Janet Sobel. Lawyon Committee vi tho San School lut month u "con- "Thia cue (Randy's) i1 akin to ■ free and open lo the public. Dierc Council or tho American tributing to an attitude" about uee the hair cue, not the armband It' The otudent diviaion or Lawyen ElectronicaAaaocialion. · ---:-_,,.,...- or alcohol and that "ia unaccep- cuea," ■aid Greg. Club Son Dierc io oporuiorin, a I • • • /, table behavior.'' But above the constitutional or on NO>'. 15 reaturing rour It eeeme that Randy apent about ieouee, including the Fint and 14th ■eminar attorney■ who will diacWNJ varioua $60 lo buy ooveral T-■hirta before amendmenta, Greg object■ to what areu the law. They include the otart c1-. They had beer Eddy adviood him earlier thi■ or or Monacban, penonal iruu• logoa on them, including one for month. Brian Corona Ertra and a multi-colored Specifically, he said, that "the dnirn for South Pacific E"]>Ort , diotrict will continue to prohibit Lager. otudenl wearln, apparel which In mid-September, after wearing patently depicta or implleo. or vi- them to ochool, he wu ifven an '1ually condonea the uoo or alcohol on-campWI 1uapen1ion (or a day. or illicit drup." . • Why beer lo(CO? "My eon i ■ Greg citeo Education Code oec- beach oriented," said GrelJ. ''They lion 48907 which allows 1tudenta are in vogue." to e:r:erciee freedom mapeech, "in- Greg, who graduated rrom USO cludin,, but not limited to, ... the Law School and i ■ with Genochio 6 wearing or buttona, hedge■, and Keen, ravon the diatrict'1 policy: other insignia ... " arainot drul!I and alcohol. ,' However, that material can't bo "Hooray, hooray, hooray. I ■ UP:' obecene or libeloua, and material ia portit," beaaid. prohibited which "eo incite• ■tu . However, he firmly ■ tand• denta u to create a clear and pres- behind hie eon'• right, u he - ii, ent danpr or the commioaion or to wear theee ahirte. "The obh1 • unlaMul action dool premlaea or advoc:alee nothin,. There la no ad- the violation of lawrul ochool regu­ vocacy here. The ahirt i1 benign," lationa, or the ■ uhstantial dim.ap- OCT 1 1986

.All... '• ,. C. I ,~,. ""

OCTOBER 1, 1986 5A I SAN DIEGO DAILYTRANSCRIPT WEDNESDAY, ( /" Some Free Legal Advice Execs Get in / Advepising and _the law, generated public lntereet client," 25 '.~titled "The Teacher or principal with you~ . the passage of Prop. A. None of ~{/;{Or 80 advertieing - Law through UCSD Exteninon noted Smelko, who pnctices bank Lee Eatep ia chairman of an executiveB wanted a law1mit; that lt'a $115 and run• from 8:30 a.m. to ruplcy oaw. program which ..r • . oeemed pretty clear. both dayo. Dyer io •loo pre- outreach advaMt! money to the 5 p.m. client.a ~in thti Chrio Britton talked •If you Club of San gu11rdl attorney ■' So wh•n pnclfce - ei~ent of the Lawyer11 11 it client - not a good of diaability, death or dj ■ a~ about 1n ounce of prevention" . . event 0 it aa a clear loan" with Diego .nee. the f"Afl!I or thoee who document County Bar Preaident peen Waft mueic to aigning. ult'a not San D,ego two a recent luncheon both parties to Charle• Bird repreeented turned out for way," John Seitman hH been elected - ironclr1d but it goeR a long Rtudent.a again8t the Fa.Jlbrook meetin1 of the Sen Diego AMOCia the executive committee of the uid Britton. And charge the legal- High School District which tion of AdvertiRing Agenciee at the or Delegate• repre- Union interest rot• for that Conference in their right to print a . ly pormiMible San Diego and Imperial reeulted Atlantio eenting free ofceM0111hip eeetng Ian ettomey beforeh- loan. replaceR Chrtetfne .cbool newepaper By group boycots countieR. He 11 to dodge What about . and you may be able Pate. • • • anddiirtricteupe"iRion againat radio station", let'R Ray. Melinda Laeater, chief of the eome really heavy ammunition which charge non-commiRRionable District Attorney'• Ju••nlla Court later on," he Raid. ad ' South Boy Municipal Court and rateo, thereby cutting out th• Divl1ion, attemptl to get young of. Britton, of Ferrio, Br•nnan Judge Murry Luftl1 io th• new Hatt agency? renden into court early to begin Britton, joined Marilyn preoident of the Board of Trusteeo A ..naitlve area, all three attor- rehabilitation. (Gray, Cary, Ame• & Fry•> and Bill or the San Diego County Law Ann Parode, aenlclr vice preal- Library. Suporior Court Judga Bill dent with San Diego Financial Kennedy iR vice Prefllident. ., formed the San Diego Coun­ ~ LawBriefs Munlcipal Court Judge Manny Corp ty Bar Foundation to rai .. and di• Ku•l•r •tepo down Oct. I 2 oner 18 by Martin Kruming tribute fondo for law-related pn>, ~..l ~ yearo on the boord and more than nine aR prHident. (1"8018. rederal neys ngreed. "You're crawling o lnl . .. M orio Arroyo-Tahln, Smelko) to talk Smelko (Wied and oaid Brit­ Law School with the Organized LRw: rurther out on the limb," National University prooecut.or about " Adverti1!ing and the 30 Tuk Force, t.on. is 8pon80ring a eemiri1tr from 8: Crime Enforcement Caught in the Cro,,ofire." to the poor Be careful because there are ft a.m. to 11 :30 a.m. on Oct. 16 en­ provide! legal Rervicee the diM:uMion centered " the Much or 0•(111 lhal can be raioed "Current. l'renda in Com• and indigent. She utabllohod and whnt right.a artiste lot or red tit led around art ," ad­ ■ com will Lawyer Pro am to agenciet11 agr1inat you 88 a.n aasocietion put.er Law." Rita Han Volunteer have compared with the on Pap 1 ded Smelko. dii,cusR trede ttec:ret.8 and warranty (Continu«J and their client.8. crime and the ar• Alternativea to bankruptcy? information, computer "ft , San Diego Trial 1...awy Prf!I are Bob Oht1f'r, a ~pecialist in dud.ion of poet cards and po111l.er8. t1ponRoring two aeminan this public interest end small buRineM 11 Federel copyright law may per• month. tain," Raid Huff. On Oct. 8 rrom 6 to 9 p.m. Corlye How about in-houf'I! artisl.8? Who Chrl•tl•n"on will moderate an owns their workR? in Room 206 A of to employment It et,hicR 11eminar "tf pursuant Conference Center unleM ex­ the Manche!ter belong& to the employer ; o ~SD. Qsii,t i• $25 for member11 pres"ly conveyed to the artiRt,'' S 0 or non-mmbera. eald Britton. 4 From 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Oct. What WR8 becomin i;t: clear during 18 there will be a Beminar on pru­ the diecuReion WH for "dvertili1ing fesaional mRlprectice litigation at agenciee to insulate themeelves the Scotli•h Rite Center. $50 for from liability 88 much &8 poeRible. memben; S76 for non-memberR. "You're not free and c1ear from Virginia Nelson is the choirper­ being Rued," advi&ed Britton, hut eon. "you may be free and clear from IOfting the lawRuit." An orientation is echeduled Fri• Said Smelko: "Buttre.. your dey from 9 a.m. until noon on the immunity." newly odop{ed Superior Court Whe n the Agency get8 the pic­ Ru1e, "Adm;ni!tretion of Ci~i1 ture from a photo broker, warned Litigation." It'• in the jury lounge Huff. "make flure you heve the on the mezzanine level of the releue or L'O n8en£ form ftigned \,y courlhouae downtown. the peroon photOgTaphed." One ('If the atickieRt problem, i8 On the Move: Tlntt Dyer, gen• the legal etal,uR oft.he agencie" and erRl counAe1 for the S,rn Diego dienta. Unined School Dl•trict, will lead n Some iUidelinea: two-part workshop on Oct. l l And • Sign u the ftgent for the client and " nothing mnre." • AR a followup Lo the contract. write a let.I.er to the media eat.ting out your relntionl!lhip with the client. • " If you're not eure your client hao the ability to pay have your client'R nftme on the contract," uid HufT. •Avoid becoming ftn " inVf'l!llor San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Ew1nlng Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

OCT 1 1986

...Alim'• ,. c. 11 Esr. r&31 uest fashion models from community groups will get into 'Spirit of Sari Diego' By Nan~~~derson from 5:30 to 10 p.m. at the San Diego :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::= The English-Speaking Union will ety have its_annua l medal pres- Tribune Society F-dllor Hilton Beach and Tennis Resort. will have } •'Books. Baubles_ and Bake entauon Oct. 14 m the La Jolla Mar- HE ANNUAL "S irit of San Area alums from Big Ten schools D. .. f hi h Up and Com1· ng Faire at 2 P-?1· Oct. 11 m Tom and nott Hotel. Dr. Norma_n Shumway ~f p h ted b will celebrate the conference's Satur- Pattie Ladner s antique shop, illegoH !las onW~ ow ,os G . -dY day opening with a no-host bar 414 La Stanford University IS thlS yean A 1 and ______Canada in La Jolla. English food and honoree. He will join Ellen Revelle T a ows omens ui , will be held Friday in the La Jolla stadium .concessions . The . Patrick ------• d · k ·11 be d F · f · f Ell B · Sc · M · It H t Th cb a e so- Henry High School .marching rm: w1 serve . or more m or- mece o en rownmg npps, on 1 band mat1on, phone 449-0265. the 7 p.m. program. A reception fol- ci!rr~~ur ..:nf .begi~ at~Pa~. fol- will play pactici_pating ~hools ' fight 9 at Sea World. Cocktail hour is 7 noon and a 1 p.m. show of May Co. lows. For mformat10n about the ed b h t d m songs. Rolf Berurschke IS 1 1 1 master of p.m. followed by dinner at 8 and a 9 fashions modeled by Bishop·s stu- The Waldorf School will benefit event or society membership, phone s~:w of~a:~nsafr~:~~ nn/Av: ceremonies . Don McVay is chairman. p.m, program featuring a talk on dents and faculty members. Maria from a p.m. Oct. 12 show _of hand- 454-6753 or 45i-6343 enue La Jolla. The event, which 2 . hen- Tickets are $10 each or $15 :per cou- " Fisheries Enhancement" by Donald Villanueva is· chairman. Tickets are crafted children's fashions in the efits the All Hallows Academy scbol- ~le at the door. For more infonna- Kent. An auction will begin at 9:15. $30 each . For more information, Fairbanks Ranch Clubhouse. Sheila The arship fund, honors volunteerism iii tion. phone 235-4040. Tickets are $50 each for Helmsmen 459 2 San Diego County Bar Associ­ phone -4o 1. Thompson is chairman of the benefit, ation Auxiliary Sa D. G t od ls t members (a support group for Sea will have its third an­ n iego. ues m e represen - World research), $150 for non- which will include more than 70 gar- nual authors· luncheon Oct. 14 in the ing 35 local cultural and health and_ Opening night for tbe San Diego members. For more information, The Grossmont Hospital Auxiliary ments featuring embroidery and de- Sheraton Harbor Island East Hotel. human care organizations will par- Opera's (SDO) 1986-87 season will be is having its annual Gingerbread Ba- tailed handwork. English tea will be Cocktail hour is II a.m. followed by ticipate in the show. Phyllis Parrish Oct. .11. A black-tie gala marks the phone 226-3870. zaar from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 10 served. Tickets are $1 5 for adults. $5 lunch at noon and a presentation by is chairman, and Gloria Melville is date. Cocktails will be served in the The annual membership tea for and 11 in Grossmont District Hospi- for children. For more information, local authors including Ke Druck co-chairman. Tickets ,are $30 each. Little America Westgate Hotel at the Auxiliary . Council of the San tal's Brier Patch campus auditorium. phone 435-4351. Jeanne Jones and M2ry Gilligan For more information, phone 459- 5:30 p.m. The Civic Theater curtain Diego Symphony Association will be 9000 Wakarusa St., La Mesa. Admis- Wong. Tickets are $20 each. For 2975. , for 'Tosca," the premiere SDO pro- held Ocl 9 in a private La Jolla resi- sion is free. The Unive · ' ie o Auxi- more information. phone 295-3766. duction, is at 7 p.m. Supper and danc- dence. Jean Morse and Phyllis Parr­ liary·s 3 th annual fashion show Tbe Su Diego Chapter of Ducks ing at tbe Westgate are set for 9:30 ish are co-chairmen. Pianist Carolyn The East Count} Chapter of San be held Oct. 14 in Town and Country The 16th annual Dia del Unlimited will have a dinner auction p.m. Dorene Whitney is chairman of Carson Sol pre­ will play during the 2 to 4 Diego Museum of Art is having a Convention Center. Rochelle Capozzi sented by the Beach and Coun tomorrow at the Town and Country the benefit, which includes overnight p.m. tea try . Prospective members are "Celebracion de Otono•· from 3 to 7 is chairman of the benefit, titled Guild of the United Cerebral Palsv Convention Center. Cocktail hour is 6 accommodations in the hotel and an welcome . For more information, p.m. Oct. 11 in the Walther-Meade "Cloisonne and Silk.'" Social hour is Women·s Commillee will be held p.m. followed by dinner at 7:30. 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Sunday brunch . phone 295-5889. residence in Tijuana. Cockt.ails. din­ II a.m. followed by lunch at noon and Oct 15 at the Blackmore Larry Baumann is chairman. Tickets Tickets are S250 each. For more in­ residence in ner and entertainment by mariachis a 1 p.m. show · of fashions from Rancho Sant.a Fe. TennlS. bridge, are $125 each. For more information, formation. phone 232-7636. Tbe 30th annual Bishop's School and a folklorico ballet are planned. JWRobinson's. Tickets are $35 each. house tours. lunch and a show o f phone 435-8095. fashion show will be held at the Tickets are SlOO. and bus transporta­ S50 for patron seating. For more in­ Ralph Lauren fashioru: are planned Hubbs Marine Research Institute school's La Jolla campus Oct. 10. So­ tion from Mission Valley is available formation. phone 260-4808. for the dav. wluch begins at 10:30 The second annual Back to tbe Big will benefit from the fourth annual cial hour is II a.m. followed by a for S5. For more information. phone a.m. Tickets are S40 each. For mo;; } Ten party will be held tomorrow Helmsmen Gala Dinner auction Oct. French Gourmet-catered lunch at 466-2601 or 460-2094. The Ellen Browning Scripps Soci- information. phone 481-7020. / La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W. 9,040)

. OCT2 1986

~lJ~" 's P. C. B Es r. 18 88

Photo by CAROL SONSTEIN USD presents 'Cloisonne and Silk' The Unive~n Diego is hosting a p.m. There will be a free drawing and pro­ fashion show and luncheon Tuesday, Oct. 14 ceeds will go to the USO Scholarship Fund. at the Mission Ballroom of the Town and From left, Linda Alessio, Sister Virginia Country Hotel. Social hour begins at 11 McMonagle and Rochelle Capozzi, chair­ a.m., luncheon at noon and fashions at 1 man, are planning the event. Cost is $35 . OCT2 1986

/-Rosaries ~r~ Weapons I tr p~~c~ 1 Crqsad,e1 s~~- ~T! annual •~dsa'ries F · a e l'JlSade" wlll take pl 1.:e Of) SL!nday, Oct. 5, at 7:30 ' p.m., in the University of Sa!:!-IJieL{o Stadium, 'in Akal~ Par!<. The eve11t will feature a Ca nc)l eli!:iht ROSUi)' Proc~s­ sion similar to those 1-ield at Fatima 0 ' an'ct Lourdes, a~d the combined voices o[ the San • Diego 11ission Basilica and St. Michael's of Poway choirs. The 4th Degree Knights pf Columbus ' Color Corps will also • I take part in the ce1·e- mrrny, whkh will close with •l.;e11e<.lidiun by Bishop Leo T. Maher of the S~n D)ego Dio­ <·cse. ''bveryone longs fo1• 11eace," says Marr Steif:eF, one of Lhe organizers n~ the rally, "but they are depending on man, instead of ' God, ' who if thu <1~s~)ute ruler of ~he Universe. We beli eve that his peace rn1.1st fir ~t come ipf.o• the pearls of men, bC' fo1 ·e ii- can take place in our wor/

OCT 3 1986

II ..

From F-1 Continued an as it might be in some Itali done inter­ renaissance work. "It usually with large open areas so this faces to di ­ type of architecture is easier gest," she said. comb added that the But Whit ­ s aren't cookie-cutter repeti building to tions. "They do vary according ir function," s he said. ·• Altho/Jgh the e theme there again is the overall styl through." that is carried ­ example she cited the Uni As an w Center (or studl!nt union) no versity to construction and scl1eduled under here n in November. The design Ojlc r, she more relaxing and simple is amenta­ said. There isn't as much orn st toward formality . tion and thru e er fa ctor of the walls of th Anoth h s is their thickness, whic building for s them sturdy and also gouJ make to e­ rgy conservation. It helpsr ene es cool ­ tain natural hea t and provid ing. a said architect Hoy Drl! Wdid She cal ob of combining the histori good j It's n with mod ern n~eds . desi g e uni ­ ew's second design job at th Dr Library, versity. lie did the Cop ltiy eted about two years ago. compl chitec­ Drew, of the Point Luma il r firm of Drew, Mosher, Watson tural esent rguson, said the design did pr Fe he spent a major challenge. He said wntown li­ San Diego time researching in the do design at the University or e university. or the architectural stone forms , brary for his work at th Hallmarks classical Roman arch, heavy tic designs," he said. iucluJe such elements as the "I do modern is or the building forms. as different. But I think it fine detail and symmetry "This w h­ kmd or fun going back, researc was ething ing and then pulling up som historical design. The design with a al nts the era when Spain was represe the height of its power. IL was the intell ec­ dominant fo rce, and art and tual things fl ourished." the Moors may have been He said left n out of Spain but "they drive e or­ ir influence with a lot of fin the rt of th is namentation work . That's pa ." design arks of Drew sa id to him the hallm ments as this type induded such ele ical R oman arch, hea vy the class e­ forms, fi ne detail and symm stone id he of the building forms. He sa try h being can't argue with the approac y the university because used b es use "other universit ic, sometim aped build tngs." odd-sh is uni­ "I think the approa ch that th ha, taken ~' ves the e nt ire versity un ity, versity ~ampus a feeling of uni ry well togetherness lhal Li es in ve the great site it has." with 130 of The university now occupies res and has 1.17 million its 175 ac e, e feet. There's room for mor squar naissance so more of the Spanbh re o up. look will g ­ projects planned fo r the fu Two ent e in clud e a ddi ti onal stud tur s and artments incl ud ing 154 umt ap d1 ool li ­ an expansion of the Law S brary. San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)

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

OCT3 1986 Rosary for peace .Jllleri'• P . c. B Esr. 1888 to be held at USD - - The third ~~1e.:rt=,iosaries for Peace Crusaff?'ffcheduled for 7:30 P-!11· Sunday at the Universitv of San Di~o stadium in Alcala Park. - The event will feature a candlelight rosary procession similar to those held at Fatima, Portugal, a~d ~ourde~, _France. The San Diego Miss10n Basilica and St. Michael's of Poway choirs, and the Fourth Degree K~ights of Columbus Color Corps will participate in the ceremony. Buses will depart from Catholic churches throughout the county to transport participants Los Angeles, CA to the univer­ (Los Angeles Co) sit)'. · For information, contact Mary Times Steiger at 466-9522 or Ruth Cerano at (San Diego Ed.) 284-6889. (Cir. D 50,010) (COCT~5731986

Jllloa's P. C. B far. 1888

vel to Pomona-Pitzer : Th· %~ty of San Diego Barbara last Saturday . football team travel~emont . Against Redlands, the Toreros today to face Pomona-Pitzer Col­ got ·1ege. touchdown runs from Matt Scholl and Anthony Crivello and a The Toreros (2-1) defeated 43-yard Redlands touchdown pass play from , 21-3, last week in their Pat Dixon to home opener. Pomona-Pitzer Jeff Mansukhani. is 1-1 Mansukhani has scored four touch a~r a 28-15 loss at UC Santa - downs this season. / Santa Ana, C~ (Orange co.) · Register (Morning Ed.) _ .(Cir. 1>. 263,099) (Cir •. ~- 280,000) . '

n ego 42, Pomona-Pitzer 1 &: Pat Dixon threw three touchdown passes and I, John Gutsmidl returned an inter­ ception 100 yards for a touchdown in thti Toreros' nonconference vic­ tory ove~the Sagehens (1-2) in Po- mona. ·

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I • • ;: \. ,•,: : >, •.•'.- .• ~•• u1ego, I..A (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) ,. OCT 5 1986

J.lfen ~ P. c. a !:st. 1888

;lJ_sp... triumphs, 42-16, ---against Pomona-Pitzer =.. Pat Dixon ttir~q@?e touchdown L I T :!lasses and John Gutsmietl returned oea eams ..an interception 100 yards for a score, :ieading USD to a 42-16 victory over Grossmont is 2-1 overall, 1-1 in the ! Pomona-Pitzer last night in Clare­ Mission Conference. The Knights are ! mont. 1-2 and 0-2. ! Dixon teamed with Scott Reilly Southwestern 19, Palomar 14 - ; twice in the first quarter and with Ed Danny Holmes rushed for 147 yards : McCoy in the third quarter for his on 27 carries and Brad Platt threw : touchdowns. Dixon completed 14 of for 216 yards for the host Apaches (2· 30 passes for 179 yards, with one in- 1, 2-0). Palomar is 2-1 and 1-1. Platt, • terception. who completed 12 of 28 passes, threw : The Toreros (3-1 ) trailed 16-13 at a 31-yard touchdown pass to wide re­ ; the half but took the lead for good in ceiver Dee Halton and ran for anoth­ • the third period when Jeff Mansu­ er score. The Apaches' Tyler Acker­ : khani returned a punt 59 yards for a son kicked two field goals for the : touchdown. only scoring in the second half. : USD's Virgil Enriquez added a 21- HIGH SCHOOLS ! yard touchdown run in the fourth MOUNTAIN-DESERT LEAGUE ! quarter, and Gutsmietl sealed the Holtville 26, Army-Navy 6 - Alon­ !;victory with his touchdown with 10 zo Camarero ran for 133 yards and_ :.seconds remaining. scored a touchdown for the visiting !.,.- Pomona-Pitzer fell to 1-2. Vikings. Teammate Jimmy Toten •.s, COMMUNITY COLLEGES had 118 yards rushing, including a 5· !~ MISSION CONFERENCE yard scoring run. Cergio Vasquez I • ·· Mesa 28, Citrus 17 - Jeff Sturch opened the scoring for Holtville with ?threw two touchdown passes for the a fumble recovery in the Warriors' ~ ost Olympians (1-1-1). Sturch com­ end zone. Army-Navy is 1-2, Holtville :Pleted 19 of 32 passes for 180 yards 1-3. !" and hit James Courtney with an 18- COASTAL LEAGUE (Eight-man) : yard TD pass in the fourth quarter. Parker 44, Bishop's 12 - Scott : After spotting the Owls (0-3) a 3-0 Drapeau scored three touchdowns, • lead, the Olympians scored on Leon­ one on a 3-yard lateral from Philip ! ard Williams' 10-yard run. Mesa Estes, for the host Lancers (2-1-1 ). : scored again to make it 14-3, but Cit­ Brian Keyser carried 19 times for 98 , rus quarterback Bruce Hunt hit Gary yards for Parker, which scored 30 , Jake with a 75-yard touchdown pass first-half points. : before the half ended. Santa Fe Christian 25, Mountain ; Grossmont 45, San Diego City O - Empire 21 - The visiting Eagles (1- - ·The-.Griffins broke OR2n a scoreless 3) got 460 yards offense in7heir game with 17 second-quarter points. league opener. San Diego, CA (San Diego co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)

OCT 6 1986

.Jlll~n '• P. c. B far. r 88& / ' /AJJ8Jr--Champion, again By John Fleeman The women's open singles final Tribune Sportswriter featured t·No USD players as Jen• After gaining a third-set tie at five- nifer Lar king had an easy time all, Mark Tappan. the defending Tri- defeating \by Brayton 6-2. 6-1. bune men's open singles champion, Larking, 19, a former CIF champi­ yesterday came close to repeating on from Poway High, spent one year his title. at Oklahoma before transferring to But in a tightly played match in- USD, where she is now a junior and side Morley Field's stadium court, the school's top player. Brayton is a Brian Turner held serve and then 17-year-old freshman from San Jose. proceeded to break Tappan. wrapp- Despite her win. Larking was less ing up a 4-6, 6-4, 7-5 victory. than pleased with her play during the 41st annual event, which spanned two weekends. Tribune Tennis "I played terribly for me,'' said Tournament Larking, who said she gets "burned out easily" in the sport. "I play for a Nearly 20 years have passed smce month. then quit for a month. I don't the men's open winner - John Yeo­ want it to control mv life." mans in 1967-68 - was able to suc­ In the men's junior vets (35s) sin­ cessfully defend his title. gles final, Rick Evans staved off Luis "I expected it to be 6-6 in the third Glass with a 6-4, 7-6 (7-3) win. set," said Turner. 26, formerly of After losing the opening set, Glass Madison High ani_U SD: "We always served for set point with a 5-3 lead in play close matches. It au depends on the second. But. in an uncharacteris­ who is serving and returning better. tic error, he sent an easy o-1erheao/ Today, it was me.'' sailing over the baseline. · After losing the first set. Tappan, Then. in the next game. he again 28, was able to scramble from a 4-1 denied himself the set with another second-set deficit to gain the finale. critical error. But from the middle of the second Said Glass, 35, J local teaching pro: set until midway through the third, "Suffice to say, both those shots were Turner put on a streak where he won in my power zone. But I didn't have 10 of 13 games. it in my power to make them." ' As for Tappan, 28, he compliment­ Said Evans, a 36-year-old CPA and ed Turner's consistent play. former La Jolla High and Stanford "He was steady as ever," said Tap­ performer: "I came with some aces pan, head pro at Balboa Tennis Club. (10) when I had to. We played on a "He gets every ball back, so it's al­ very fast court, which probably hurt ways frustrating to play him." Luis more than me. . Down 5-3 in the third set, Tappan "I always enjoy playing him. He · put on an impressive comeback, win- mixes up his game so well, and it's ning two straight games. However, very hard to settle into any kind of ~ Turner held serve and quic kly built a rhythm against him." ·Iove-40 advantage over Tapp_an, who Tribune titles in 11 other categor­ overcame two match points. ies also were decided yesterday. For !. . But at 30-40, Tappan, whose game scores. see Page D-5. ~grew more aggressive in the final Winners and runners-up received ";set, sent a backhand volley wide, trophies; winners also received gift .ending the match. certificates ranging from $25 to $175. San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

··' OCT7 1986

~s--<' 1'ribu11,• µh otu by Jud Zwmk Graduate information day S1udenls at lbe Untyersily !If. sw· l>it!g11;N1use to informalion day yesterday. The Universily or Ari- learn more aboul graduale programs al some 40 1ona, University or Wisconsin, Harvard Universily colleges and universilies duriug USD's gradujile and 37 state instilutioos sel up booths. lClr. u. , ,.. ,.,,

OCT 8 1986

Jltlm'• ~. c. B ""• 11u 7 ThJ Art Of Putting Together Law Office Teams T~'tuainess Update' aeminar discll88ion Friday at USD's Man- on Tuesday afternoons at 1:30 p.m. Tv.Hday, October 14 at the Uniyersjty of San Diego chester Conference Center on "Im- in Dept. 6. The Taxation Law Section could have been directed at any ages of Mexico as Depicted by the • • • noon, Vanity Room, Univere 11 group - accountants, doctors, ex• Maaa Media." The 8ellllion is from San Diero County Club, Speaker: Vaughn Morr1 ecutives. Even attorneys. 6-7:30 p.m. Bar Aaaoclatlon Subject: A Panel DiscW1Sion ,, It wu on team building and the • • • Meetin1a, Oct. 9,.15 1986 Year End Tu Planning ' speaker was Lawrence Barry, A legal malpractice prevention Thuraday, Oct. 9 Light of the New Act. who used to be a quali"ty control seminar is scheduled for Friday Tb e Environmental Law 4 The Workera' Compenaatl,. u. manauer at Ford Motor Co. and from 9 a.m. to noon at the Radwon L d Law Section - 11:30 11 .m., Aul>, a an U11e Section - noon, Re now heads Behavorial Manage- Hotel In Mi88ion Valley. The pro- Lounge Room, University Club, staurant. ment Corumltan•·, Inc. here. gram is co-sponsored by the Ssn S .., peaker: Abby Wolfsheimer, Sub- Military Llalaon Commlth-, For close to an hour last Fri'day Diego Law Center, a joint project of . "H noon, Conference Room, Bar Aoe · B lked USD La Sch 1 d th t Ject: umane Growth." ciation. mornmg arry ta about teams 00 4 w an e coun Y The Bu1lne&1 Law Section - Wedneaday,Oct. H ,, •• noon, Varsity Room, University The Real Property Law Secli.,. Law Briefs Club, Speaker: Michael Jenaen, - n!)(>n, Varsity Room, Univerd1I ' Subject: Common Busineu Pro- Club, Speaker: George Damoob, by Martin Kruming blems in Employment Relation- Subject: Effects of the Tax Act ., ships. Real Property Transactions. - their makeup and why they're Bar Association. Friday, October 10 The Medical-Le&al Committe, important. Subjects include caees that The Medical•Leaal Commit~ - 7 :00 p.111., Grace Courtroom, US1 One example was a team of law• should • .be rejected; screening noon, Conference Room, Bar Office. Law School, Speakers: Dr. Richa, . yers who "get together for a project potential clierit problems; legal Attorney/Realtor Committee - Scott, Daniel Broderick, Alvi, and work in the best possible com­ fees and avoiding disputes; and noon, Conference Room of Luce, Kalmaneon, Dr. Gary William,, bi nation.'-' Complex busine88 frequent causes of legal malprac­ Forward, Hamilton & Scripps. Subject: Bouvia: The Issues. litigation, let's say, or criminal tice. pro,iecution or defense. Perhaps a • • • sophisticated products liability The State Bar's Labor and Em­ case. ployment Law Section will hold The team might include their fourth . annual meeting Oct. paralegals, investigators, legal se­ 17 and 18 in San· Diego. Panel crelaries and expert witne88es who topics include arbitration alter­ come together on that one matter natives, employee leaves pf and than disperae. abeence, coping with COBR,A and "Developing communications the U.S. Supreme Court and affir­ among people," said Barry, is the mative action. first ingredient for team building. Gene Upshaw, executive direc­ If a partner wure to tell an tor of the National Football Lea­ associate, "You're doing a goob gue, will address drug testing in job" what does that mean? profeasional sports at the Oct. 18 You'd be suprised how the two luncheon. might view the comment different­ • • • ly if one isn't specific. "We're very San Diego Legal Secretaries will skilled at indirect expression," said hold their annual Day in Court Barry. Oct. 16 at the U.S. Grant Hotel. By their very nature, said Barry, There's a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. lawyers are "trained to be &88er­ and a mock trial staged by Saxon, tive and very pursuasivl\ orally." Alt, Brewer and Kincannon at 2 "Yet they misperceive a vast p.m. at Cal Western Law School. amount of resources that exist in For more information call their colleagues and associates in Deborah Schuff at 233-6119. the office. They'd deny it if you say On Oct. 23 Superior Court Judge it to them." Robert Thaxton, attorney David Barry believes that "part of this Allen and chief probate examiner communication is learning how to Barbara Curry will give a pro­ give negative feedback to team bate update al a dinner meeting of members." the association at the Stardust "How to disagree and not be Hotel. disagreeable," is a skill, said And on Nov. l the W111ociation Barry, who has a doctorate in will sponsor a trip to the garment clinical paychology from the Uni­ district in Los Angi,les. Call versity of Utah. Marre Burlflund 11t 236J711 for Some pointers on managing a information. team building process: • • • • A desire to improve. On the Move: Lawrence Bran­ • Identify the prol>lell'\ ton la the new cJ:iairman of the Tax • What's the ideal? Advisory Commi11Sion, which gov­ • Develop a strategy and tactics erns the St11te Bar's tax specializa­ on ways to improvu. tion program. •Review the prog~eH with • • meetings and open discussion. The family law calendar cur­ "The only way you learn about rently set on Tuesday mornings at team building is by doing it," said 8:30 in Dept. 6 in El Cajon is now Barry. • • • News Media Watch: Chief Jus­ tice Rose Bird will be Pam Plotkin'• gueJ1t this Saturday at 2:30 p.m. on Channel 5l's At the Bar program. OCT 8 1986

lJl/1~'1 '• P. C. B far. 18/i //

~ - L ·'Once you start a sport, you Young-San Diego State football soccer field. The Bruins, 5-0-4 this must maintain a 2.0," said Water­ game has been 'College changed from 7 year, are ranked No. 3 in the na- J man. p.m. to 4:45 . • 9 p.m. for the benefit of "It's quite tion and No. 1 on the West Coast. a project," said Water­ a national TV audience, which will USO Notes ~t man of the has won it's last six games undertaking which be able to view the game on ESPN. and forces her to sports a 9-1-0 record. research which sub­ San Diego State's football team U.S. International jects students are signed Universi­ up for and has a bye this week after falling ty's soccer team which ones they are actually reached the fi. en­ Saturday to Stanford 17-10. The nals of the BYU homecoming rolled in. Aztecs clas­ are the only undefeated sic over the weekend by defeatiqg Waterman, whose job is to re ­ team in the Western Athletic Con­ Colorado:s club team 6- L, before port infractions to the California ference, with a 2-0 record, 3-2 over­ Association falling to the host Cougars 3-2 in of Community Colleg­ all. overtime es, has a clean in the championship. slate. In addition, the kickoff time for Jorge "] was really surprised," Huerta was named most she said , I he road game against Texas-El valuable defender pointing out that sophornures in the tourna• are Paso game has been moved up to 6 ment, while teammate By Donna Balancia(T·A Sportswriter doing particularly well, academi Gary Botha ­ p.m. to accommodate a civic holi­ was named the tourney's cally. day. most "They had yaluable forward. Five other Gulls a really good year," Chris Hardy leads all rushers were Athletes are she said. ·'We named to the an-tournament are nearly a third of with 68 .6 yards a game, sixth over­ team. the way through the semester." all in the WAC, and scoring with The Gulls met Cal State-Fuller ·doing well The Holiday Bowl Team 8.4 ­ in Se­ points a game, second in the ton this afternoon and lection Committee will take will travel cm its WAC. Tight end Robert Awalt to UCLA to meet the rlefending first 1m.1jor .,;couting expedition for leads na­ their classes receivers and is third in the tional champions Sunday potential teams to play in t.he bow l WAC with . The 5.2 catches a game. Gulls tied the Bruins 1-1 in the This is one of three times during game, which will take place Dec. 30 The University on­ th of San Diego ly meeting of the two teams last e semester when Patti Water­ at San Diego Stadium. is :.!- 1 afterc.leleabng Pomona season. USI U won the Southwest man, women's athletic director at Committee members will be Pitzer College 42-16 last Saturday. Soccer Conference title Palomar College, could pull her looking at f,,ur games in its search Thi last year, s week the Toreros will take with UCLA second. hair out. for a po:; ~il,le opponent for the on the Claremont-Mudd Stags, USIU's volleyball team She has to make sure all of the Western Athletic Conference 2- moved 1. its record to 9-11 Oct. school's athletes, both men and champion. "The 1 by defeat­ defense had an outstand­ ing USO, 15-4, 15-2, 15-11, women, are adhering to state eligi­ Games being scouted Saturday ing game in the for us," said Coach Brian first West Coast Athletic Confer­ bility requirements. include Navy at Air Force and Fogarty. "Fur the fourth consecu­ ence game for the Gulls. Later All athletes have to take 12 units Ohio State at rndiana. Two Pac- 10 tive game they in while didn't give up a the week, the Gulls fell to USC in participating in a sport, and games will also be checked out: point in the second a 24 half." non-league clash, 15 -8, I 1-15, 15- units must be completed before Washington at StanforJ and Ari ­ The USD soccer the second season team will 10, 15-8. of participation zona at UCLA. host the defending NCAA champi­ in a sport. The Gulls travel Friday to Cal Kickoff lime fur I lit' Brigham lJll UCLA at :J:~m p.m. at the USO State-Fullerton. / " Sen OleQO, CA (SanOleQOCo-l Dally Tranacripl (Cir. D. 7,415) 1 Coun~y,¾ttorney Plan- . ·OCT 8 1986 (Continued lh>~,. IA/ eona employed 10 the Clau1fied commiNion, formed under Lhe um- Service." broil• of 1be JJ~ S..n Tho Board of Supervieor■ and Di•~~tar . Af\er ltudy- purcbaalow aventa may aleo m,ke in11 optlona in publio dufenae, the 1uch deci1ion1. Befo111 Prop. A, ..Alt...', ,. c. I i;.,, "'' commiuion favored a non-profit such review Wd in tbe handa of the corporation . Civil Service Commiuioo upon County auperviaora quickly em- recomnumdation o£ the board or LaWSUit Opposes braced the notion of doin& aw»y purchasing •lient. with Lh e current aya1tem, that of Luoma claimed, and the CEA contractinli out Lo low-bid law petition allegea, thllt at no time h»» firmw BOme indigent defeDN work either the Civil Service Commia- Defuhder while the rOII ia handled by System 21 staff •ion or the Chiof AdmlniBtrative lawyer■ in tho Office of Defende111 Office determined that an in- County Workers Service1 Claim (ODS). dependent defender program ia The Several combination ayslem i1 refer- more economical i.lld efficient. Will Lose Jobs n,d i.o •• a modified pubhc defender In fact, the complaint notes, oflico. By PAULINE REPARD IL haa boen criticized for liickey'1 1taft' hu found that a full yean S...1»,,ulJuyf'ru.tt·rJp,SultWIHU for ea:ceeding it.B budirel and public defender office would be failin11 i.o overoee The San Diego County Employ­ the quality of cheaper. Staff recnmmendltion lo work by contr1tct eea Auociation hao filed suit lo firms. aupervi..ora h•• been to 1tupport lhe ODS Ea:ecutivu halt lhts creation of 1t privalti com• Director Melvin ei.ptrnded COWlty office. Nit& munity defender 11ystem that and Chief Adminiotrative Of- Loun1a add•d that the CEA boo ficer Norman might leave county work.era with­ Hickey have lobbied filed an unfair labor practicea suit for a outjoba. third option: a full public de- against thtt county for placing fender The complaint accuaea the Board office equal io 1treugth lo Prop. A on the ballot without union the diatrict attorney of Supervisorlil of violating lhe '• office. contfent. _/ Hick~y•• 11laft' county charter limitinv the use of has c•lculated an- / nultll Wit of II public indepeudunt contractora, and of defender officu al around $10 million, refwing Lo meet and confer on the or $IS mil- lion, including tranailion maller with the employ~• union. and »tart-up coat.w. '"The county hM an obhgation to With ita oug&utad hi1her meet and confer on any m1:1lter af. 1lllll'• ing levels, the community fectin& the wat"ea and working defender office ia estimated lo coat amywhere condition1 of employe~a we repre­ from $12 million i.o $18 aent," uid CEA Gen~ral Manaver million, depending on who Wyleen Luoma yesterdll)'. doe» the cakulatina. "When tho county looked at the Votea cut by county auperviaora likelihood or conlractin11 OU\ (for over the aummer have tak.en the indi11ent defepael, in our opillio11 it county cloeer and clOMer to the had an obligation to meet with ua community ayatem, with an 1ty1t on the impact on civil service em­ toward having it in place by m:a:t ployoe• and lhe feaaibility of it ll\UlUDtlr. work.in¥ ouL to the OOnefit of tu.­ Luoma 1&dd.rettaed payere." 1upervi110r» at two of the meetinga, warning them Chief Deputy County Couneel of po88ible fallout over awardin&' Daniel Wallace acknowledged an indeptindent contract without receivina a copy of the petition yes­ proper meet-and-confer terd».y. "From what with the I've read, we CEA. disagree," W•lla,e said. "Wo in­ Yeat.erday ahe aa id 11uch verbal tend Lo defend •aahwt it viwor­ warnin&B •huuld ou»ly," havo 1,.1ut the boud on nolicu that ti meullllll wu He added he thought tho ,ult requedled - even requirttd, under premature, aa no contract has been the Meyera-Miliaa-Brown Act awarded yd. rt!gulating i<)vernment employee­ Luoma e11 timated a private, employer relation.a. non-profit aystem of dt:ftmJ.ing the "Ab10lulely, I felt after urving poor could COil '2 million to $3.6 twice that ii"• loo coolly, ille11al ond million more than lhe annual cost in violation of thtt charter , that I of a full public defender'• office. wa, wh i&tling in the wind." . The union'• petition, filed Fridey The lawyer who filed the petition in Superior Court, Sfflu an irtjunc­ for CEA, Robert Neal, added thol tion to keep the county from laying the Public Employ••• Relal(pn» off 43 current Office of Defender Bou.rd hu.11 ruled thut u.11 llttp«ta of 8-trvice» worker,. cunlr•utina, out,Mrvictt• being per­ It oilO ..kl that a judge order tho form.,d by atat.e wurk.er1 11hould be Board of Superviaor1 to 11et Hide it11 the aubjecl. of mttet-and-confer. d~uuoo to form a private indiw~nl "We aee no difference belwet,n defense proif"&m - at least until at.ate and county employee& u far the county ha• met with the CEA. u tbia iBconceroed," 1Mid Neal. Strictly •P••kinv, the board The CEA'• aecood point, that the bdo' t ,witched ov~r to a private Board of Supervi10n ii violatin11 pravram yet. At their Sept. 9 meet• the county chart.er, ia bued on ing, aupcrviiOra vot.&d to appoint provi1io1111 under Propo1ition A, trusteH who wuuld draft. a con­ approvttd by voter• ln June. tract. If 1upervieon liked the IL allow ■ &ivea conlractina: power terma, tht'y wuuld th~n 111pprove lhu to tho Chief Admlo.iatrative Offica, contn...:t uud hire the iJ'OUp. to ftr■L det.trmine whether aervice■ Th11 move toward a private du­ "can be provided more economi­ fts1u.kir '1 uffic• 11toL •Ulrt4td al th~ c•lly and efficiently by an in­ r-=commendation o( ay independent dependenl contractor llul.o by per- fCont,nutd u11 r•M&3AI anta Ana, CA >rang• Co.) ftng■ County Register • r. D. 271,281) ;Ir. Sat. 264,966} .Ir. s. 302,808)

OCT9 1986

Pat answers no solution for crime problem The one thing these explanations of the stroke of a pen. lf young criminals and biologically inferior. They disregard gov­ By George J. Bryjak crime control have in common is that come from broken homes, what can or are unable to understand society's parents to raise The conserva­ they are destined to fail. ernment do ? Require n 196i the President's Commission o.n rules regarding behavior. proper!)' just as they are is punishment. The certainty of punishment will in­ their children Law Enforcement and Administration tive solution to crime pay taxes? reject individual explanations crease dramatically ( and rates of crime required to Iof Justice stated, "There has alwavs Liberals The radical answer is the most unlikely been too much crime. Virtually every of criminal behavior and see crime root­ decrease) only if we hire more police-a lot more. We also need hundreds of addi· scenario of all. We are as far away today generation since the founding of the na­ ed in society's institutions and fundamen­ society than at crime tional criminal court judges and to in­ from becoming a socialist tion and before has felt itself threatened tal beliefs. From this perspective For all the prob­ , unemployment, crease our correctional facilities at least any time in our lustory. by the specter of rising crime and vio­ is the result of poverty States faces. the over· political disenfran­ threefold. But Americans are not willing lems the United lence." Nothing has changed. racism, sexism, and majority of Americans (in· to the crime prob­ to pay the billions of dollars in additional whelming Even though the crime rate has chisement. Solutions eluding the poor ) are committed to a cap­ more equitable distribution revenue this solution requires. dropped slightly since 1980. it is still lem include a economy. The lower classes and wealth, and end to racism and sex­ The liberal response to crime is even italist among the highest in the industrial of the chronically unemployed don't want to world.costing Americans as much as $240 ism. and more jobs for a growing under­ more unlikely for both ideological and practical reasons. I cannot imagine any overthrow the system. To the contrary, billion annually. class. they just want to be successful like every­ Radicals see crime as the inevitable legislation being passed that would re­ Conservative, liberal and radical one else. thinkers have offered a variety of causal byproduct of a corrupt and exploitative quire the top 20 percent of the population to give any portion of their wealth ( ap­ The basic solutions to the crime prob­ explanations and solutions to the crime capitalist system. Capitalism is based on We hu­ proximately 80 percent of the nation's lem are really quite straightforward. problem. However, given the realities of competition and greed, and measures behavior through in terms of mate­ wealth) to society's poorest and lower ­ either control criminal the social, economic and political climate man worth exclusively ( rehabilitation has not . The rich oppress and brutal­ middle-income families. punishment in the United States, these solutions yield rial success worked ) or alter the basic attitudes and ize poor. who in turn survive by prey­ Other possible causes of crirr>e from the same bleak scenano - a future as the institutions ( the government. economy each other. Radicals believe that the liberal perspective do not lend them- ' crime-ridden as our past. ing on and family) of society. Conservatives see crime as the result some form of socialism or communism - selves to direct intervention. While rac­ . Criminals a classless society - will significantly ism and sexism can be controlled bv law of individual shortcomings Bryjak is an associate professor of SOCIO~ , morally reduce, if not totally ehminate, criminal to a certain extent. these are deep-seated are viewed as less intelligent ogy. IJoiversro, Al San Otegc_ EINnor Miil 'Fo< tho Reglll11tf deficient, psychologically maladjusted behavior. atti!tJdes th~cannot be wiped away by OCT 10 1981>

Jl[k,i ', P. C. B fat. 1811 j - vAll-ournose ;J-7 J'{"_r _player leads USD attack Mansukhani is busiest Torero By Ric Bucher ~tnff Writer A list of Jeff Mansukhani's roles on the Unive~ Diego football team stretches almost as far as the name of the Toreros' opponent this week. Mansukhani will be available as a wide receiver, punt- and kick-re­ turner. plare-kick holder, backup punter and occasional running back when USD (3-1) hosts the Claremont McKenna-Harvey Mudd-Scripps Col­ lrge Slags (omorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Torcro Stadium. Fnt the sake of brrvity, Mansu­ khani is known as "Mongoose," and the three-campus collPgc with the 2-1 record is referred lo as Claremonl­ Mudd. For the sake of the Toreros' for­ tunes this season, Coach Brian Fo­ garty hopes the 5-foot -9, 170-pound Mansukhani remains healthy. "Ir he went down, we'd need five guys lo replace him." Fogarty said. ( "But I've never been one to be con­ cerned so much with a guy gelling hurl that I wouldn "t play him." Alter having his last two seasons curtailed by injuries - stress frac­ tures and muscle problems in his shins as a freshman , a torn muscle in his left ankle as a sophomore - the junior from Capistrano Valley rarely has left the field this fall . His 23 catches for 426 yards and four touch­ downs lead the Toreros' receiving corps. He also has returned six punts for 102 yards and 11 kickoffs for 273 y~rds. And though it is more difficult to m•iasure, Fogarty considers holding for the place-kicker as the mosl im ­ porlanl function of his roles. That talent also distinguishes Man­ sukhani fnin1 Chris Dabrow. the Stags· 5-9, 200-pound wingback /kick ­ and punt-returner, who has accumu­ lated 573 all-purpose yards and five touchdowns in just three games. Dahrow, a junior. ran for 199 of those yards - II more than he had all last year - in the Stags' 27-10 season-opening win over Redlands. In an 8-7 lo~s lot.he Toreros in 1985. Dabrow harl his best performance of the season, rushing 11 limes for 55 · yards and scoring his leam·s only touchdown. Preparation is the key, Mansu­ khani said, which sometimes makes warm-ups rat.her strenuous. "Somrlimes you·re in more of a sweat hefore the game than during it." he said. San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

OCT 12 1986

Jlllffl ~ "· C. 8 far. 1681

Sunday, --- '\!lie .!liln October 12, 1986 Diego Union H-17 Audi event may be .here to ~qc,c; stay Duringthe awards presentation al ------Stewart. Edwards, Dan Mattera last month's Audi Challenge tourna- 11 e II i S (freshman, Lomita), Mark Farren menl, everyone who took the micro- ______II (sophomore, San Jose) and Peter phone at center court - sponsors, Mark Zeigler Choi (junior, Flagstaff, Ariz.) are promoters and winner Pam Shriver ------newcomers. - spoke optimistically of making the this way, especially the ones who On Oct. 23, the team will play its inaugural event an annual one. have learned the concept and under- annual intrasquad Torero Tangle, be- They weren't just being polite. stand that every game is important." ginning at 2 p.m. "I really think there is a very good The six leagues include a North SERVE'S UP - NASCOM, a na- chance of having it next year," said San Diego league, a husband-wife tional serving competition based at Shelly Hall of Spear/ Hall Commun!- league and an open league with club Hotel de! Coronado, will begin ex- cations, which promoted the eight- pros. Balboa Tennis Club alone had panding nationally, according to player exhibition. "I have been told 47 sign-ups for TeamTennis, prompt- president Ben Press. "It's just abuut by the Audi people and by the Ran- ing Felman 10 form an inlraclub lo get going," Press said. "We're cho Bernardo Inn people that they league there. starting Lo gel some national spon- thought everything went very well. Teams play Tuesday, Wednesday sors." ''What they're look,ing al is hoping and Thursday nights and Saturday NASCOM is different from normal lo make a long-term commitment to mornings. The season includes six serving competitions in that it is the tournament and maybe draw the matches and playoffs, and concludes handicapped, so that weaker servers No. 1 or No. 2 player in the world lo in late November. There are similar are not instantly eliminated. Most increase attendance and maybe ex- league,s in Orange and Ventura coun- NASCOM events are in San Diego, pand the field from eight to 16." ties, and Felman s._iid he hopes to but last month Atlanta was host fur There's even talk of making it a have San Diego County's champions one. sanctioned pro tournament. play theirs. HALF VOLLEYS - The USTA is Lofty goals, but judging by the fa- sponsoring a clinic for many of the vorable reaction of players and orga- FRESH BLOOD AT USD _ For nation's top juniors this weekend at nizers, hardly unrealistic ones. , the first time in nine -years, a 'fresh- Mission Hills Country Club in Ran- The biggest improvement, Hall man won the University of San Diego cho Mirage. Dennis Ralston and Tun, hopes, will be in attendance. Except team tryout tournament. Gorman are among those who will for the Sunday finals, the 4,000-seal James Edwards of Denver didn't provide instruction ... The Volvo stadium erected on the Rancho Ber- lose a set in his four matches in the Tennis/ All-American Championships nardo Inn's courts was never half 2o-player tournament, which Coach are Oct. 30-Nov. 2 al UCLA's tennis full. Ed Collins uses to determine his JO- center. The 32-draw stogies and lti· "I think that was the only thing man team. In the final , Edwards team doubles tournament features you can point to. I think we got hurt scored a 6-3, 6-0 victory over Chris the nation's top male collegiate play- by the weather the ,first couple of Smith, last season's No. 4 player. ers ... days, and then by not having (Gabrle- Last year's No. I and 2 players _ The San Diego contingent that at- la) Sabatini," he said, referring Lo the Jim McNamee and David Stewart _ tended last week 's USPTA (U .S. Pru- rain the morning of the first round are recovering from injuries and did fessional Tennis Association) 1,000- and the injury that fyrced Sabatini to not ,compete in the tryout tourna- person convention in Rancho Mirage withdraw the week before. "But, of menl. The 1986-87 rosier includes re- returned home with more than a few course, those are things that you lurnees Curtis Dadian, Rob MacKay, titles in the convention's tennis tour- can't control." Scoll Patridge, McNamee, Smith and nament. Andy Gordon won the na- Slill, the four-day event was "prof: tional singles crown, and Cherise itable," according lo Hall. So well- Hagey teamed with Lisa Blackshear sponsored was the event, Hall said, ______· for the open women's doubles title. that it was in the black before tickets Junior• Other local winners: Bob Chapman were sold. Tri-Cily Palrona Tournamonl - Oct (55 singles), Chapman and Ben Prt:SS 25-26. Nov 1-2 MlfaCosla College, ( d bl ) Bill M '))"k d L'J Woody Blocker's T~nms Cenler. Boys' and 55 OU es , I I an an c. TEAM TENNIS - The opening g1ds' single& (w,I11 consolalion) ill 10, 12, Serues (65 doubles) . .. matches Thursday night for San 14 , 16, 18 dovlslons ConIac1 GIenda Has- Shelly Boyce of the Vista Tennis Diego's Domino's TeamTennis fall selo al 729-2855. (The tournament 1s In 11s 1 "" year I Club was the big winner in the arna- leagues were rained out, but interest Ed Collin• USD Tonnia Camp Salollilo teur portion of the Audi Challenge. has not dampened in the past year. Tournomonl - Nov . 1-2. 8 Umvorsny 01 Boyce didn't win one of the doubles San Diego, Grossmont College, Boys' end TeamTennis director John Felman girl& ' beg,nmng and nllermed,ale singles ,n tournaments, but she did win an had one four-team league last year, 10. 12. 1 ◄ . 1s, 18 en,,y deadllno: oc, 22. AuJ1 , which was raffled as part uf and now be has six leagues with rep­ ConldCI Ed Collins • 1 260 · ◄ 803 the inlerclub event. Other winners: resentative from 11 local tennis Adult• Maree Schacht and Jeannie Portfill clubs. La Jolla Tonnia Club Fall Double ■ Tour- (Hotel de) Coronado, women's A QOU · "The players enjoy it. They're hav­ ;:~~;•c~oo~~!•~ ~i;-~ ~;!~~~ ~~uJb~:: bles); Roger Holbert and Scott Peter• ing a lot of fun with it," Felman said. and ,m, od doubles 111 A, B, C; men's 45 son (Tennis Escondido, men's A dou- _ "I think they like the competition doubles Co111ac1 Bob Perry al 459 -9950. bles). / _,,.,.. San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

OCi 1 31986

Jlfl~n•• P. c. e Es r. 1888 _,.,-Fr~ng has begun complex on a $10.6 million for resident students apartment Diego. at the University Tlie ,,,;;:?tf~< .J?f San 156-unit, suc-buildiKl(i!o'mplex to the USD Sports Center will be adjacent a chronic and will be built housing problem to alleviate graduate students for undergraduate . "This year and dents in the we had to Oakwood Apatments" put 240 stu­ said Tom Burke, in Pacific dean of student Beach, Schoell and Paul affairs. Inc. has designed project to conform the apartments found to the Spanish throughout the Renaissance tion campus. C.A style Co. is general . Larsen Construc manager contractor. Jon ­ for the Larsen McDowell, project completed firm, said the in time for project should ber. student occupancy be next Septem­ The two-bedroom with in three-story two-bath apartments buildings that will be second-floor and will be connected have third-floor walkways. with a dining area, Each unit balcony a kitchen, will . Also being a living room buildings, constructed and a six tennis are four bicycle courts and storage a parking lot. ~ OCT 1 31986

._A/le. 't r. C. 8 /'11. 1111

/ SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1986 Go~ Samaritans Are Talking On Their Car Phones Stev~m1, drivinJC Along J. Ui Education for more ln(ormation. org11nization and manng,ment Kinder GN"er il!I thf! director ot rec,,nlly, noticed coro 1wervlng to oupport for th• •re• office. OSI ■ ll!O hotel ■ at ... She l'tftrt"nic Memori• teachers. Fomaca Fam_lly Rakery vie(' hazard to Airwatch traffic al Center in Mission Valley Oct. pre11ident J ame1 Fom•~a hH reportero who reported the problem 30, 2-8 p.m. Stuart M11rcant.onl i11 new car been reelected to the Independent over loca l radio atatiom1. manAger at P•clfic Be•ch Ford. Baken Cooperative board of di.rec. Thia gnod flRmaritAn ia one of Al EspN!to Tel. Nlcbolao C. Marcantonl waR formerly with ton, for 1987. competitor Pacifi. c. Beach . Toyota . Business Matters The Prudential lnaurance Co. Harcourt Brace ~Jovanovich I of America ha.a formed a new in- announcH four new e,cecutive ap­ . by Libby Brydolf 1mrance program for SRn Diego: pointment.A: John F. DerardJ, who ha.11 Mrved PrnC ■ re Plu1. HeAded hy loco! u trea1mrer for the last eight yean,, hoo been elected • 3.500 loc•l PacTel Mobile Acee•• phyaiciRn Dr. Sol Llzerbram, the Kalevlty hoo moved up to mojor senior vice pre11ident at the pub­ cuBlomer11 who compri1e the program lfl being touted AB an account11 repreeentative. Gordon li•hing firm. Robert E. Evan ■on PacTel C~lluler Patrol. Since the alterntttive to traditional in11ur­ E. Mlrrett, formerly a loan/ is a180 a new 11enior vie@ preaidftnt. patrol formed in mid-Augu1t, ance and HMO options. Nine collection ■ officer at Bank of He will ■ cl •• deputy to Peter callers h11ve logged more than hoopltol ■ and mon, than 600 doc­ Commerce, h, the new collections Jovanovich. Dr. DUiy Rea1an, 1,200 cal111 on emergenciee ranging ton are expected to participate. mAnftger. Marc A. Wall11ce take8 formerly Ruperintendent of the from brush fire11 to tn.ffic acci­ The program allowo cilent■ to over H telecommunications swit.ch HouRton public Rehool diltrict, dents. select their own doctors while PA.Y· technician to handle installation. comea aboard as a eenlor vice pre- " It makee the commute more in­ ing fixed f... to the plan. trouble11hooting and malntem,nce. . .. 11 i dent handling educational teresting end there'a a certain publication11 from the company'1 plea,mre in helping other M/A Com Government Sy1- people/' oubeidiary, l.eerned & Te.ted, the Vam1Hid. tem1 Llnkablt diviRion ha,. prn. moted Frank O1good from direc­ Educ11lion Co., in Austin. Finally, Thoma, A. Wllllamaon, president The Society of Telecommuni­ tor of program development to of another HBJ Rubeidia.ry, The cations Con11ultant1' fall con­ 1Hi11hnt vice president for Poychologic■ I Corp., bas been ference ie Ret for San Diego Nov. strategic oommunicationa. O!!good mede a company vice preeident. 19-23. For the fim time. the r,,.t joined M/A-Com in 1981. Another three dAyl!I of the conference will be M/A-Com promotion goe11 to Den• ... nl11 Vlnrent, OPf"n to the pnhHc .,,;th t.opiC8 who has moved up ,Jerome n. LaDow, formerly from employment manager to covering cable televi11ion, tele­ San Diego district m11nager for director of human resources. communication1 network,. a talk Ko.levity Mlrrett Leaaeway Tr ■ n11portatlon hy Rep. Jim B•les, ().Sen Diego. Corp., ha• token over the helm of L<>ren CampbeU. nect oaleo and on update on Federal Com­ the company' ■ West Cout opera­ manager for Unlvendty munications CommiMion regula­ Len-y J. Cari• hao been named Ford, ha111 tion•. l.aDow h•• been with LTC"• been named to tory polidefll The meeting will he Southern CalifoTniA vice pre8idE'nt Ford Motor Co. 's local ouboidiary PHD Corp. for 26 Grand MASter level held at the Hotel fnter-Contlnen­ of Mleo al Pacific BeU Directory. for selling at ye•ro. LTC purchaoed PHO In tal. Conlttct the society in New Caris, who livea in San Diego, has least 500 can during the pHt year. 1976. York City for more information. been with Poe Bell 18 yeRni. Hi1 Campbell actually oold that moet recent poeition was general number inju.8l six monthe. The lnolde Edre. • San Diego sftle■ manager for San Diego. Celerity ComputinlJ, maker of group dedicated to peroono.J and ... Mark Grund1trom is the new high-performance 1mperminicom­ planetary pe•ce. hold• breakfaot Mrvice manager at Pear,mn Ford. putero. hao hired Jemet F. !ltef­ meeting• each Thuroday. 7-8:45 It' ■ a promotion for Grundatrom fortl as ill new vice preeident of a m., at the La Jollo Village lnn. who was body Rhop manager. marketing and sales. StafTord tef\ a Spe111ken, for the next three weeks flimilar position At Sy ·111, a tele- are: J ■ mfll WanleH, diecUMing At The Corlobad Inn. PRIii (Contfnuftd on Pap .4.) the importance of 11ymbol11 in busi• neH dealingl!I, Oct. 16; " One Minute ManAger" ken Blan•

Or. Sldn•y Konn. director of M•ureen Renfro, former the San Dlef{o Supercomputer AMOCiRte Hlet1 repre8Cnlative at Center. will dlecuu hia miracu­ Sell World, h•• returned to her former 88 lous feat of bringing that ambitious employer tour and travel proj"Ct to <"o mpletfon on time and repre ■ enb.tive . Renfro moat within hudget 111. tomorrow's mN!t,. recently wu director of t1ale111 for ing of the Project M11na1ement Great Pacific Hotelo. fnaUtute. Metier Man,tgement will hOf!t e cocktail hour nt Kingl!I '"' Timothy E. Boyle, formerly Inn beginning nt 15 :30 p.m. Dinner head of Co1ener•tJon N11tlone.l •nd the opeech will follow. Coot io Corp., i1 the new vice preaident of buaineu S 15 for members; S 17 for non­ development for Energy members. Factora. Energy Factors acquired CNC laot April. Jacqueline Brown, a11a111tant profe880r of marketin at USO Or,anlsatlon Sy.teme Inc.• a will di11eu 8111 the pros :nd ·;;,;;-;,(- Sorrento Valley•bfli,ed con11ulting marketing re&e,uch Rt t.he Oct. 17 firm, h1 the new ronsult11mt for the USO BualneH Update Reminar. Department of Energy's S,rn Fran- The bret1kfaat meeting begin.R at c:i8CO office. OSI will give ongoing 7:30 1.m. Coot io $15. Contact the ~ - USO 1.lf'p11rtment of Continuing I - Azusa, CA (Loa ~ngelea Co.) Azusa.Herald (W. 13,7001 •

-J//;;,. P. C. B Est. 1888

.,, . ( ~U dedicate~ smc~?.v:~!i~!di- cate a new outdoor sports . Saturday, complex Oct. 18, at 4:30 p.m. The dedication will follow Homecoming the APU football game against the U.piversity of San begins Diego which at 1 p.m. .___.. · · The $1.2 million project features -eight-lane ·an . i aH-weatlier track and seat- .. - ing for '1 nearly ~.800 spectators and will field soccer, football . and field and track events. A new locker room, weight room, and training fac~lity are also included in the improved plex. com- ___-:· .· . . . OCT 1 51986

---··-·· - -· - •·•·- ---- Wedne~day, October 15, 1986 C TIIE~TRIBUNE San Diego, USD's Egan has work ahead By i&i7lfn:y Tr/bun,, Sportswriter Under construction signs are need­ ed around the ..I.JSD_sporls Center these days. The road leading to the Sports Center is covered with dirt and debris, the byproducts created by new dormitories rising adjacent to the building. Inside the facllity, Toreros coach Hank Egan today begins construc­ tion on his 1986-87 men ·s basketball team. "The first few days of practice are really hard because you're torn be­ tween two things," said Egan, who begins his third year al USO. "First of all, you want lo get it established that you want to play hard and those kinds of things. But you also have a /ot of leaching to do. "I always enjoy practice much more after the first seven or eight practices because you have all your drills in and have re-established how you're going to approach things. There's less teaching and more doing. The inlensily grows. ll should go a lot quicker this year than it has in lhe past because we return a lot of kids." The skeletons of buildings are tak­ ing shape outside. The harkhone for lhis year's Toreros team is also in place. Three starters are among nine lettermen returning from the team that went 19-9, the school's best mark al the Division I level, and finished third in thP. WCAC last season. The returning starters are 7-fool center Srolt Thompson, 6-8 forward Nils Madden and guard Paul Leon­ ard. All are seniors. Thompson aver­ aged 14 .4 points and 7.3 rebounds a Trlb,me file photo lasl sr~snn to earn AII -WCAC game BIG EXPECTATIONS FOR SENIOR SCOTT THOMPSON first-team honors for the second USD HAS year. Madden averaged straight ort­ Bell from Crawford. nearly 10 poinl~ a game and five re­ people and I think that's an imp . ant factor." Egan said. "I know they "I don't give a whole lot of speech­ bounds. Leonard averaged 6.8 points things 30 per­ were good athletes when we recruit­ es," said Egan. "But one of the However, the Toreros lost that this is with the ed them and they have good basket­ I talk a whole lot about is c~nl of their scoring offense where you have of seniors Mark Bostic and ball skills. How they fit into the over­ the kind of business departure prove yourself everyday. There Pete Murphy, another All-WCAC all plan is what I have lo spend lime to determining." are no days where you ran mentally first -team member. Wilh lhe addi­ thing i~ shot this sea­ or physically rest. The other tion of the three-point Among the players who will be got to want to perform will especially miss Mur­ that you've son, USO after starting spots are sophomore under pressure. If you're the kind of phy's long-range shooting. guard Danny Means, freshman one '.>f those shooter in Murphy person that doesn't like "WP lost a great swingman Craig" Cottrell, 6-8 senior you're not going to like Mark Bostic, who can cre­ things. then and a guy, forward /center Steve Krallman and we go about business. some things defensively and the way at P 6-8 junior forward /center Jim Pel­ "We have enough essential pieces rhangc things on both ends of the . so lon that if we gel some other guys lo fill nnor," Egan said. "They created have a two of It will also be interesting to note in the rest of the puzzle, we much pressure between the basketball couldn't concen­ the progress of 6-5 sophomore swing­ chance to be a pretty good them that people well we fit together." Thompson." man Mike Haupt. one of three team. H's how trate on Scott the San foundation laid down in prac­ So, Egan's primary task in prac­ redshirls. Haupt, who was The Diego-CIF Player of the Year al tice will be tested early in an exhibi­ tice is to find the two players who in by Murphy Mira Mesa three years ago, attended tion game Nov. 7 against Athletes can fill the roles occupied make some adjust­ He must also determine San Diego Slate as a freshman and Action. Egan will and Bostic. the USO following that contest in prep­ who will cnmplemenl the starling will be eligible at the end of ments fall semester. The roster also lea­ ara t.ion for the tram's season opener five. Dondi Utah. "I haven't seen them intermix with lures 6-8 freshman forward Nov. 28 al , I I I,, I• • I ~ . I ·~··-A-6 · 1/(;f owth, ·traffic 'woes Worry Sipan 1 . traffic problems while · at the . By. Tim Ml~.j~ln • q~< i i·,.,_,- ,------.;.;,,...,..,. developments need to be planned · same tirpe eliminating recrea­ Staff Wrltt'r • • ~ \ \ more carefully. just tional programs for youth. I "I think the council should i "J ;._ . • ' , • • big sleeper issue, , slow down a little bit," Si pan "I think the (,,\ .~rnr~ ,,,- ,,,.;,f'ik.o;: i think anybody else is Thil is\ m~· said. "The land will still be there that I don't c:ahdiil:1t<'.~ ,~,, ,,,.,.,·,·c ill ,,,,. _. revitalization of ·or in five to· 10 years." .. addressing, is the Nov. 4 ,•h\•fit,'11 . Vista Shopping · ... A third generation Chula the Chula 1At. '26, ' Rkh:ml Sipan . is ih~ he said. .. . V:~ , ~ ., attended RoseBank Center," • "'. '. t. ··" i Vistan; Sipan .. ,. t hl' n~l1t' !'of.• Sipa()'s criticisim is . : yo_ung~sl<'-'atllti,latr in Elementary, · Hilltop Junior arid Most of Cil\· <.\11111~TI -, i1C' proposal to close ·'a .. seat -on thl' Hilltop High School where he got aimed at the . Chula 'Vist{i : ·· · i _' ' between ·1 and H ! politics. After Fifth Avenue ' • involved•in student t f ' shopp­ . 'But ngl' has '"'t bl' ·n a ' han- ',in 1978 he attended streets to consolidate the idea.s t_o ' graduatiJig , he , . d1cap in ~,,mini,! 1111 ' witlJ ing center. ·such and action 1 ~ .. ,I ; ..... , .1.- 1 ;. r , of California, ~ • · I rl , tne University ll' \'lly H1r thl' granc:ison lead to gridlock. · improve•. Berkeley as a pre-law major. said, would ·knwn rancher take a study to of Chui:, · \'ista He graduated in 1983, returned "It doesn?t traffic is already stop­ Charles Offrrm:111. to Chula Vista and earned his law know that an -:111,,rncy, said thf and slow on ·, · Sipan, degree from the Uni.v.~!fillY-Q.f'San and-go on Broadway fndng the city is Sipan said. biggest rrohkm - Di~ssing the state bar exam Fourth Avenue," u i I d . I a r g e the proposal p re S.!i u r' C t " h in 1985. He is now· working for He also opposes on the acreage east Boys Ciub on I · '.d·cvelopiucnis an attorney in La Mesa. to eliminate the . . -, , , for upgrading of, . 1 If elected, he said, he would· Street. Any plans is · pretty center, he said, .' .,"Jhe _North County · i7 have nQ problem juggling his the shopping .O:ut;'"' Sipan .said .. 'Richard Sipan include either a new Boys , ,, buil't • J ' 1 ·schedule to meet the workload. should for open · 1· • !, • a site for "Developers arc looking . l first bid for Club building or finding units' or more.. , While this is his ''land ' and · they look towarct the 5,000 said he . it elsewhere in the area. · couple of broth'ers elected office, Sipan Bay . .The couhcil has pro­ I • "I have a said he will spend about South Sipan said. entertained thoughts 'of running Sipan bably been 'deluged with plans to who are carpenters," on his campaign, concen- onl5' _9ne in 1982. $3,000 develop." . "They usually build J:iro- Si pan is also focusing on a pro- t ·r a t i n g o n w a I k i n g , house at a I time. I have no Solving I the problem, Sipari by the city neighborhoods and passing out with that." ' ! posal being considered said, require moving caut,iously blem more campaign flyers . La r g e - s c ~ I e that, he said, will produce with large development plans of B u t t h e - _..___ - - .. _.:.. ..:. OCT 16 1986

•I ( Aztecs start I /Q;i~.~~' I -;;-1~~ h . I I r scratc again I from I Any college basketball team with three, I lofty a~plrations should have Colleges four, returning starters (pref­ I maybe man. Brown I erably seniors), a dominant big Brian scorer and a reliable play­ I a proven yesterday, returns three senior . lice I maker of from its 19-9 team: 7-foot Given that his team has none starters I coach center Scdtt Thompson, 6-8 forward the above, San Diego State Paul I this to Nils Madden and 6-1 guard Smokey Gaines has at least Egan said he I 't worry about Leonard. Coach Hank console him: He needn to boost his 1985- I hopes. expects Thompson raising anyone's 14.4 points and 7.3 re­ I , who opened practice 86 averages of The Aztecs USD's football team has a I , graduated the top five bounds .. , yesterday 10-19 hefty chaliengeSalurilay at AZllsa I scorers from last season's Okoye. vacuum. SDSU Pacific: stopping Cho Cho I team. What's left is a Fogarty called aircraft carriers, no Toreros coach Brian has no returning a "Division I player -range threats, nor any the halfback serious long at a Division III school." , for that matter. There is one playing seniors , 6-2 and 250 pounds, has 584 returning junior, 6-8 center Gerald Okoye .. . from a yards on 85 carries, a 6.8 average Murray, but he's recuperating are listed in Divi­ . Four UCSD teams broken right knee nRI rnnkings: women's see one advantage in sion III natio ~~ Gaines can (No. 1), women's soccer (6), I,fl . volleyball having a team without superstars men's waler to worry about men's soccer (19) and "We don't have e UCSD and SDSU any one," he said. polo (I~) ... Th catering to yball teams have a none of this: 'I got a bad women's volle "There'll be record of 53-5. The Aztecs I can't run.' That kind of stuff combined . .. leg, be ranked No. 1 in Division I be contagious. Everybody will are can 's soccer team broke into the the same level." ' SDSU on five I national rankings this The heart of the team will be Division since a fair week (No. 17) for the first time sophomores who accumulated play fourth­ time last season: 1982. Sunday the Aztecs amount of playing the defending national Darryl Gaines (Smokey's son), ranked UCLA, guards and . . . After winning the Johnny Scruggs, Tracy Dildy champion Kevin .S. Air All-American Cham­ Josh Lowery, and center ITCA/U pionships last week at Myrtle Beach, Brown. 's tennis player Murray may contribute, S.C., SDSU women It appears Javer can claim to be the . His right knee was tested yester­ Monique too than 's top collegian. morning and was stronger nation the day ANIMAL ABUSE (Devoted to expected. Al practice later, Murray A · unusually abused in college sports~ took part in most drills. Tech last week - SDSU has 59-21 loss to Georgia MORE SMOKEY price for North Caroli­ polir.y regarding carried a high something of new addition to falling out of academics. Aware na Stale. In basketball and I rankings, 19 players admini~trators would like the naliona that school injured. Eight are starters: de­ players lo graduate, Gaines has were knee more for fensive tackle John Adleta (lorn instituted a mandatory study hall Michael Thursday cartilage), free safety Monday, Tuesday and , defensive tackle who miss study Brooks (concussion) evenings. Players (sprained knee), inside are late to a team Brian Bulluck hall or a class, or Kelvin Crooms (sprained , Gaines said, must rise at 5 linebacker meeting at foot), outside linebacker Scott Wilson next morning to run the steps Nelson the have (sprained ankle), cornerback the Aztec Bowl. Three players and sprained with the steps, Jones (broken hand become acquainted halfback Bobby Crumpler said. knee), guard Gaines (bruised thigh) and offensive MISCELLANY - USD's biisket­ fool). prac- Johnny Smith (sprained ball team, which als

Podiat!Y ~~P formed - . ~rcu1?Biach reside~t Gregory o: .Clark has joined Charles Luckey-in bis practice at ' 4747 Mission Boulevard, in Pacific Beach. Together they have formed North Shores Podiatry~· Qro!lp . to provide· podiatry care to the north shores area:. - -_ Clark is a graduate of the Unive~ty of San Diego and the 'Califorrua College oCPodiatric Medicine in San- Francisco. He completed his podiatric surgical residency at Villa View Hospital in San Diego. . .. "~dding Dr. Clark to my prac­ tice of 30 years in Pacific Beach allows us to provid~ the_highest quality of podiatric medicine and surgery to the north shores area of San Diego," u,ickey said. Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) 1 Blade Tribune (Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. s. 30,498)

, ,. OCT 1 '1 1 ·,1 t ' ' ' 1

unite.d at use·chapel . s J and James Rebecca Castro of Oceanside Marie were recently married. Patrick Gross of Torrance University at Founders Chapel at the A ceremony of Connie M. C"astro Pie.fo united the daughter ot,.Sao Mr. and Mrs. William Ray of Oceanside to the son of · · Gross Sr. of Torrance. in marriage by her brother, 1 The bride was given Spring VaHey. Jerry A. Castro of Cerda of El honor were Tina Castro Matrons of San Bernardino; Mona Lisa Montoya of Centro and were Maril\ F. sisters of the bride. Bridesmaids and Monica M. Nares of Encinitas Smith of Vista, . L. Paras of Sherman Oaks .Chiarme Gross Jr., brother of the Best man was William Ray Ushers were Loren L. Mitchell, groom, of Torrance. all of Tor- and Richard J. La Rose, Thomas C. Starr . , , and Felix Castro of Oceanside · rance was held at Tom Ham's receptibn for 170 guests A . Lighthouse at Harbor Island and San Luis Rey Academy · The bride attended Spanish and received a B.A. in MiraCosta College the University in couselor education from and a M.Ed and teaches Spanish · San Diego. She has counseled of Hills. at a high school in Mission West High School, El ! , The bridegroom attended and is Long Beach State University Camino College, in music and working toward a degree currently employed by the . administration. He is business and as g~uita:ristat Hotel in Redondo Beach Sheraton Beach. · Le Petit Cafe in' Hermosa MARIE and JAMES GROSS (J ' San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) OCT 1 'l 1!86 San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500)

.Jlllen'• P. c. B l: ~. 1morma11on . 44u:2i 11.

~ Diatingui1hed Spe era Series c~w ith Willlaf'll(~~ president of .Jlllm '• P. C. 8 F.s r. 1888 Group W Televis1 01rc:::!''kllWl!tf'l1l'tt\"\N hy "Freedom Isn' t Free," 7:30 a.m Oct . 22 . Manchester Conference Center. J..dm 1ss1on. S15. lnforma­ t,on : 260-4585. EDUCATION C. Terry Brown, c~CEO of Atlas Hotels, has beafriiii(ed'to the Uni­ versity of San Diego Board of Trustees. Frank Allesio Jr., president of Dan Mar Investment Co., has also been appointed to US D's board of trustees. ,,,,,-/' 7'

San Diego, Calif, Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) OCT 1 o 1986

.Jlll.en's P. c. B E.

'lJSD trustees member named ALCALA PARK - Frank D'.7~Jr. was recently named to the University of Sa~t'~ard of Trustees. Alessio, a La Jolla resident, has been president o f Dan Mar Investment Co. since 1983 . The 3 4-member USD board is chaired by Bishop Leo T . Maher. / ' · OCT 1 '11986

Jl(/oi'• ,. C. 8 f.sr. 186&

SCOTT'S ST ATS ( Thompson's leaps giflr'v_sp a jump Improvement of 7-foot senior gives Egan confidence in his Toreros

By Bill Center team in assists last year. Storr Wriltr "It helps our offense for the the ball Egan proudly talks about players to know that when Hank has both the "quantum leaps" being made goes in to Scott, he the to get it back by Scott Thompson , a 7-foot senior mind and the ability to an open man," Egan said. the Univer.iity of San Diego is bill­ Scoll Thompson's scoring. shooting. though, would like to see s stalls­ ing as its first-ever All-America Egan, reboo nding and blocked shot player score a bit ee years at USO: candidate. this unselfish lies In his thr got to assert him­ Bk. These are not leaps made from more. "Scott has Yr. G Avg. FG% Rob. little more," he said. "I like the basketball noor, for Thompson selr a '83 28 7.1 SO ◄ . 5 38 ­ the idea of having him putting the is not your slam-dunking, shot ◄ 27 11 .1 55 6.7 ◄ 9 You know he's g oing to ' 8 center of highlight films. ball up. 52 blocking shots, and you know ·es 2e t ◄ . ◄ 55 7.3 The leaps Egan talks about are far take only good he's accurate." Ttl. 75 10.1 5◄ S.2 13t more significant. at play. in strength Accuracy seldom is a problem "In all -around shot Scott today is far USO. Last year the Toreros and stamina, 's pat­ year ago, when point guard was where he was at the end 51.5 percent out of Egan ahead of 's tradi­ unsettled bet ween Leonard and season;· Egan said. "It is a terned oflense. The team of last shooting Kiki Jackson. pleasant surprise:• tionally good outside innu­ for USD this sea­ "Paul is a very steadying So it should be no surprise if should bode well much has established a ence at a position that gets USD fields its best team ever. West son: The WCAC . "It's line to go along of the pressure," Egan said Coast Athletic Conference coaches 19-foot three-point clock. hard for an outsider to understand have picked the Toreros to win with a 45-second your point It's too close," Egan said. "The his va lue. You want their second conference title In " extension of your e shouldn·t be right at the top of guard to be an four years. lin run the offense the key:· planning . . . lo The most notable reason is mistakes. Leonard Olie player Egan must replace is without making Thompson, although two other a player." shooting guard Peter Murphy, an is this type of starters - 6-8 power forward Nils likes the ability and the Paul AII-WCAC selection who shot over Egan Madden and 6-1 point guard makeup of the three re­ - return 54 percent from what is now three­ mental Leonard. both seniors turning starters "down the mid­ 19-9, USD's point territory. The leading candi­ from a team that went ­ dle." Leonard, Thompson and Mad­ in Division I. date for Murphy's spot is convert best record ever , a 6-1 den (9.3 points, 5.6 rebounds. 59 per­ 21. averaged 14 .4 ed point guard Danny Means Thompson, will audition cent shooting) are all soft-spoken. and 7.3 rebounds last year sophomore. But Egan points at shooting 'Tm excitable enough for all of shot 55 percent from the noor a number of players ­ and forward , at which us," Egan said. "They are not laid 75 percent from the foul line. guard and small and Mark Manor (6.5 back as much as it might appear. scored in double figures in 24 6-6 returnee He shooting) has the But this is not a rah-rah lot." games and finished among the points. 52 percent Madden ck. Backing Thompson and WCAC leaders in every shooting inside tra Krallman list also includes 6-6 junior­ will be 6-8 senior Steve and rebounding category . Bnl The rebounds). " He llege transfer Marty Munn (third (3.1 points, 2.5 statistics do not tell the entire co s more,'' Egan in the stale in scoring. 23.4, and shows his emotion story. he comes onto the rebounding. 13.0, at Hartnell Col­ said. "When "The mental part of basketball gives us a spark.'. lege). 6-5 freshman Craig Cottrell fl oor, he comes very easy for Scott Thomp­ is Thompson. a two­ (who led Arizona high school play­ But the key son," said veteran NBA scout Stu selection who has ers in scoring and rebounding), 6-7 time AII-WCAC Inman. starling since his freshman , his redshirt Brian Anderson and 6-5 been "In all our tough games year. numbers go up," Egan said. "He is Mike Haupt. people Haupt, San Diego County's high "I think even I misunderstood one of the most competitive Scott," said Egan, who had few j player of the year in 1984 I have ever met. Plus, he under­ school big men while Mira Mesa, played on the wing chances to teach stands the game as well as any col­ for Force Academy as a freshman for San Diego State coaching at Air lege player you 'll find :' 13 seasons. "They come around known to in 1984-85. He will become eligible for Thompson has been at a different pace. Scott now is the point in one of USD's zone around Dec. 20. play where it was a reaching a new level of play." oflenses. He was fourth on the USO is ahead of ~------( San Diego, CA (San _Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

OCT 181986

..All~,.·. P. C. B E.

✓- / It's must-win time for Trojans Host thifaten ASU in key Pac-10 game

By Bill Center, Staff Writer Trojans. LOS .ANGELES - As bad as it was, USC's loss to "To win this week, we're going to have to play much Washington State last Saturday wasn't as bad as, say, a better," Tollner said. "Last Saturday (the 34-14 loss at loss to Arizona State. Washington State) was our poorest game by far. We "Although every loss affects you," Trojans coach Ted didn't have near the enthusiasm or the intensity needed Tollner said this week, "we are in as good shape as to win this league." Washington State outgained USC by anybody. We control our destiny." a 4-1 ratio on the ground in beating the Trojans for the For the moment, at least. first time in 29 years. Seven teams - Arizona State, Washington, USC, Trojans quarterback Rodney Peete has completed a Washington State, Arizona, Stanford and UCLA _ still career-high 16 passes each of the past two weeks, and are in the running for the Pac-lO's Rose Bowl berth. the Trojans' 340 yards through the air last Saturday was All but the Sun Devils, who have been tied by Washing- their most since 1979. But 15th-ranked USC (4-1, 2-1 ) has ton State, have one loss. Only three times in the history committed 10 turnovers in the last six quarters (and of the Pac-10 has a team with two conference losses scored only two touchdowns) and 18 this 3eason (13 furn­ played in Pasadena on ~ew Year's Day, so it could be a bles and five interceptions). must-win situation for everyone. Tenth-ranked Arizona State (4-0-1} is led by former Especially for Arizona State and USC, who meet at Grossmont High quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst (54- 1:30 this afternoon at the Coliseum. for-97, 798 yards) and tailbacks Darryl Harris (400 yards, "The Washington State loss has taken away our mar- 4.2 average) and converted wide receiver Paul Day (219 g_in of error," Tollner said, "but we're in the same posi- yards, 4.6 average) out of Kearny High. The Trojans have t10n as a lot of people. It's playoff football, and it will be lost all-conference outside linebacker Sam Anno for the this way until the end of November." rest of the season with a torn knee ligament. The Arizona State-USC game is by far the most im- • • • portant to the Pac-10 race this week. Oregon State visits The University of San Diego (3-2 after last Saturday's Arizona, UCLA is at California and Stanford is at Oregon 13-9 loss to Claremont=Mudd) is at Azusa Pacific at 1:30 in the three other conference games. _ this afternoon. The 2-0-2 hosts are ranked 14th in the Not only is Arizona State (2-0-1) the only unbeaten nation in NAIA Division II and are led by Christian "Cho team in the Pac-10, the Sun Devils are the only confer- Cho" Okoye, one of the nation's top small-college ruP _ ence member holding a winning record (4-2.) against the _ ning backs. · H~nJ1boldt State nips St. Mary's in a nonconference game at Santa · ·Rosenkranz passes Barbara. AREA Dabrow, who leads the Southern for 312 yards in loss , Intercollegiate Athletic · complex as the California .. million stadium Conference, has rushed for 639 (3-0-2), ranked 13th in Di· · AREA From staff, news-service reports Cougars yards in five games. vision II by the NAIA, beat the To­ SUMMARIES UC Davis 51, San Francisco reros (3-3) in a nonconference Peter­ quarterback Tim State 3: Quarterback Chris UNIV. OF SAN OIEGO 19 "" '. · Freshman game before 3,200 at Azusa. AZUSA PACIFIC 49, a former Servite High 20 of 23 passes as the -19 ·- Rosenkranz, Whittier 18: son completed Olego ...... 6 6 0 Pomona-Pitzer 20, San -49 connected with wide re­ Aggies (5-0) rolled over the 9ators Azuu Pacffic ...... 7 21 14 standout, John Parker ran for two touch­ ! ; ; ceiver Warren Parker on a school­ (0-6) in a Northern California Ath­ downs and quarterback Robert SD - Ennquez 59 run (kick blocked) ' play -in the game at San kick) record 94-yard pass passes letic Conference AP - Eames 3 run (Ar1I Bristow completed 17 of 33 I run (Arlt kick) , 1 second ·quarter, but St. Mary's lost Francisco. AP - Okoye 218 yards for the Sagehens (2-3, AP - Okoye 47 run (Ari! kick) Saturday for O,xon (pass la1led) . ,, to Humboldt State, 14-10, the Clara 33, Cal Lutheran SD - McCoy 6 pass lrom in a SCI AC victory over Santa 4 pass lrom Eames (Ari! kick) · at Moraga. 1-1) the Kings­ AP - T11chenal (3-3, 1-1) at Whittier. Brian 9: The Broncos defeated AP - Okoye 6 run (ArI1 kick) 14 of 27 Poets (Arlt kick) ,._., '- Rosenkranz completed goals of 39 and 32 men in a Western Conference AP - A Johnson 3 run re• Neal kicked field AP - Reeves I run IArl1 kick) 312 yards. Parker had five trom O,xon (Furseu, k1ckl · ;· for Pomona .. Whittier was game at Thousand Oaks. SD - Mansukhani 8 pass for 150 yards. yards for , ceptions 100 yards 21, Cal Poly POMONA-PITZER 20, WHITTIER 18 Peterson led by Gaylan Sweet's CS Nor1hrldge ·: Quarterback Matt 14 3 -20 , SLO 20: Quarterback Chris Pomona-Pttzer ...... 0 3 rushing 0 12 -18 for 357 yards and two scoring Whittier ...... 0 6 ) ,:- ~ threw 16, Parker connected with Bryan 1 to lead the Lumberjacks (2· Claremont-Mudd-Scripps •• passes touchdown pass (kick la1led) Barbara 13: Former Kellen on a 6-yard Wh - Juarez 8 run A) to the nonconference victory UC Santa FG Neal 39 .: Chris with 20 seconds remaining and the PP - . - over the Gaels (3·3). Foothill High standout PP - Parker 2 run (Neal kick) conversion kick gave the - Parker 14 run (Neal kick) 49, ~nlveralty Dabrow rushed for 118 yards, 6 of following PP ; , Azusa Pacific over the Mus­ PP - FG Neal 32 run late in Matadors the victory 18 pass lrom Juarez fk,ck la1led) ,.. of San Diego 19: Christian Okoye them on a touchdown at Wh - Kaas1nen lead the tangs in a nonconference game Wh - Swee! 5 run (pass la11ed) ·· · gained 162 yards and scored four the fourth quarter, to Gauchos (2-4) Northridge. ' :touchdqwns in the school's new $1.3 Stags (4-1) over the

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4A c SANDIEGODAILYTRANSCRIPT MONDAY,OCTOBER20,1986 /ffowJo Find Silver Lining In Firing Cloud is a modeling • • • "You'r::-~red." The words are ForecRst Model on- ,Just a few megahertz down the twn of the most dreaded for an em- program that demonstrates of truats for nt- dial, Jack Merker is the new vice plnyee, hut Miriam Rothman, screen the benefits planners, CPAs, president of operations at KSDO . assistant professor of management l.orneys, financial bank and insur- Merker, a six-year veteran of the a~ they take their toll on trust companies, station, was promoted from pro- the boss as well. Rothman will ex- ance agents. • gram director. plain the hows, whens and wheres • • Computer Aided • • • of firing and tell managers how to A new software packa ge for Joseph Tagliarino is new car " find the silver lining in that Design (CADl and contrec- sales ma nager at Pacific Beach dreaded, dark cloud." She'll be engineers, architects Toyot.a . • • • ffl?r:. Business Matters Acupunturist Francia Sottile has joined the Acupuncture Med­ ~ by Dean Nelson ical Clinic. Her nddition means extended clinic hours. Enter Computer, • • • speaking Oct. 31 as part of US D's tors comes from DeRktop Mutual Lire In­ Business Update fall breakfast a local maker of Sweet-P Northwestern p-Set Lettering honored local agent Da­ seminars. The $15 breakfast starts Plotters and Ty surance new CAD wide-bed W, Dilworth as one of its top at 7:30 a.m. Contact the USO Of­ software. The vid d with a variety for September. Dilworth fice of Continuing Education for plotter cen be use sellers It adjusts to various ranked second among 6,400 na­ more information. of computers. • • • paper sizes, works with H-P'a tional agents. He works with the e and can be used Jnmes E. Whistler general agen­ JSSCO's Alan Peller will gTaphics languag of PC-based soft­ . discuss ways of using computer with a number cy es. • graphics to convey, brighten up ware design packag • • . . . Ann M. Morrison has come to and illustrate technical informa­ Industrtea just had too Diego from Greensboro, N.C., tion tomorrow at an evening meet­ Alopex Sen things going: fi shing rods, head the Center for Creative ing of the Society for Technical many to alarms, pool cleaners and spa local operations. Communication. Faller's 8 p .m. Leadership's Executive vice presi­ educational agency talk will follow two hours of equipment. The nonprofit Lyndol L. Cook says Alopex ors management training cocktails and dinner. dent spons plans to focus on the pool and spa programs and conducts organiza­ . The San Marcos firm . The San Diego Computer industries tional research its subsidiaries All American Society holds its 7th Annual sold • • • and Aegis Technologies and View Medical Center Computer Fair, Nov. 1-2, at the Tackle Harbor its Polaris Vac-Sweep hes hired Kathleen Scottish Rite Center in Mission consolidated & Hospital product lines. Greg Martin as community rela­ Valley. The fair plans 30 lectures and Anzen Marie former president of Anzen coordinator for its Reach pro­ on a variety of topics ranging from Ritter, tions is now vice president of Reech is a drug end alcohol spreadsheet techniques to robotics, Products, gram. develoment. Dick Ed­ program. publishing software, graphics corporate rehabilitation who wee technical services boards, computer animation, cor­ mJston, • • • for Polaris Vee-Sweep, The San Diego Hall of Science, porate videos, networking, word manager heads up Alopex product develop­ which runs the Reuben H, Fleet processing and computer lan­ activities. Other promotions Theater and Science guages. The fair, which costs_ $5, ment Space include Gary Vancil, western re­ in , has added will alRO have numerous e.-hibits Center sales menager; Mere new trustcl!fl to its board. ancl hands-on user tables. The fair gional nine eastern field sales to three-member terms are will run 9 a .m.-5 p.m. both days. EHenburg, Elected • • • manager; Mark Myers, technical Timothy M. Considine, James Laurie Batter, Pesqueira, San­ The Central City A88oclation sales coordinator; Jessop, Ralph stration manager; and Vecchione, Norm and San Diego Historical Socie­ sales admini dra Lowe, assistant to the , Martin Engler, Vicki ty's Horton League hope to put Frances Eisenberg of sales. , Edmund F. Whlte and some life into downtown Friday vice president Carlson • Zimmerman. Incumbents evening with a "City Alive Arter • • Jock T. Fletcher and Peter Five" mixer in honor of Alonzo Ferdinand . Rodi were reelected. Board of­ Horton's 173rd birthday. The C cers for 1987 are: Chris Fon­ group will install a plaque honor­ fi tana, president; Rodi, vice presi­ ing Horton at Horton Plaza Park at nt; Roland W. Carroll, treasur­ 5 p.m. The mixer will be held at the de Pflugh, secretary. / Executive Hotel and Spa, 1055 er, and Mitch First Ave, 5-7:30p.m. • • • The local chapter of Executive Women International holds is annual Monti, Carlo Night Fri­ v ...... n day, with dicP rolling 6-11 p.m. The n u1ego

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San Diego,_CA · soccer keeps (San Diego Co.) Rise in girls San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217 089) tournament expanding -: (Cir. S. 341:840) ,.::u:; .s;-c:::- The--Se~nth Annual Raiders-Coca .USQ and UCSD have teams with Cola Girls Soccer Tournament, held UCSD in the Divsion III level but · Nov. 29 through Dec. 6 at three South playing Division I teams. San Diego _OC-!- t 919-86 Bay area sites, will have 40 teams in State has a club team. three di visions this year, up from 36 The Raiders-Coca Cola tourna­ Jlll ' teams (and four "B" teams) last year. ment is drawing even more interest l!lf • - P. C. B F..<1. 1888 That's up from 36 teams in 1984. than the 40 teams now entered but Up from 28 teams in 1983. Up from Pietila says he is trying to prevent TORERos SOCcE the tournament from spreading ed a 3-1 South~~-~SD post­ across the county as do tournaments ry over visitint't'a~erence victo- · 1 'Girls soccer has in other sports. Already, this 40-team Jes. Chris Duke, Bo te Los Ange­ tourney is the largest in girls soccer Art Faro scored for USKDem(leriey and skyrocketed the in California. 3-2). / "We could take four more teams last few years' and pick up another site," Pietila - Ron Pietila said, "but we really don't want to go the rout of basketball, volleyball or baseball and play at a bunch of dif­ 24. Up from 12. Up from fou_r its first ferent sites. It takes something away from the game. In our tourney, you San Diego, CA year. Co.) where girls soccer have a host team and it allows teams {San Diego And that's just San Diego Union is headed.,Up. to feel a relationship to the tourna­ , Coronado ment and the host team." {Cir. D. 217,089) When Marian, Crawford {Cir. S. 341,840) · and host Southwest played in this Already, the tournament is played tournament's first annual, girls at three sites - Southwest, Sweetwa­ soccer was not yet a San Diego CIF ter and Montgomery. sport. "We could just go crazy if we OCT 1 91986 Interest has carried the sport a wanted to," Pietila said. long way in six years. In the Metro Torrey Pines (unlimited), Mission meeting in September, Bay (limited) and Bishop's (classi­ Conference P. C, B fat, 1888 South Bay area schools determined fied) return as division champions Jl/11!,r~ that the nu mber of girls now inter­ while 3-A champion Bonita Vista and ested in playing is high enough to 2-A champion San Pasqual also are ~ing began recently --;;-n the create JV teams. entered. $10:6 million apa~~plex fo1 The North County was the first to The other entrants are: Hoover, res1de?t students at u{~-Oiif~;~rsity of field JV girls soccer teams while the Sante Fe Christian, Sweetwater, Cai,­ San Diego. The 156-unit, six-buildin~ East County and City schools have tle Park, Crawford, El Cajon, E I com~xt to the USD Sport~ yet to do so. Camino, Kearny, Montgomery, Ou_ Center. The C.A. Larsen Construction "Girls soccer has skyrocketed the Lady of Peace and San Diego in the the general contractor. Stu­ La Co. is last few years," Bonita Vista coach classified division; Escondido, should be able to move in next Southwest, dents Ron Pietila said. Pietila, who started Jolla, Mount Miguel, Septen1ber. ~ , the soccer program at Southwest Clairemont, Mar Vista, San Pasqual, High in 1982 and left after last season University, Coronado, Monte Vista, to become the coach at Bonita Vista, Orange Glen, University City, Chris­ is the tournament director of the tian, Madison, Mission Bay and Sar Raiders-Coca Cola tourney. Marcos in the limited division; anc "There are over 300 colleges and Chula Vista, Mira Mesa, Mt. Carme' universities that field womens soccer Helix, Point Loma, San Dieguit1 teams now," Pietila said, "and now Hilltop, Poway, Valhalla and Vista i girls in our area have even more in­ the unlimited division. centive because USIU is offering Playoffs will be Saturday, Dec. 6 scholarships now." at Southwest High. ( - Solana Beach, CA (San Diego co.) the Citizen • (Cir. W. 20,000) _

Wright is ne·w vice president Lilk%fi - Kathleen Wright, a Leucadia resident, has been promoted to vice president of West Coast Pro­ jection, Inc., one of the largest audio­ visual/video production companies in the San Diego area. .. ~ Wright, previously· r director of marketing for West Coast Projections, has added to the firm's client list such major accounts as IVAC Corporation, Hybritech, Inc., TraveLodge Interna­ tional, Coca-Cola·, USA , The· Koll Com­ ,>any and Ernest W. Hahn, Inc. iHer new responsibilities will include overall strategic planning for the com­ pany while continuing with new business development. A native San Diegan, Wright gradu­ ated from Point Loma High School, at­ tended the Univ,grsity of San Die~o and the· Fashion Institute of Design & Mer­ chandising, where she rec·eived her degree in commercial art. She is a member of the Advertising Club of San Diego, the Junior Chainber of Commerce and the Association for / Multi-Image. Kathleen Wright / I

: . The San Diego M111eum of Art's booted black­ Palsy Women's Committee :. Ue dinner Oct II to inauaurate wu held lut week lta Endowment at the Rancho Santa Fe estate of Mr. and : Campaign was among San Diego area social Mrs. ,;events Allen Blackmore. • . of the paal Announcement wa.s made of a Klee Wyk million gill to Auzlllaty of the Museum of Man : ,1 the fund from the John M. and opened ils Haunted Museum ~~ .S.lly 8. Thornton Foundation. lul weekend with '• a costume dinner party commemorating : - ·ven;i of San Diego Au~iliary bad Its an­ 25 :: years of Klee Wyk theme parties. aual fashion show week at the Town and The ; -Country Convention American Cancer Society staged Ill Ascol Center. JWRoblmon's pro­ '86 car show Sunday in • Vided the clothes. Rochelle Capozzi Embarcadero Marina was chalr- Park. A patron champagne lunch preceded 1maa . I the show. ,, •: The Ellen Browning Scripps Society present­ Friends ill annual of UCSD Music bad a Russian recep­ ; ecl award to Norman Edward Shum­ tion Sunday : way during a lecture _before the , Mandeville Center /reception last week. Spe­ Bosendorfer Concert •.clal guest was Ellen Revelle. featuring planilt Cecil Lytle. . : , Tbe annual Dia del Sol apomored by the ZBeacb and Coun~ Guild _ot United Cerebral 11-1-pboll» by Rael a.Ji-Jub G«doo, Bob&dd/lw. o.. ldSkw-dl udO,. VoJCko ~ I I ~ ~NweW_j1~aD,'s:~i~~~Ht'tie 1 :: '. ·~ ~y·~.1~{},~J , . 'one word: ma~~jtrrit ~e ~a~ , , • Tribune Staff Writer,, • ~- ·: ~ the school as a product - an , IKE A HIBERNATING undiscovered jewel, .he would , . ; ~ bear suddenly jolted · say - that just needed to be - ::rL awake, "California sold to the right people. , · ,Western Law School is com- 1 ,I;>essent is selling. This fall-he ·. ing alive after years of 'deep has embarked on a cross-coun- 1 1 · sleep. · ·· ·'- • • ·· • try tour to visit dozens of ··· A, massive recruiting blitz ,is schools. He takes, with him a · · •' on and the endowment fund has slick, 14-minute -video - a bold ' been beefed up to nearly 10 , ·marketing , tool virtually,'" times last year's amount. But ,, unheard of in the staid world of more than that, a new energy law .schools . Faculty members has invaded the elegant ltali- also are traveling on recruiting t anate halls of this 'small and lit-. ' tours .and · Dessent bas, con-' ·' •• tie-known downtown . private · vi'nced alumni to show the video -r 1 · •:law school. , · ,, . ,) · , to 'schools in their areas. , · · ;: 1 ~ , • That energy comes from an In his first three months in I •/ unlikely source: a blunt, force- , the job, he was the drive behind, I· ·, ful businessman with little pa- a c;ampaign that raised $60,000 · i " tience ·for , the . slow-moving, from .alumni -for an,endowment" r sometqnes pedantic world of fund; last.year's 1alumn H:ontri, ,:· ·· · academia and no patience for · butions totaled 1 $71000. , Jie.• ap- f, •.' , titles...... , pointed .new .. l:ioard· tmemtiers , ; ; '. He is the school's new dean: •. with fund-raising experience. · 1 1 ', i 1.. " ' I cion't want people to call • ' He has pushed for courses on .. '} me- dean. I Just want to ge~ the . contempc;>rary. law issues and . ; · •job · done," said ,. Michael Des- seminars on .international law, : rsent, who took over in May .• , · biotechnology . and, , condomini- ,1, . • When he • was hired, he ' um law1 The school is sponsor- . . Tribune photo by Joel Zwink ~- -v~ sumined up ·the school's need in Plea'se ~ee·DESS. , C-5 _t· Michael Dessent, California Western Law School dean ► ir-4• 'I \ T , ." r'' • fi C\ ri -t- 1\) rJ -- (

\ ,

,-f-ro_m_ber__ hip-. - --rise..;..._of-fi-ce ~:--·ce_Cl_u_b_chain._' -("_H_I_ha_v,_e_a_men-__,------~~-----sc~boo=I ~-,-. -- ._..,;;,..;...~,,,, _,----- ,_----~-the-last-"."'fou_r_y_ea_n,_a_ccordin&~-::. :--to-ABA-~ 11re!-r to talk building. '!be back'ilrop is pure Sao tor, it is Sol Price,'.' Dessenl said.) "It's heresy OCIWl and blue mo~ ~ -- figum. Competition for top students he Diego - sparkllD& ing I forum OD sports law Ibis Satur, "We knew among the J Fueled by a love of the law, .: in the : ") . . ii intense, especially this way, but in a skies. day and one OD the role ol law law schools. ught c1.u1es at. USD's law school will or "bow Imelda needed to be done· mialler 'buy' a__ "I can't help but think tliat arts OD Nov. D - way, but in !or JO years. He ooached bis daugb- sense you la Ohio la January," Dessent didn't liow .. "It's heresy to talk lhil while his wife play (Marcol) eot stuck with all those but we a sense you 'buy' a student," he said. lier's softball team; said, grinning. l art muterpieces," as be puts out of,town he wrote I children's student,,, Deisent pboay said . At the same time - ~ lhil ii I 1fU Surprisingly, the recent upheaval il ' bow,,, book "Baseball Becky," about bis said.· . amor.& William touchy issue - he wants to increase a bu created little dissemiOD His influence bas even touched the professor average passing rate oa -Olaching. He also bas published . la fact, it is difficult to to see the the school's law. the faculty scbool store. He wants the California bar exam. la lhil state volume set on corporate find a professor who isn't enamored school's new logo splashed on every- Lynch._ And he is a constant promoter of students watch that number, because hired new housing and with the school's new directiOD and thing from T-shirts to tote bags to by Cal Western. He describes the He bu all the California exam is considered directors to belp students leader. la a rare act of solidarity, suspenden. - - most diffi- li:bool's professors as young and en- placement to I ·•t "- · - many to be the nation's to live when lhey arrive 25 faculty members pitcbecl in The nen - and most difficult - ergetic, with a -priority of teachin& find a place 1 is longer i!I the cult Out-0f-state students, who make when they leave. '6,500 contribution to Ille endow step is to attract students. For yean, educational park 00 students. • ~ • • • · and a place to work t;\ ~ , up ball of Cal Western's enrollment, si&- fund. · , local Jaw students have chosen cards. : pushes what be sees as The scbool offers a "spouses and most rather stay ~od to do better than average on the '!be dean _to help "He's jlllt what we needed - I only if they weren't ac- Dessent said be would strengths: a low faculty-stu- nificant others" program Cal Westeni owns the bar exams in their home states. alber law shot of adrenalin," said Robert BohJI USD's law.,.K.,bool · downtown - the school a respected international them understand the stress of cepled at Cedar Ave. Dment bas thrown himself into dent ratio, "Wfre consulered number two in . large, historic building on school. • ' ~t ~":[ ~I j;; ~h=E, asu::~e::ort. :.r~b:~~:~~e-~" ::1 ~~ucl:°ts"~t~:r~ Of course, there is San Diego itself. . that it's not Just a boneyinooa. ~~~D~~~:~ccurate He :a:fu:'se of bis life. Before two years instead of the traditional it's a real mar con- menl from the present 450 to 600. brings to the rest out- The promotional video's opening erybody's hoping Another concern is the name dean, be helped Sol Price three and to receive credit for · / University That's not easy when the pool of ap- becoming sceoe shows ~ alumna extolliog the rlage." ., fusion with Western State his enorm~ly successful side work in law firms. / 25 percen_ t in, expand , CoUece · • • 1w, localed a few miles plicants has dropped • north :. Dessent's school is •--- -- ~ ■------•--• 1 - • • - - · • - --- -=-tr=" -- schoolsamong •in . theJlree-fburlhs U.S. accredited of all by lawthe • • • • • - - American Bar Association; Western Law School is not (although II recent- ly applied). ~ Establ.isbed in 1924 as part ol Cali fornia Western University (n·ow USW), the school kept a ,low profile for yean. But· changes in the last· decade ,ometimes brought instabili­ ty as wen IS growth. After becoming independeal in 1971, Cal Western moved clowntown from Point Loma and expanded - al the expense of quality, some feel • Faculty was hired and new stu­ dents brought in, but many faculty members felt a strong sense of lead- enblp still WIS lacking. • "We knew more needed to be done but we didn't know how," said profes­ sor William Lynch. Lynch came to the school in 1978 after 22 years in the Navy as a judge advoca te. Since then, several plans have fall­ en through: a.proposed merger with UCSD failed last year after the Uni­ versity of California decided the local campus did not need a law school A move to a planned La Costa (Cir. 0. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

OCT 21 1986

Jlllffl ', P. C. B fat 7--- . t 888 Toreros to look in the mirror After 49-19 loss, USD to host struggling Gauchos By Ric Bucher rre{ the same. They may Starr Writer ':),..- 7 be a little quic~­ yards and 12 touchdowns, six to Man­ er than we are. It makes The University it a little sukhani, who has snared 32 passes for of [an Diego foot­ easier to prepare in that we can ball team wilf che~{sconfidence run 558 yards this season. our regular offense against our regu­ Marks against a mirror image Saturday is not too far behind: 23 af­ lar defense. The defense that we see . catches, 404 ternoon at 1:30 in Torero Stadium. yards and four touch­ this week is one we've se1:n off and downs. Wright The Toreros, physically sound but is 78 of 182 for 1,103 on since the first day of practice in yards and 10 touchdowns, shellshocked after a 49-19 battering August. including " two last week in a 16-13 by Azusa Pacific last weekend, host The loss to Clare­ UCSB offense should also be mont-Mudd and its bruising the UC-Santa Barbara Gauchos, a 2-4 familiar, because running team it relies on a pass­ back, Chris Dabrow. The Toreros that resembles USD Oil both ing combo - quarterback sides Paul similarly were unable to stop Da­ of the ball. Wright and wide "We're receiver Steve brow the previous week in a 13-9 de• very similar," said Toreros Marks - just as coach the Toreros depend feat. Brian Fogarty. "They're also on Pat Dixon throwing very to Jeff Man­ The Gauchos don't have a running young. Sizewise, they're about sukhani. Dixon is 85 of 196 for 1,151 back the caliber of Dabrow - or Azusa Pacific's Christian Okoye, who trampled the Toreros for 163 yards and three touchdowns on 24 carries. "I've had a lot of peoµle asking me if I think Okoye can play in the pros," Fogarty said. "If you ask our defense, they're all reildy to nominate him lO the Pro Bowl, because he pretty much destroyed us. He's a Divisioo I running back playing on the Division III level." The Gauchos, oil the other hand, are a club team in their first year on the Division III level. FooLball was reintroduced as a club sport at UCSB two years ago after a 10-year hiatus. The Toreros handled them rather easily last year, 21-7, and Fogarty hopes another decisive win can offset . the Azusa loss. ./ David Nelsqn / Society· ·Mar :ch of Ditnes· Benefit ·.•b~~~ M,.9re Than .Fare • / I ; chef is to Munger In 1986, to be a famous SAN DIEGO-George. at least in as "a fashion • be a pop celebrity, deJ!c,ribed the moment in the world of for the kind certain circles. and , ,how for foodies." And six are acknowl- eat-the crowd ·.' fine dining, these of foJu who live to . Among them more than a few edged superstars of 150 numbered Jeremiah Tower of San Fran- soula-it was indeed a tasty were such cisco's Stars restaurant, and New , scene. , Alain Sail- wife. Piret, Yorkers 1'iffi-e Franey Munger, who with his Larry Forgione restaurant hac ( of Le Cirque), founded the Piret's Place), Seppi reference to (of An American chain in 1978, spokein Four Sedans and of six intema- Renggli of the the grand procession Ku.min, the ·noted pastry acclaimed chefs then pa- Albert tionally wizard who once presided over the rading through the lobby of the ■ White House kitchens. Imperial Bank Tower. ••• Wolfgang Puck, the chef-propri- of the largest of site of Los Angeles' ultra-trendy five ~- 8~'!o etor - th~ county's Spago, was to have been the sev ~es. The men, in COUNTY a ret s enth member of the group, but styli.sh suits and rose ---- day the kitchen mishap the previous boutonnieres rather than . in kitch- prevented his attendance checked. uniforms worn for the Sunday with trumpet All were on hand ens, were introduced reception that preceded and greeted with the sort patrons' fanfares Monday's "Fete X Five," a novel Forgione and Nancy He applause usually lavished on . Jacque Powell, left, Larry of fund -raiser for the March of Dimes to aid the stars and other pop celebri- " fashion show for foodies" movie Pleue aee SOCIETY, Pare 241 from a ties. a I · 111orr lhan l:IO,(X)() for the " h• ' SOCI'ETY: Shi(' fund, an amount that h t Fund-l{aiser 'ill'US the Was More Than Fare equivalent or the 11 u , 1 ""'' w.1ulJ M earn«I by an .s1 1, Coatl- ■ a4 fro111 Poro I vln Ladin, Conoile and John •mll,w,ntnt of $250,000. Oe1ha, . onP. ahould only r hoos~ M tal fur lhe 1lay .) The s~la, thtfint or ite .klnd ever to .Marianne McDonald with Uutla Aleulo aerved u r ,, Adrian theme for a party If one Is willing lo J:W. ltolWlollllU,.Which preaent• be held here, alloweQok author and journali•t, lo Saturday' ■ "Stepping Out," the Japanese lloral arrang•m•nts rooe cluded rope Lrlcka, particlpaLed as honorary chairman, group aquare danclna '• 16th annual dinner and · from planter• rimmed with carved and clogging. a )Ob that Included recruiting the auction. • Buddh11 and jade-colored CICtUI ll waa lo have Included th• working chef■ . Given in the Marriott ballroom • , bloom,. and the program men ~ participation of a large pig u well, ',l'he event allO provided plenty lor 250 gue1U, the auction Included lloned lhal the hotel had auigned hut the porker developed •Ill• of job1 for local foodie ■ , who all of lhe uaual lillle frivolllie•- · chef Hing Jung lo plan the menu of fright al th• lul moment and hid flocked lo the committee poaLS 11 extravagant tripa, dinne r parllea, • •II drop soup, aesame-flavored lo be excuaed from eagerly u a group of French artworka-usually offered performln1, at 1uch chicken ■alad and Chineae 1001•• Michael Kearney, acllng trenchermen alUlcking the tablt be nefiu. But one moat unuaual llem vice berry mousae. ( A llttlt joke wu pre•idenl of unlv•rally artalra nauUcaJ miles. Auc\ioneera cull, Powell , ..ponded, "'l'hat'a Mac Hudaon and Joe Ba~•r I the ,uy-1 had lo figure out how lo gel radio furlnymen) had little trouble lo all fiv• r.,tauranu on the ■amt disposing of this offering. tvening." She added that a practi­ Jane flni•hkin and Pam Linton cal 111>lullon to this p,oblem never chaired the evening, with auill· did preaenl Itself. ance from a committee that includ ­ Quite a few of the guests ed also Jan I Walker, Jean Donahoe, bemoaned the lac, that they would Eileen Connelly, Marcia o,uerink, be abl• lo ■ample only on• chef• Kathy Schrooder, Dana Saxten, Sia c~ation1, a altualion that waa miti­ 8urrow1, Kathie Hool, Lfllle gated by th• •pecial hors d'oeuvre Blackburn, CarorStallinga, Nancy that each whipped up as his contri­ Dean and Kathy Petnson. bution Lo the Sunday reception. Among the gue11 t:1 were Lee and Among the fanciful titlh1l!I were Marion Dodson, Stove and Wendy Forgione·• deviled crab and oyster Tail, Kin\ Hallee w1lh Joseph Mur­ (nl 1ers, and 'rower's Hlmon and phy, ChUt:k ;mJ :::ihari Collon, Stev­ tuna lartare canaprs, wh1f'h ,>eople en .ln

I!!,~endent scholars conf ere nee s~itedule on West for in- California; a specialist The first conference economics, Ray Chasse scholars ever held in African dependent' of Los Angeles; and Margaret California will begin at Southern Delacy of Portland, a communi- a.m. on Saturday, in the 8:45 ty activist who has published Conference Center at pro- Manchester books and articles on penal of San Diego. The and the the University blems in the 18th century cif active independent { :., gathering by present day. · · will be ·welcomed i la · scholars Other panelist~ will be G~ Pusateri of USD's . .the ·. , Dean Joseph Wright, who is active in both of Arts and Sciences. · ( or .. .: College Berkeley-based Institute 9 a.m. a panel concerned New · 1 At Historical Studies :and the increasing public recogni- of Iii- :· : with ..-_ Y,ork-based Association and access to grants will Art; Joy :.} ; tion · dependent Historians of the day-long event. A Mary-: ' ! open Frieman, co-founder with on producing a na- ; workshop Stroll of San. Diego Independent for researchers the La :_; . tional newsletter -Scholars and prcsideric of customarily are unaffiliated Society; -~ '. who at . Jolla- Chamber Music a university will follow the ~Y · .w ith and Glenna Matthc~ of 10:30. of _a Univ,ersity, of will feature Arca, winner A noon luncheon School of Journalism \ speaker a prominent Missouri '• as keynote award for excellence in women's from Cal Tech, medieval scholar interest journalism. · .. and MacArthur Fellow con- historian Anyone may attend the F. Benton. The future of in- is ad- John f crence, but preregistration . scholarship will be fee-in- dependent vised. The $5 registration at 2:30 p.m. by a panel the discussed eludes all three . panels and different viewpoints cosi ·or representing cocktail buffet, and the optimum conditions for infor- · on the the luncheon is $7. Further who follow a scholarly Mary those mation is available from career outside the·· traditional or Gwen Alex- . Cates, 298-9054 structure of the university. 6 p.m. and with ander, 454-1911 (after The conference will close buffet for ·an on weekends). a cocktail The sponsor of the confcrence, at University House, .. registrants San Diego Independent Scholars, Diego. ago to UC Sari was f oundcd four years variety of interests is A wide independent scholan a con- by the participants. give repr~sentcd genial forum for their research. include an author of three open They All meetings are free and published novels, Sharan / Park, to the public. Newman of Newbury ,> WI San Diego, CA Diego Co.) (San Ranch Mira Mesa Scripps Star News ' (Cir. 2xW.)

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JOHN MCSWEENY TERRY CHURCHILL local residents Way appoints of United general manager Mcs­ poration and he Churchlll and John Division, positions Terry Ranch, its Convair both of Scripps since 1983. He previous­ weeny. division has held been appointed served as vice· president 1 have United ly had c.>_f in the 1986 deputy general manager 1 leaders Agencies and been with Way/Combined Health division. He has the for 26 years, ; Drive. General Dynamjcs vice president, posts in its Churchill, area holding executive · serves as a chair­ before moving Pacific Bell, of Pomona division in the Services division Diego. · man ' to San , Mcs­ the campaign. A native Californian of Fresno under-graduate An honors graduate weeny earned his and a veteran of University, Los. State University degree at Loyola Guard, he began a master's degree the U.S. Coast in Angeles, and with Pacific Bell engineering from . his career in electrical . He is 1967; University of Colorado of the the Institute of He is a member member of the board of a Electronics Metropolitan YMCA Electrical and Diego State licensed profes­ directors, San Engineers and a Council, engineer in the University President's sional electrical Diego- Presi­ Ut¥ve~ty of San state of California. and the Greater San this year's cam­ dent'siub · The goal for of Commerce. set at $25 million, Diego Chamber his paign has been McSweeny is serving help fund 96 health John of the which will pro- year as a member human care agencies third -team, this and 340 pro­ campaign leadership approximately of the Major , ·viding and year. as chairman grams to area individuals He is vice presi­ Firms division. families. · .-:.: ~cs ~or- dent of General ,-··· ..,. .•. . ,,u,, (Cir. Sat. 264,986) (Cir. S. 302,808)

Dominguez Hills' Strachan ties f s~ring mark in soccer victory I Tbe Register Glenn Strachan tied the school HIGHLIGJITS single-season record with his 12th goal of the ·season Wednesday to second shutout of the season as lead Cal State Dominguez Hills to a Chapman downed Cal Poly Pomona, 2-0 soccer victory over Cal Poly 2-0. . San Luis Obispo in a California Col­ Scott McCrimmon and Rick Sny­ legiate Athletic Association match. der scored for Chapman (8-7-1, 2- Strachan, a senior from Edison 3). Bello had eight saves in goal. High, broke the record held by Goalie Tony Rieger had 11 saves Dave Trifonovitch in 1984.-· for Pomona (5-8-3, 1-3-1) . Dominguez Hills (9-5-1 ,- 4-1), Gene Rathswohl scored three ranked 18th in NCAA Division II, goals as Unmrsit:y gf Sa A Diego ( 14- moved into second place behind de­ 2) blanked Biola, 3-0, in nonconfer­ fending champion Cal State North­ ence play. Biola is 5-5-1. ridge. San Luis Obispo, ranked l'n wat'er polo: 17th in Division II, falls to 9-6 and 3- Greg Lumb scored the go-ahead 2 in the California Collegiate Ath- goal with SO seconds remaining in letic Association. , the third period as Cal State Los In other men's soccer: Angeles recorded a 10-7 nonconfer­ G9alie Keri Bello turned in his ~nce victory at Cal State Fullerton . • • ( _,. • p .... ;; ; .. RESOLTS,SCIIEDOLES

COLLEGE Al Ml SAC, 3.0 MIi.. 1 1. Ebiner (MSAC) 19:42: 2. Nugent (MSAC)° 20:00: 3. ' !.awrence (MSAC) 20:12: 4. Young (Fut) 20:44: 5. Mayber,y Water Polo (Fut) 21:08. · - CERRITOS 21, LONG BEACH 34 Nonconference - . Al La Mirada County Pa~ 3.0 MIies . 1. MacMarlane (Cer) 20:29: 2. Covarrudlas (Cer) 21 :17: 3. CS LOS ANGELES 10, CS FULLERTON 7 Spiehs (LS) 21 :41 ; 4. Keilbach (LB) 21 :58; 5. Barron (Cer) Lo.Angelee ...... 0 2 5 3 -10 211:43. Fullerton • • • . • • • • • • 2 1 2 2 -7 ------Football Goal Scorers: (LA): Lumb 2. J. B. Meirelles 2. Terry 2. Mantor 1. Nichols 1, FO11, 1>9. 1>9~- ..- - 5. De Anza .... · · · .... · • ·: · - · .... · • .. · . .. - · 6-0-0 NC)flC_onference .---=-~-~ ·. -~--~- ·. ~: =='.:::::::::::::::::·::::~:: ::: ~ UCLA'~-' UC &Illa~. 11-15, 1>1i. > 15. 1~ . 8· ~ · · · · · · · · · · · • · • · • • · · · • · · : · · · 4-l-0 15-a . -· ~ )! ~011- =. Palomar :: 4-1-0:: : .: ,: 12... : Gavilan:.:: :: : : >1-0: : : : .: 13; : .: San: : : : Diego: : : Mesa Men's Soccer • 3-1-1. 14. Long Beach 4-1-0, 15. Laney 4-2-0. 16. Butte >1· o. 17. Cablillo 4-2-0. 18. Moo,parl< 4-2-0, 19. Modesto 3-2-0. CCAA 20. Sedd!e'-11 3-2-0. CHAPMAN 2, CAL POLY POMONA 0 Scorwn: (Chap) McCrinmon. Synder. • NATIONAL Ooelle S.V..: Bello (Chap) 8: Fleger (CPP) 11 By J.C. Grt6-Wlrw Hlllllme: Chapman 2. Cal Poly Po1rona o , ' 1. Glendale ...... • ...... • .. 6-0-0 CALSTATEDOMINGUEZHILLS2,CALl'OLYSANLUIS , 2. Colfey,ile. Kans ...... 6-0-0 =:~Fmmganl;Straclwi l.: .. !:E ·= :::::::::::::-::::::::: iE : N~onf~• ~·-~: ~~·::::::::::: :: :::::::::::~::. ~ 4 1 SAN CIEQO 1, BIOL.A O. ' 8. Harper, I . . . . . •...... • .. . . • ...... 6-0-0 lcorenl: (USO) Kamel1e, Rathswohl 2 9. Ricks, Ida. .... , •.••..•• : .•••..... • • -· ••• 8-0-1 Gode S.-: ero,.n (Bio) 8; Hucicelbeny (USO) 8, · .!0. Northwest. Mss. .... · ...... 7-1-0 Vlldngo; t. • • · - 11 . 0ul'age. 1.6-1-0, 12. Men:ed>1-0, 13. Phoenix.Ariz- • . -,. . Hlllllme: U Sin Diego 1, Bio1a O . . . >1-0, 14. Oboe, Utah i -1-0. 15. Walla Walla, Wash. 6-0-0. CHRIST COL.I.EGE IRVINE 4, PACIFIC CHRISTlAN O 18. Lees ~ . N.C. 7-0-0, 17. Ranger, Tex. SO-O, 18. lcorM: (CCI) Bola:u, Clem. s---. Manoon.- • . ~ . II. 6-1-0, 19. De _Anza. 6-Qal, 20. (lie) Copiall- Oode S.-: lolink (CCI) 4; Mr:IOnney (PC) 15. ~ Msa. 7-1-0, Ve,mllon, Mm.~. _ · Hilftlme: CCI 1, Pacific Chr1stian O - . • ~ ·· · · · • Schedule · ~ • 'Schedule -· ·· · · _· Today ~ ' . T~y _ · ''";,, _.. --t;•, . WATERPQLO ..!:. Gtos,montatlJCSanDiegoJV. 3p.m. ·, WATER POLO-UClAat Pepperdine, 3 p.m.; Nor Foo:e · WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL-Santa Batbara. at Canyons,/. ~ UC Irvine, Hetitage Par1(, 7 p.m. - ~ • Santa Monica at q,cnaro. Ventura_ al Pielce, ! p.m. U WOMafS SOCCER - Redlands at UC Irvine: 3 p_ri,_ • • ·., .•- . -· L .. • WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL - Cal Slate Fullerton at Ha- - -1- -· --- wall, 7:30 p.m. ; P0inl Lema at Bio1a. 7 p.m. - -· . ...._ • - - - 1.,emOn Grove, CA (San Otego Co.) Lemon Grove Review (Cir. W. 2,884)

Egan Rehnm as , f;> "!!~f:.~,., basI<:etbal[ team, majer tM', qi­ rec90J'} of t;W,ro yea,x: e9acll H~ Eg_an, ch~ed,1 th,e re. tu~ of 9 lettermen and 3 sqµ-1:ers frpm last season'$ 19-9 team. They a,lso have 3 newCQl'Tlers and 5 redshirts to round out Egan's ro~er of 17, student­ ath.letes. The. Toreros will face the San Diego based Athletes-rn­ Action team in an exhibition, ' at USD on- Friday, Nov. 7. Game time is scheduled fo.r 7:30 p.m. and-admission is free to the public. The Toreros open their sea­ son on Friday, NOV'. 28 at the U. of Utah before h_osting B~ois~. &tat~_ lf~ on 'Ph~~qgy, Dec. 4' -· · · - 1 • · r1i ' Jti't.t.''f ·o, Friday, October 24, 1986 THEf.TRIBUNE B-3 Jlldge orders delay of Luc.as' first trial ByMi~?n?n Tribune Staff Writer The first trial of David Allen Lucas, who ts charged with six mur­ ders in two cases, has been delayed at least until next Thursday. Superior · Court Judge David M. Gill ordered the delay yesterday to allow another judge to finish hearing pretrial motions in both cases. Under questioning by Gill, Lucas agreed that he could not go to trial yesterday because of pending pre­ trial motions and agreed to have the trial set for next Thursday. However, he followed defense attorney Steven Feldman's advice and stood silent when Gill asked three times whether he waived the maximum time before trial. . . Said Feldman: "There is a question Charged in six slayings of sequence. I am advising my client , · not to answer." Colin, 3, on May 4, 1979, in their Nor- Deputy 'District Attorney Daniel mal Heights home; and with murder­ Williams asked for the waiver, not- ing real estate sales.woman Gayle _ing that_the 4th District _Court of Ap- Garcia,' . 29, on Dec. 8, 1981, in a peal ruled last month that Lucas' · Spring Valley home she was showing trial must be set within 60 days of his to prospective renters.- Aug. 25 request for a trial. Superior In the Nov. 3 trial, Lucas is Court Judge Franklin B. Orfield had cliarge~ with murdering Rhonda set the trial for yesterday. · S_tr~ng; 24, and a ~hild she was baby- Said Feldman:' "!' don't believe a s1ttm~, Amber, Fisher,. 3, on Oct. ~3, time waiver is necessary." _1984 , m _Str;mg _s La~es1de home; ~vtth_· After the ·court , session, Deputy murdermg UQ!vers1ty of San Diego District Attorne Georgi w. Clarke student Anne Cathe~me Swanke, 22, · ·d· "Th • . Y.,. ·• ti bo t th , _who was last seen ahve Nov. 20, 1984, sat.• · ..~r~ IS a qu!:> on _a __ ~- e. · walking toward her disabled vehicle w~ 3..ve~~ g1V1ng us ... a~ a_~dition~l lO carrying a can· of gasoline on Park­ days, and the other tr}~! IS sch~~le.d way Drive iri La Mesa; and with at­ No~. 3; Th~y are worr_ied ,wl: .c~~ld , tempting to murder and kidnapping ~neak m_an ~ st_ar t ~e othe~,tnaJ. , . . Jooy ~ntia'go, 34, a Seattle woman In the trial now set for Oct'. 30, . who sumved a throat-slashing, skull cas, .30, is charged with murdering· fracture and stab wounds on June 9 Suzanne Jacobs, ~3!, ·and her -_son, _1984. - ", -~ ·: .::_ .. • ,_ , :g'. ' MENT) ·,._. ' ;! ' , ,. •. .. (AoyfmsEMENT) • ' • .. ~ • .7. . l/ Tiebi-eaker May End Up Costing Oxy ~ B-v ('\ tt ,, ' Belen . tbe · footull . NUOq, The loss . was Occldental's second move into the top 10. Four teams 0 · coaches in the uthem California this season, probably barring Ute ahead of them were defeated dur• Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Tigers from returning to U.o play- • ina the weekend. decided to adopt a tiebreaker to otrs. That was despite quarterback 0 avoid confusion in SCIAC standings Mark Krajnik's school-record 32 Tb• . effeulve llae at Clare- that might cost team• a ahot al the. completions and receiver Jon Bil- mont-Mudd is feeding off the sue- .Division Ill playoffs. lingsley's record -16 receptions for cesa of running back Chris Dabrow, The conference dfdn't use the 193 yards and 4 touchdown,. It wu · the school's moat producUve back tiebreaker until last weekend. And the. moBt pointa °'y hu · scored in in more than a decade. . now, ' ironically, the rule might 20 yeara. "There's all aorta of ways Dabrow I.a averaging 128 yards a have knocked out Occidental, the of losing," Widolff aaid. "We've game, and his family has the only SCIAC team tlrl1ave gbut lo , found afew this year." · offensive line over for dinner the playoffs.in the last three year11. Use of the tiebreaker took some whenever Dabrow gaina 100 yards The Tigers lost lo La Verne, people by surprise, including some and the team wins. The combina- 53-52, in overtime. La Verne leads league officials. One, told the' score tion clicked for the third time last the conference with a 3-1 record. had been 53-52 in overtime, weekend when Dabrow got 114 In the SCIAC tiebreaker, each _ quipped: "Baaketball ha1m't star~d yards in a 16-13 victory over UC team is given the ball .on the yet." Santa Barbara. . - opponent's 25-yard line. Sinee both So far, the Dabrow family has teams are guaranteed a serie1t and O cooked Italian and steak dinners. defenses cannot score, the winner The ••but of Azuu Pacific'• new This week, the team will eat Mexi- of the coin toss chose to go on stadium was a ~"lmaah· aa can fare. defense both times Saturday. Tied well as an artistic success. The at 3il aiter regulation play, Oxy won Cougars not only defeated the □ the first l08I and chose defense, u~ersity~iego, -49-19, but UC Rlvenl•• la tbe No. 15 giving up a touchdown but coming ••drewastiifcltn,-ro

.Jlll~n '• ,. c. 8 · ~,s ,. ,BBB ~-..:.:aiQ::-::'.~:-"!:"'.~ ~~ . a~ a estudiante I por exhibicion indecorosa . 't'l procuraduria de justicia de la ciudad de San Diego decidi6 formular cargos contra un estudiante Diego de la Universidad de San acusado _de exponerse en for ma indeco~ · mujeres que protestaban grupo de contra una reciente ola de ataques sexuales en las instalaciones de la instituci6n. Stuart . Swett, subprocurador de la ciudad planes de : declar6 que tiene acusar al estudiante de 22 anos, de conducta exponerse indecentemente. lujuriosa y de La Policia del campus inform6 que eljoven privadas y ensefi6 sus partes se acarici6 frent~ a la ventana del edificio en un area segundo piso del ocupada por viviendas para los estudiantes. Una foto del incidente ocurrido el martes por la noche fue publicada en la pagina frontal de universitario. la edici6n del jueves del peri6dico ------

llnloa H-7 SIID~Y, October U, IHI 'ildua llkgo

LLEGE FOOTBALL '86 ., .. ' I .... -•• .... ,.. ,. I

the · ., • Hoffman. lt was ooe of three interceptions (all in ~~'~5~!!1!~~~!~~~~':~~~-~~~~~~-bounds. ~ ,. • , ,., ,, ~ "I for 162 Bar~a~~1~~steam bas lost three straight after a S-1 start. ball) for Dixon, wbo completed 1~ of 33 __ lint !fi.~~f~aC-Santa Barbara's football team gambled and woa;, whose UCSB, which stnigg)ed on offense all day, toolt a 7-0 il" ·: ' , •• . intentional safety late in the would have never done Dan Cos_ta's 15-yard _ yards.~ erdaJ, surviving an on the Gauc~ (l:4~_ I~ o_a second-string quarterback didn't play well," Fogarty an estimated crowd of;~ The strategy ~!most ~~ guarler. Starting quarter- • "The first half, Dixoo_just ,e to defer 1..!!;j..belore uudfield oo the ensumg. nm wtth 8:11 left ln)be fint be was throwing as well as . 1 USD106t ]ICS9eSSIOO on d~ at with 1:04 left in _the third• said. "But oo that wt drive, l atJ'orei, nun. back. with less lhan..ll!i _ back Paul Wright madeJt 14-ll football, we'jusl didn't put team, bad a H-7 lea free kick. but it got the 'ball il;Yard drive with a C be bas an yur. We moved the CSB, a firs,-1ear Division m back Tony Knight blocked quarter, ending an ~I-play, · its I-yard line with 6:3& minutes left when defensive • L _ It in the end zone.• the ball, fourth-and-nine, at attempt ' yard touchdown dive.·· • 1 victory after three Steve Marks take' John, Corrigan's 38-yard field-goal total offense, Warren was relieved to get a Coach Mike Warren had punier of seven pass- USO, which finished with only 244 yards safety. ! Quarterback P,at Dixoo completed five a 20-yard pass · .straight losses. . snap and drift out of the end zone for a receiver Jeff ,cored with 12:U 1~ in the game, on four weeks," have gone es, including roar , for 56 yards to wide TD recep- "This is almost a carbon copy of the last niere were all "kinds of things that could Barbara's f"!"l' Dil

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' .· ,. •• • • . · "i \ ~ .,...J ' 4". TomBlair ·

; LIFE IN THE CITY: A sign . · · : a_nnouncing transfer of ownership is I up at Lehr's Greenhouse in Mission I ~Yall~y. 'And the takeov_er by Tia Juana Tilly's fs e_xpected in 30-60 :: ,days.' Marketing man Fred Moore says $3 million "in remodeling an·d improyements to t~e 21,59()-sq.-ft.. restaurant will be done· in sections, between November and April. . .. · New kid: While San Diego ~taie : University, which dates back to 'befor_~J~e turn ·o! the century, was - -celebrating'its traditions ',Vith --~ ­ •homecoming festiviti~ over the weekend, tJniyersity of San Diego_ .: .!Va$ seeking to establish 1ts · ·· . : traditions. An ad appeared Friday in ' . : . the campus newspaper, The Vista, : offering $1,000 cash to the

1 contributor of. winning lyrics and ; music in a contest'f or a school fight _ • '. song.and alma· mater ..... San . - ' · 1 ~Diegans c~uld.~~.t a_do~b_le shot of •· . ·actor Bruce l>avJSOn this weekend. :. ' · ·. Daviso1:1, -~ppeafµ1g rn·the title rolf ' . 1 •of "Mesmer" fu theJlld Globe's ~lay : - I D~overfSeries, opened citywfde_in .~. I : the. new movie; "Lies.". ! : ' ': ' • • ' •• ' ~. ·. l ~ ~~' - ...:._ ~~-: ~~ . . - . C ------

~ B-£ ~Jd•llkllo lbdoa Sunday, October M, 19" 7 ✓ look to. Qrga~~iing to ·adyance ~.ffo~ts Iride.pe;nde~~ scholar~" 1 ~ !:t: :,~;1:': iJ: ofac~emia inclut!e a lot ~/pressure, ·t~!~:f ~~~::' ~~~~gw~ = . history ~d . . 'TM constraints they are mistaken for bwns and · lure, city p!.nning.and ;?iP__:_ . ~r:.sii~~ ~ecii1:: By being independent we bow work ~~ri~~ pressure to-get things in print, "They all want to continue scholar, pursu- tbe competitlon'ror foundation ' bag I.dies. · . said, For an independent things less orthodox alld more imaginative., for 111dependent they are enthusiastic about," he _of grants and academic prestige_ are. can do .,, S ll Support groups learning institu• Ing a st~dy _witbou~ the assistance purswt of . in this country now number adding that many institution or substantial games that lbw~ the - ,nary tro scholan unaffiliated a learmng : • '\ : • 50. By calling a regional !ions are accepting is a lonely, difficult and expeD: . knowledge. more. than their grant to scholar-· "' with the intent of organ- scholars in order to incorporate live !.!Ky -,e, •. •• •. • -! "Ilr' tbe commitment " that · !ions, said Mary. Stroll, president of conference : said, "sell-funding is a tor of · a research program these grou111i SDIS toot the ideas into ~ curriculilm: Yesteri uring a conference of ship," Benton than per- SDIS. izing be aaid, net.works of mooey. The em-- leads to knowledge rather first step in creating a national coali- By organizing, the San Ditgo lndependent Scbo!.n lbe true independent - "The constraints of academia in- scholars in tbe,fields of should be on achievement sonal gain, Benton said. to tion, said Ron 'Gross, a Great Neck, independent (SDIS) at ~e Unive£!ily of SaJJ pbasis and pooling re- elude a lot of pressure, pressure language, geograpb; and so­ than office." , By organizing a me- N.Y., scholar interested in education modern Diego; which lncl_uded ~m rather scholars will be ' get things in print," said Stroll, have recenUy been able to, academia, tenured professors sources, independent refonn. . , ciology Ole couiiiry, steps were taken In cosUy studies dieval historian. "By being independ- colleges and univer- across workin& on "what tliey able to travel, r ontinue The biggest task will be in lryin& convince major to create, a network of independent too often are and some ' ent, we can do things less orthodox their assistance in ex- rather than what they and have access to grants organize what, by nat~ is lbe sities to seek scbolan working toward national have to do to people and more imaginative." to , he said. be said. 1be independent . university facilities open organized - a highly unorgan- panding research , . ,, · want to do," studies can become least • statua. affiliated with academic organiza- Independent • • ., John F. Ben- scholar, however, ii a "unique ere- In bis keynote speech, - =:-,:----...:..==- ...... ! / ., .., ~ ' , " ---,-.,------:-+---~~===,'-- San Dleg (San Dleg Evening T Cir. D► 12

...,.g-.:.~:1-: :~:::r:::~=:m

~os, Aztecs tie !~a~%~ match San Diego State and USD staged a doozy of a college soccer match yes­ terday at USD with the host Toreros, a slight underdog, coming away with a 3-3 tie after 90 minutes of regula­ tion and two 15-minute overtimes. USD's Chris Duke beaded home a comer kick .with 4½ minutes left in the second OT to produce the final score. Before Duke's final thrust, the Az­ tecs bad led twice - 2-1 on a goal by leading scorer Kyle Whittemore in the 72nd minute of regulation and 3-2 on Tim Homan's shot four minutes into the first extra session. Steve Boardman had the other goal for the .visitors, on a penalty kick. USD (14-3- lt) got its other t~o goals from Bo ltaemerle. The Azttfcs, ranked 18th in the country, now are 10-2-4. P. c. B Esr. 1888

( Tuesday, October 28, 1986 'l!bt.ianilkgollnion D-3 · r1'ztecs, Toreros tie after two overtimes I ~t:l,:;5' By Ric Buaier striker Mike Brille running down Slaff Writer clears by the defense, the Aztecs If college soccer matches were al- battered goalkeeper Scott Huckle- lowed to continue ad infinitum until berry with 10 first-half shots, but five a winner was determined, San Diego saves and luck kept it tied through State an~ still be knock- halftime. It took a little of both on ing the ball around and each other .one play: Huckleberry blocked for­ down on the Torero turf. ward Kyle Whittemore's diving head- The result of 110 minutes of an al- er at the near post; Whittemore, most non-stop, brawl-brewing, end- lying on the ground, then got a foot to-end contest yesterday afternoon on the rebound, only to see it deflect for the city's bragging rights ended 3- off the far post. 3. Both teams have reason to trum- Whittemore, the Aztecs' leading pet the verdict - the Aztecs (10-2-4) scorer with 14 goals and seven as­ because they dominated the match; sists, appeared to have his fourth the Toreros (14-3-1) because they game-winning goal in the 72nd min­ came from behind twice, kicking, ute when he took a pass from mid- , butting and grabbing, to salvage fiel4er Curt Lewis, turned. and from the_ir first tie. · 25 yards out nailed the upper right Sophomore midfielder Chris Duke corner of the net to make it 2-1. scored the Toreros' third goal with The Toreros came right back, 4½ minutes remaining in the second scoring eight minutes later despite a and final 10-minute overtime, head- tremendous effort by Hernandez. ing home a corner kick by Art Faro. USD's Mark Fenick, a junior for- USD also started the action, even ward and late first-half substitute, though SDSU kicked off, with senior headed on goal Sterling Peloso's forward Bo Kaemerle scoring the cross to the far post, but Hernandez first of his two goals 16 seconds into got a hand on the ball, deflecting it the match. Kaemerle blocked Aztec across the goalmouth. Kaemerle, defender Steve Boardman's clearing ever the uncanny opportunist, was pass, came up with the ensuing loose there to shoot from · point-blank ball and stuck it past goalkeeper range. Hernandez somehow managed Felipe Hernandez to make it 1-0. to deflect the second shot as well, but In hindsight, it might have been this time only into the upper netting. the worst thing the Toreros could Hernandez finished with six saves; have done. Huckleberry had 12. · "It seemed like it almost worked Tim Roman's resilience returned against us," said Kaemerle, the the lead to the Aztecs four minutes Toreros' leading scorer with 16 goals into the first overtime. Honian, who and eight assists. "We laid off, and was set up by a square pass from they started coming at us." midfielder Ken Taylor and a dummy The Aztecs' offensive pressure be- run by Whittemore, had a left-footed came too much for Duke. On a San shot bl~ked before he hit a right­ Diego State corner kick in the 13th footer from 13 yards into the lower minute, the sophomore midfielder left corner. blatantly pushed Boardman away Surely, one would have thought, from an attempted header. It was a this last goal would break the relatively light foul in comparison to Toreros' fortitude. But, by this time, some others committed, but referee even San Diego State coach Chuck Simon Ferreira awarded a penalty Clegg was a believer. After the A - kick, which Boardman promptly tees scored, Clegg confided. to a by­ tucked in the lower right corner to stander, "I'll bet you they ti~ it up. tie it, 1-1. · . . · That's just the kind of team 'they With the Toreros' offense· consist- are." I • . ;,,-- did. ~ L ing of Kaemerte and freshman They has programmed music by Bach, Piston, Berio and _Prokofiev.

I Harbld·-Wattnan will conduct the SDSU Wind Symphony in music by Malcolm Arnold, Samuel Barber, Gordon Jacob, Frank Bencriscutto . and Greg Steinke on Nov. 16 in the Dramatic Arts Theater at 3 p.m.

On Nov. 2 from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. in · the C~min~ Theater, the U~iversitl_'. of ~Diego will host a workshop on making strTrig instruments and an informal concert featuring instruments made by local luthiers. On other campuses: Flutist Gary The event is sponsored by the Schocker will play a solo recital in Southern California Association of San Diego State University's Smith· Violin Makers, the American String RecitaTlfa I on Nopv . 9 at 7 .m. Part · Teachers Association and the USD • • I of the SDSU concert music department. .'J . - ..J ...... series, Schocker El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co) Daily Californian (Cir. D 100,271)

CA . Carlsbad, Santa Fe, CA Diego Co.) Rancho (San Diego Co.) La Costan (San Rancho Santa Fe (Cir. W. 5,000) Review (Cir. W.)

Jl/leri's P. C. e fsc 18.i&,~-,

E MISANTHROPE" Th~ ~jie~classic 1/ will be presented in French~pn~aturday /i San Diego, ~A Past To at the University of Sari Diego. Information: j (San Diego Co.) RSF 260-4682. . . Ocean Mission Pacific Beach News .Be Unearthed (Cir. 2xW .. 21,~) An ar~zg. who has conducted numerous digs in the RSF area will present his findings on pre-Covena_nt human settlements in a program at the annual meeting of the RSF Historical Society, in the library Nov. 6 at 7 p.m. . 1 USO wor~shop P.robes Uniy_srsity of San D1e~o I '"'The Luke Gospels" professor James Monorty will I ~f display photographs and .other · "The·Lukt~is.the titi~ originating m the a workshop giYenib,Jr.the Institute memorabilia of the Ranch to augment Ministries from dawn 1 for Christian in 6:30-9 ~30 p.m. Nov. 13, 14 and 17 in his presentation, "Early Life 'Serra 204 .at the Universi!LQ!_ San Rancho Santa Fe, As Determined By Archaeological I Qi.jl,o in Alcala Park.· I • . e guest speaker will be the Studies." ~~v. Eugene LaVe~ere. The cost Among features of the . event IS $20 for registration postmarked • will be details of the hfe of Thursday, Nov. 6, or $25 at the j Ranch Riding Club founder ,by · · · • door. · John Robertson. . For more information, call , For further information call 1 2tj0-4784. '. C C •. '. ' •/ .- . - - _._ . ' 756-2990 . Haf~eS't_ Season.reaps I /)('X C. . l bounty ' of ' holiday I•. 'f ·1 social °'::)':>:)\ • r ,.,• I doini. I, 'A' • : J social harvest has been mas. The Auru~·s rich Brace family, beginning Dec. 20, will n, 11,'l is busy posing for a portrait by Seb;,_ -~ 'E: 1'1e ·el n'. ... . and varie~. Now the season's emphasis is . stay at Brick House Tavern in Williamsburg ' '• ,''• · '• · and Capella, a La Jolla artist. She recently WOI\ on the appr:paching November /December later at Williamsburg Hospitality House · · · k ·, .; holidays and events portrait sitting at an Opera Guild fashion sl related to them. Organiza- The holiday house party group ·wm in6lude: Mr. tions as well as individuals benefit. are as busy as the and Mrs. Kim Brace (Candace) of Falls Church, Mr. and Mrs. Michael merchants in featuring Thanksgiving and lbs Gonzalez, wh9 recen Christ- Va., and their children, Christopher and Warren (y enjoyed a trip to China, did their mas. · ;, ·; . · · Clayton Brace; holiday plot Mr. and Mrs. Craig Lapp (Lynne ting before they left. Their festive board on As al}Vays during.the holidays,!fa'mily members Brace) and son Jeremy of El Cajon; and and Mr. and Thanksgiving will be enjoyed by 35 guest$, includ­ memories dictate the programs of :celebra­ Mrs. Michael Hentigan (Kerry Brace) of La tors, inspiring Mesa. ing their children and grandchildren and Mr. Gon­ reunions, celebrations for family The San Diegans will return Jan. 3 after a week in visitors, and ic.mily zalez's relatives from Tijuana and Guadalajara, getaways. 1 Washington, D.C. . ., _ . , , . . Mexico. · Mrs. Clayton ,Brace (Jeanne) will be joined by Mrs. Brace's daughter, Diane, will remain in Their joint family members will include Mr. most members of her family for the Christmas Seattle during the holidays. She is with the Pacific JO~kson holidays in Williamburg, and Mrs. Michael Gonzalez Jr. (Sally) and Mr. and Va., which is rich in his­ · Northwest Ballet Company, which has commit­ Mrs. Maxwell ------~. tory and famous Boone Hellmann (Cindy Gonzalez) for its holiday festivity. Friends ments in Vancouver, British Columbia; Portland, of Encinitas and their '· will enjoy her house here for a ~alifornia Christ- children; Mr. and Mrs. Rob­ Ore.; and Seattle during the holidays. Mrs. Brace Please see JACKSON, E-4 \ \ . - ' San Diego, Tbursday, October 30, 1986 • E-4 ntE•TRIBUNE

I Two of II•• malll- 11ay1 of Tbe San Diego Social Ser­ vice AuUiary are Mn.Jou Rlppo (Eleaaor), ldl, aadMn. Ralpb C. Hardie (Ter ...). Mn. Hardie celebraled lier 102nd blrlb· day Tuesday.

.!' *Jackson------I • 1 I· I , KFMB-TV : Coot/JJwd ,.,_ E-1 • • l , Saa Diego Hilton. She bu Rtnuaded penoaality; Hal Clemen~ ; ert Kennedy (Betsy) and son of Ran- · ' Mr. Gonulez lo aerve u master of news reporter; Art Linkletter TV lcho Santa Fe; Fred Snyder of Mission ceremonies of tbe event, which and radio br01dcaater; and 'their 'Hills; and Mn. Gonzalez's brother-ln- 1 promises lo live up to Its title: :·Let's wives. ·1aw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. James All Be Children for Tbe Day." Mr. and Mn. John Rippo (Eleanor) :Kendrick (Margaret) of La Jolla. Mn. Charles W. Henkelmann of Mission Hills have an Involved . 6, Mr. and Mrs. GODule~ , (Joan) of Bonita, who will ~erve as family holiday luncheon/boutique of : Oa Dec ­ will attend the wedding In Wayuta, c»-chal_rman of the party, will p~ The San Diego Social Service A11.1ill Minn., of Mn. Gooulez's daughter, her husband, Dr. Heokelmann, mto ary on Nov. 6. . The Rlppos will give Mrs. Margaret Snyder Fo1, and J0!!Y service u ~ta that day. . tbelr annual party on the night of the Brauao Staaovlkl. In mid-December Mr. and M11. teams also will be Parade of Light■ (1 f!!5Uve proces­ lhe Gooulez home will be the aettlng · featured at "Celebrate the Holidays," alon of decorated and lighted boatl · again for the annual Christmas party a benefit nhlbition by and for San on the bay). The event can be seen Hlsto~~al Socl_ety Nov. 13-Dec. from their house, which bu a pane>- , 1g1ven by tbe Committee of 100, an Diego organlutloa · supportive of Balboa U. The nb1b1Uoa w1U feature SO or ramie view of the harbor and Point , rark and lt.s architecture. more vignettes depicting Cbr11tmu Loma. . Husbands always bave been Im- scenes created by designen, archl- The Parade of Lighta will be Dec. , portant social asset.s u escorts and tects and landscape architects force- 21, whicb happens to be the 2oth bost.s but this year they are taking lebr1ty hosts. The festive, e1tended birthday of the Rippos' grandson, An­ cent~r stage u acton OD the social display will open at a gala preview thony John Rippo, a UCSD student. · scene. Wives, including Mn. Goo- Nov. 22. , The Dec. 23 birthday of the Rippos' ' ulez. who are active in volunteer Among those who will be repre- ' son, John A. Rippo, also will be toast­ ; worj for community endeavors, are ' seated In vlptttes are: Charlie eel at the party. The Rippos' daugh­ lncorporating their husbands on their Joiner of the Slil Diego Charger,; ter, Bonnie of San Antonio Tens committees. ' San Diego PICAI Terry Kennedy will be her~ for the Cbrisui;aa holi'. Mrs. Michael lbs Gonulez will be and Tim Fla~ Jerry Coleman, day. • chairman of the annual Children's who broadca s Padres baseball Thi• v••• u- o•--- - -1 • •• . ' Party from 2 to 4 p.m., Dec. 21, of the games OD tele ·oo ~nd ra~7"' , San Diego Opera AssociaUoo at the Anthony, KFM '°"" •/,.._.______

~L- - ~------*u aCKISUU---...+------. C0111lna and selected the 71 I the November holidays. by Mr E-4 -:7 ()~' lnp during text from nine of Mr. CoUI- I Con !/nO

1888 IUC Irvine u~8te ~9SS . Bell Gardens, CA (Los Angeles Co.) UC Irvine's swimming Bell Gardens Review team opens its 1986-87 (Cir. 2xW. 5,510) season Saturday, hosting (Cir. Sat. 2,290) the Univer~)'--0,f- San Diegf in a noon meet at the - Craw ord Hall pool. OCT 30 1986 Coach Charlie Schober's .. , team features veteran leadership from senior Lee McKinney from Las Vegas. McKinney was involved in four school records at the PCAA Championships last season. -: _ 1-luskies sign Jenkins UCI set nine school . J. q S"E ~ records 'last year. Anthony Jenkins, Pius X I Lee McKinney 1 High's All-CIF basketball play­ 'EATERFLASHES - .. er, has made a pre-season ver­ The men's soccer team faces No. 1 ranked Stan­ bal commitment to play at the closes out its 1986 schedule ford at 10:20 a.m. and UC University of Washington next Sunday", hosting Nevada Santa Barbara at 1:50 p.m. year. Las Vegas at 2 p.m. on Saturday at the 49er In­ Jenkins, a 6-4 point guard, nar­ Crawford Field. Coach vitational at Belmont Plaza rowed his final five choices to Derek Lawther'.s squad is Pool in Long Beach. Action the Huskies, Oregon, Arizona, at UC Santa Barbara continues Sunday in the University of San Diego and San tonight . . . The Anteater nine-team tournament / Jose State. M1~ Murphy, his women's volleyball team is coach, estimated over 60 col­ in the midst of a five-match leges . were actively recruiting , homestand. UCI hosts Cal his star player. Poly San Luis Obispo at "It was a hard decision for An­ 7:30 tomorrow night ·in thony because the other schools Crawford Hall and UC-San­ recruiting him have fine pro­ ta Barbara next Wednes- · grams," said Murphy. "He just day- night . ~ . Coach Ted . · felt this was the one that suited - Newland's water polo team him." Jenkins averaged 21.0 points, · 7.0 rebouns and 3.2 assists per game as a junior/ to :- 'Pack~ ~\: beukmejian Trying \ charge. . ·:, P[ofesSOfS. . f Law 4 • .Court, - • &a..,~HAGF.R, I By PHILIP Writet Times Staff ' group of FRANCISCO-A SAN accused Gov. 242 law professors of Deukmejian Thursday George Rose Eliza­ opposing Chief Justice on and two other justices beth Bird he could fall ballot so that the Supreme Court "pack" the state his own judicial appointees. with releasing a peti­ The professors, law at 12 California tion circulated governor asserted that the schools, defeat of Bird and was urging the Justices Cruz Reynoso Associate "solely for Joseph R. Grodin and unpopular stands their politically any lack of rather than for . . . part." qualification on their Dean Gerald Uel­ A spoke$man, of Santa of the University man said that Deuk­ Clara Law School, offi-· and all other elected mejian out" of judicial cials should "stay elections. retention we erode the "The risk is that judicial office is ... principle that a Uelman said. "We nonpartisan," on of and urging retentfen judges in the posit criticizing Deukmejian faculty' at 1 are putting and in a statement for over half of the endorsements . . . their stock accounted .. seeking decisions may atfect of the justices where their law schools. from UCLA. the position at the 12 faculty members of With elected officials." petition were released The list included the University the professors' by the California, Berkeley, of Sart Copies of and in other cities University of USC, University held here Politics Out Stanford, ity:o! news conferences to Keep California, Davis, of the Law, Univer Citizens' Committee confirmation Hastings College _U! Independent supporting Francisco, aee COURT, 1e Court, an organization Pleue of the ballot next Tuesday. six justices on the who signed the of ail that the professors Spokesmen said COT:JRT 'Professors See an Effort to 'Pack' High Court .;u,.s-s [ Conlin•• from Par• a Among Olhen, Schwartz cited a upholding a new llate law Santa Clara, University of San decision r it eaaler lO convlcl drunk Otego, Golden Gal~ty, making convic­ I and Loyola La'w drivers, a ruling allo..Oing a Wl!m:1'1'-collep the vicUm School Uon ror rape even where I did nol physically resiat her attack­ I Deukmejlan, a Republican, haa er and a holding I.hat private made the court"a central Issue in hls securil,y guards need not warn I campaign for reelection. aaserting shoplifting auapecla they arrest or I that BU'd, ReynOBO and Grodin-all their conatitutlonal rlghla to silence I appointed by Democratic Gov. Ed­ and legal counaet. mund G. Brown Jr.-have followed their peraonal vtewa rather than r------1"--­ lhe law In oorllistently voting to overturn death aenl.e!\ces imposed on coavicted murderers. Donna Lipper; 'a campa gn spokeswoman for the governor, aald in response to the professors' clalma I.hat "what the governor wants and what California needs Is to 'unpack' the court, because It's been 'packed' for yeara with ap­ polnteea of Jerry Brown." "Their philosophiee have carried over Into the way they make declslona," she aald or the Brown appointees. ''The governor feels that one of his major reaponstbllitiee is ap­ pointing judges and that the people or California have a right lO know what kind of judges are going on the court," she said. The profeaora aald in their peti­ tion thal It la "dangerous and destructive" lO in)ecl partisan poli­ tia into a )lldlcla1 elecUon. Ille! tllat allhoQall Deuk­ mejlan had focll&ed attention on the three Brown appointees' record• on capital punishment, "the tenor or hil oppo,nUon auneeu a desire to ._'pack the court'.. with band-picked aOC1ien .. Ba11oC Al present, there are two Deul<­ me!lan appointees 011 the eeven­ member court-Juoticee Malcolm M. Lucu and Edward A. Panelli. Both are on the ballot.- along with Justice Stanley Moak, an appointee of Denocratic Gov. F.dmund G. (Pat) Brown, but none of these three face organised oppombon. At the news canlens,ee hen, Uelman predicted a -~ !'ffhap­ in&'' cl the coun lhauld Bird, Reynoeo and Grodin be removed by the voters. The court. be noted, had been at the "cuttilla edge" ot I.be law foe about 30 yean. fllulag decillom lo criminal, penollll iJ1luo' and other .- that were often the first of their kind In the nation. 'To~DIHcttoa' "The agenda or opponents of the jusUcee 18 to change the direction of the court," Uelman aaid. "They wont to make the court lees re­ sponsive to the need lO shape the law to (\Ql!(<>rm With chan~ In our ..:,ei.:,ly." . !>tot. Louis SertWa!'t! or Ha.slingt Colle,;, of l.'i l~.,,. dl•trJbtll.ed 8 !iJL Oi ,4{\ .1 r1 :r. . \;!I'. Televfslon 2t:f55 s-..· Cup - KNSC,4 will d9110to a live four.hour telecast to cover Saturday's event al Santa Antta. The teJecast begins at 11 a.m. Denver va. Rakfers - The Raiders. win­ ners of five straighl, play the 7• 1 Broncos on SUnday al the Cokseum. the game Is a sell out, so KNBC/4 wfll lolevlse the game live at 1 p.m. What's Happening S.-,.' Cup - Santa Anita Is the site for this yea(s Bree

Saturday College Water Polo 0 8 a.m. - 49ef lnvltallonal, Belmont Plaza. Tk:l

Sunday College Water Polo 0 8 Lm. - 49ef lrwilalional, Belmont Plaza. 1-: $5, $8 for two-day tourna­ ment paaa (213"198-41M9) Hone Racing 0 12:30 p,m. -C>ak Tree Meeting: Thor· ~. Santa Anita. llckets: $2.75 general admlsolon, reoerved -ta an ad· dltional $2 o, $3.50 (816-574-RACE) NFL D 1 p.m. - 0onv« 118. Raiders. Los Angales Memorial Colloeum. Sold out (213-322-3451) College Soc:cel' □ 2 p.m. - Nev-.L.aa v_. at UC ~:~ ::;:11;~ (856-820% pr.pfP.sors· accuse Deukmejian of trying to pack court 65 law activity Bird's In other campaign stances in specific sions." · failed to enforce the state's ·ically unpopular bas Committee to Conserve the 'eourts ~m S&al! ud Nfts R

Jllf.en'• P. C. 8 F.sr . 1888 YsEMl~AR:U - e niver5jty · ofSa n 6ieg~ 11 h usiness Update Breakf~ wS1 . . ow's emmar • Business?" Featuring San Diego, Calif. Dr Charles • f or of Holt, associate pro ess Southern Cross . . at 7·30 a m economics • · · . at the Manchester (Cir. W. 27,500) Confere nee c Center. Cost is $15 . on tact the University of San Diego at 260/ OOT2

[.,r. .)lllen's P. C. B 1888

U.S.D. -z. ~ S5 __. Business Update Fall 1986, offered by USD"s Business Administrati School of on, Manchester Conference t:SD. Continental Center. breakfast at 7:30 a.m. ; seminar Dates and wpics: 8-9 a.m. Oct. 3, " T eam building by Lawrence skills for managers•· Barry; Oct. 10, " H ow's business H oh: Oct. .. by Charles 17, "Could marketing organ research help your ization )·· by Jacq ueline Brown ; Oct. 31 , "Fired! .. by Mariam R othman; Nov. 7, " The loyalty ethic: An everyday managemem issue or j ust a matter of academi( concern Elizabeth Arnold. Cost " b~ : $1 5 each session . Info: 260-4585 Pastoral Visitors . Ministers Training, a with Sr two-da) worbhop . Pat H eaney, J oan Krogmeier. Catherine Elaine Manin. Sr. Osimo, Oct. 4 and NO\·. Salomon 8. 9 a.m.-4 :30 p.m .. Lect ure Hall, USD. Offered bv the Institute for Christian M inistries. Cost : S35 at the door. More: 260-4784. Piano recital by Fr. Nicolas R eveles, O ct. 5 Theater, , 4 p .m ., Camino USD. Haydn , Beethove::n , \'ili work a-Lobos and Chopin s to be performed. A USD Mu sic Depanment fund-raiser. Info: 260-4600 ext. 4456. Graduate school information day. Oct. 6. 10 a.m.-2 Camino Patio. Representativ p.m .. es from 40 state and national colleges and universiti es will be present . Call : 260-4524 "Masters and . Minors,,. a graduate English Lee Gerlach program by Dr. , USD English professor Manchester . O ct. 9, 4-6 p.m., Conference Center. Cost : $4. Info: 260-4585. / \VCUI UIV\JV \.JU . J Spring Valley Bulletin (Cir. W. 2,708) OCT 2 1986

~llf!ra'• P. c. e I.St. ,aa11 !ftosarJes ~r~ Weapons I~ ~eace Crusade Sun.,1 San Diego, CA The 3rd annual "Jlt:Mf~ (San Diego Co.) For Peace Crusat.le'1)wi~ ..fa{e Evening Tribune place on Sun.day, Oct. 5, at (Cir. D. 127,454) 7:30 p.m ., in the ~1-sity or Sap Diego Stadium, in Alcala Park. The event will feature a Candleligh t Rosary Proces­ OCT 10 1986 s ion similar to those held at Fatima and Lourdes, and the combined vuices of the San Di go Mission l3asilica and St. ~llf!rt'• P. C. B l:.

OCT2 1986

Jlllni '• P. C. 8 E.

ALUMNI SERIES A concert of vocal har­ monies at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 1 at the University of Califo rni a at San Diego in Room 8-10. Information: 534-6467. FATHER NICHOLAS , REVELES Piano recital at 4 p .m. Sunday in the Camino Theatre at the Universil\l a/ San Diego. lnfor­ ma_ti~.., . ?'-0-4682/

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)

OCT 1 31986

I Jllioa '• P. C. 8 F..<1. 1888 I

Boa~Trustees./' 2._ C\SS _ · The Ch11drea's Sc~ool ha$,. an- nounced the promotion of Heather McNair to the position of head teacher for the kindergarten class. McNair is a native La Jollan and has been working as an assistant head teacher at the school for the past three years. · Other new teachers . at the • • • arc Camille Wright, who , Roeer Hedg~k school on earned her degree and _teaching -'The Political At-;_~ka 1 the • ..;!' I - Future of San .~and - Usn•s c-- . Diego at 8 tonight 2 free . ' ~,r,i~ . ~no Theatre. It's credential tr?Ji'1ic Univ~ty.<\{ • • • • Hawaii; M.a.r~ Talbot, ,.,~ho_,d'{.r-· graduated from San Diego State 1\s-. ' --- University and completed; her -~· teaching credential at the Univcr­ sity....of San Diego; ancl -f-atti Arctz, who teaches,: in·. .- .the ·,. preschool and completed the pro- gram at the National C~ntcr for Montessori Education· in. San Diego. The After ~ch90l: Pro- aram is be~i dirccied) tµs year by Mike . Stewart, who ...also teaches computer instruction. _for . all ages at the school. .-.. -:1./ ··. ..,. . r. • • • • • San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) OCT 1 "I 1!86 San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500)

.Jlfl~n '• P. c. e far. 188h OCT 2 O198 6 _ - · , .. a,11 ..:, i. ,ruorma1Ion. 4-4U·~2 t, .

~ Distinguished Spe era Series c~w ith Will1.i!)I(~~ president of .Jlltenl '• p . c • B F.sr. 1888 Group W Televisio,~%Dll!tffll"t!1\Yhy " Freedom Isn't Free." 7:30 a .m. Oct. 22. Manchester Conference Cen ter. .C.dm1ss1on: $15. lntorma- ..-:::::::: t1on: 26~-4585. _.,,./ EDUCATION C. Terry Brown, c~CEO of Atlas Hotels, has beeifnlrrr'etf'to the Uni­ versity of San Diego Board of Trustees. Frank Allesio Jr., president of Dan Mar Investment Co., has also been appointed to US D's board of trustees.

7' /'"

Sa n Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27 ,500) OCT 1 o 1986

.Jlll.en' s P. C. B far. 1888

'1JSD ta,stees member named ALCALA PARK - Frank D'.J~Jr. was recently named to the University of Sa~~it'.,ard of Trustees. Alessio, a La Jolla resident, has been president of Dan Mar Investment Co. since 1983 . The 3 4-member USO board is chaired by Bishop L eo T . Maher. / . Escondido, CA (San .Diego Co.) Tli:nes Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568)

ar, CA Diego Co.) ~r Surfcomber W~t

fat. 1888 . U§!!_Erofessor to lecture The St. Jam~Educa­ tion Series ~t~s Father l Ron Pachence. an associate professor at USD's Institute for Christian Ministries, spe.aking on "Leadership in Christian Ministry: An Historical Over- view." The presentation will be Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. St. James Church is located at 625 S. Nardo Ave. in Solana Beach. Pachence·s teaching experi­ ence includes stints at the Catho­ lic University, St. Mary's Semi- . nary, George Maso·n University and in .the Peace Corps. His publications include "The Priest," "The Journal of Dhar­ ma" and "Living Light." /

( (

San Diego, Monday, October .20, 1986 USP stud~~ts· tackling ~~~=!~g!dm~r~l!1!1~ students are helping to battle wfae- Walsh said. 1 . ' • spread language problems in five The program originated Southeast · last San Diego elementary spring when Walsh learned of the schools. un­ · derstaffed conditions of schools in They are tutoring students in Eng- • Southeast San Diego. l lish, mathematics and reading, aca- - - . 1 demic areas where the children are · "Some of the students do not speak \ unable to keep up with their class- 1 mates. ~g~, nor do their parents,' _sbe • _ S&Id. In consequence, it is very diffi- These children are especially in cult for them to receive the extra need of help because 80 percent of help they need at home or scboof" 1 the students are froJ!l Spanish-speak- Bruce Gordon, the project's sta- ing families, ,aid Sister Betsy Walsh, - den! coordinator, ~d the t,iton faculty director of the program. meet every other week to share i The their schools involved are Balboa, experiences ' and discuss problems · Our Lady of Angels, Our Lady of they encounter: ' - San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evenrng Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) _ San Diego.! CA) (San Diego Co. Tribune Evenlng127 454) (Cir. D. '

SD OPERA wo~:Hf'J>lm111flcSHOP SHOW­ ex- c -:- An even~orn, cerpts1 ; dlrecteddbat 8 p m. Tuesday in • be presente · lty of San theWll Camino Theater, Unlvers __.,,.. ~ Diego. ~ ~ocurement_21ncers

O~l~uon·s top pro- Twenty t officers• will come curemen a conference _on ~ov. ' together for They include execu- 13-14 at _LJSD. neral Motors, Nor­ tives from Ge -Packard, IBM and throp, Hewlett / Motorola_

~IJ bold an afternoon of m~.ic an triag-maki~g lore at 2:15 p.m. Sunday, and it's not an a/ten, ing with t,vfne. The event • features member, of the Southern Ca rrua Violin Maker, AssOcia. j,,. - · . tio,i discUSsing thO art of making stringed instruments and perform . .:• •h>g with... them. lolormauon, ~- · . ~ .•: ... _ . _· ~ Diego wi~l ., · The University of San 1 . , · ff~ fA_f~~tnat , "!f1visibl~ Um- :-. .:.v~f~~ p.m. tomorrow m the · Carlsba3 Public · Library, 1250 Elm ~ ~Ave., Carlsbad. University biolog_y :.and physiology professor Curt Spams :will share some of his research_find­ :iJigs on sleep and dreams. For mfor­ maijon, call John Nunes at 260-468V l!.§!!_profess_or to le~ture · The St Jam~Educa- ' tion Series ~~~ Father Ron Pac hence. a.n associate professor at USD's Institute for Christian· Ministries, speaking on ~•Leadership in Christian . Ministry: An Historical Over- view." · · The presentation will be Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. St. Jame_s Church is located at 625 ' S. Nardo Ave. in Solana Beach I ·Pac~ence's teaching experi~ ence includes stints at ·the Catho- . lie University, St. Mary's Semi-· ~ nary,_George Mason University _and in the Peace Corps. -His pub~ications include " The . Prie~t," "The Journal of Dhar- ma:•_an~ "~iving_Ught .'/ Carl5bad, CA (San Diego Co.) LaCostjn (Ctr. W. 5,000)

Universjty of San Die biol­ Solana Beach, CA ogy and physiolo~ .Jli¢'essor (San Diego Co.) Curt Spa~ wiJ.ldib~ some The CIUzen of his research findings on sleep (Cir. W. 20,000) and dreams at a 7 p.m. Tuesday Oct. 28, meeting of USD's "In~ visible University." The seminar, which will be held at the Carlsbad Public Library in La Costa, is free and open to the public. 1888 Spanis will also discuss sleep The Moliere classic and exercise in relation to good resented in French at 8 p.m. Saturday " health. he Univers,!!}'....2LSan Die~o. Information: / For more information, contact · ?-15S- _/ John Nune~ at 260-4682. ~