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Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 USD News

1985-10-01

University of San Diego News Print Media Coverage 1985.10

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 1985.10" (1985). Print Media Coverage 1947-2009. 159. https://digital.sandiego.edu/print-media/159

This News Clipping is brought to you for free and open access by the USD News at Digital USD. It has been accepted for inclusion in Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 by an authorized administrator of Digital USD. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1J City panel OKs plan to delay project at mission • and expense to cal data and a valuable piece of However, Worley said, the time Callahan pared by the city staff prompted the board impossible. He said an By Bill force the history. involved may make this Writer attempt to reconsider the project and fee and three Tribune Staff . The site board passed along a list of recom­ early estimate of a $45,000 ticking on the San Diego diocese to modify its plans. has 30 days a stiff price to pay. The clock has begun and council ap­ mendations to the council - which months' work seems Diocese's plans to construct a However, because the board - seeking a means to the esti­ Roman Catholic earlier, they now have only in which to hear the matter ''This would add about 6 percent controversial multi-purpose building on ar­ proved the project some restrictions on the diocese. the building," he said. "I to delay issuance of building permits of imposing mated $750,000 cost of chaeologically sensitive grounds at the Mission the power include a performance bond assuring diocese would find this accept­ come up with a plan for preserving historic These do not think the San Diego de Alcala. or a compilation of as-yet-unorganized archaeo­ able." Site Board yes­ mission ruins. One plan would be to condemn protective A frustrated city Historical city officials logical fmdings within two years, the board's requests voted its opposition to con­ and purchase the property, but to the site and a Worley said meeting terday formally prohibitive. measures to prevent damage the diocese to begin construction of the 8,100-square-foot building. say this would be fmancially would allow struction accommodate religious revised environmental report. than if the delay were imposed. However, the advisory board's action does The building would attorney for the diocese, said earlier social activities and education classes Donald Worley, the diocese can sit out the maxi­ not block the project; it only initiates a sched­ services, the diocese will try to comply with the However, con­ the first of the 21 California missions built he and 360-day waiting period if satisfying the ule under which city officials can delay at · recommendations. mum of 360 days from by Father Junipero Serra. city becomes t9() expensive, he said. struction for a maximum ar- . He said he is attempting to find an archaeol­ we The project has been opposed by some and oppo­ "We can sit it out or we can say: 'Look, yesterday. who say ogist acceptable to both the diocese get going,' " he project were initially approved chaeologists and environmentalists, the research on want to get early approval and Plans for the would destroy or nents of the project to conduct on how mqch it costs." board and the city council in 1980, but an construction of the building said, "but it depends by the to as-yet-undiscovered histori- the historical data. error in an environmental-impact report pre- seal off access T University of San Die8o ***Please return to PUBLIC RELATIONS Public Relations

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ROUTE SHEETS

Dr. Author Hughes, President

Jack Boyce, Vice President, Financial Affairs

Dr. Ray Brandes, Dean , School of Graduate & Cont. Educat i on Thomas Burke Vice President and Dean, Student Affairs Dr. James Burns , Dean , School of Business

Dr. Ed DeRoche, Dean , School of Education

Sr. Sally Furay, Vice President and Provost

Sheldon Krantz, Dean , School of Law

Fr. Mike McKay, Director , Campus Ministry

Dr. Irene S. Palmer, Dean, School of Nursing

Dr. William Pickett, Vice President, University Relations

Dr. Joseph Pusateri, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Pat Watson, Dean of Academic Services

Fr. Cahill, Director , Physical Education , Recreation, At hletes Malachi Raffert.y, Director , Continuing Education

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Alcala' Park, San Diego, California 9211 0 619/260-4600 October 1985

--- rofessor's life is centeied· on·the . / \ U.S. -~~·C ,...onstitutio.. • .n t,,,....,;,' ~ · , By • jfli Jaaet Satter 1111 life. I ' Slaff Wnw • He WU boru In Chlca10 (to, too, II ii a wrlter'1 house. wu 01andler) Raymond and lived In an apart- Chandler, known for meal building In a Jewilb "'Ibe Bl& communl- Sleep, "'Ibe Long Goodbye" ly on Ille west side. His parents and hil delec:tlve were Pblllp Marlowe, from the Rualan-Poland area lived and wrote . "The there. area coamted o{. flnl ceneration Now Bernard Siecan - ~ to Americana." hll frfenda - U.. In the i. Jolla Boni In 1924, home, an ;only child, he coocentnllnc on Illa wrltJna spoke Yiddish until and studies. ~ wu 5. He jokes about En1li11i being hil second i But bil 1111'1 a world of ftcUoa. It II language. He grew up.playing ball the reality of the U.S. In Constitution. the alleys and 1treeu. Times were "11'1 the eovernlnc document of tough. When 1he nation; be could find work, his 1t'1 the most Important father wu a women drm ules­ law that mats In tllil coaotry; uld man. ,IMi USO jir'Ofmor. "It , 11u wttbltood "We llad nothlng,"-sald Sleaan. ''I the teat of lime; It ii 200 yeen old. mean, rm not kldciinl When l llad to ADd lt't IIJII ,ery relffaat to todety • 80 to Ille tchool '.Pllfll, my mother k ~ It emll llldaJ1 jat M It-nle- , bad !° ~ S5, and II WU very • ... lllellldet)' dlffi • tllat:e~•. ' c:ult. , ..J ' , Siepn'a fuclnation wtlla Ille c1ocu- s1eca • ment ,stm ~fortable, re- 1111 led to a national reputation calls, ''The last lime . a an I had an Inter­ npert an coeatltutloul law view lite thil, al t11i1 stage and an I k!Dd ol appointment' by Praldent terminated IL" But be uy, · Reagan Ille that ivth to Comtnllllail on the Bl-' a anille. "!1'1 a different world." ceateanlal of Ille U.S. Colllltutloa. He liked school, and decided on · , , de- law early. Tbe commllllon "I tbou&bl 1 had the teod- )'U Nt up to - enctea, tbe akllil I thought could be .elop and coordinate activities m- Uleful In that rounding profession." He wu al­ the bicentennial of the ways Interested In polillcal fmnm: of the Conatltotion matters, In 1787. wu president of hit blgb school 11M Su Diep ljllloo/8ro

Coadned from Page F-1 curves in toward the sb~re, the Coro­ having lhe nation governed In such a nado Islands are in the distance. way u to marimile partnenbip individual liber­ 1fhich lasted 20 years. Tbougb Siegan bu concentrated ty I think is a great accomplishment, He wu appointed research fellow in on the ConsUlution for years. ii and that's the accomplishment law ls a of the and economics at tbe University fairly short document, only 15 pages. Constilulion." of Harvard Law School in 1988-89. He "It bulcally sets up a toclety that Siegan is admita It wu a prestigious posl "I pull u Utile restraint on an indivldu­ cooeerned today about economic liberty. Pgllt it and 1ot il Tbat began my al u II consistent witb civilization, "We have protect• IICldemle career." with orderly existence. ed enormously apeec1l, press, relia-, . I think that ls ion, His major research project wu on a remarkable adlle,emenl," sexual privacy, bat we no loager SleplL said ... protect econOll)lc wblcb bad DO zoalng. • Uberties. Tbole' • pablllledff-- Bil are lbe liberties ltady was controvenlal •1 • Tbe Constitution was framed connected with in property. free said Homtoa functioned better with­ 1787. After ratification by the re­ enterprise. The court · oat zelCWII tllan if it had zoning." quired nine stales in at one lime did protect economic lib­ 1788, the gov­ erties, His laterelt In zoning bad come ernment and the first congress hut since 19:16, it bu not pro­ came tected the about via hit law practice and own­ into being In 1789. Before that, Siegan production or distribution · Ing property. "I learned tbal to fully explains, the country ol goods a nd services, the right to was run by Ar· ~tract undentand the controls on land use, tides of Confederation, with minimal for economic purpose. And one bad to go to tbe Constitution, and central authority and llttie power yet that was one of the things that I once one set lmmened in one part of over the stales. '"l'bere wu of greatest concern, lf not tbe was nothing greatest Ille c-tltuUon, it's a very attnc­ of the eort we have now, with a na­ concern ol Ille fr1men of ., tlve document for one academlc:ally tional election lor president," be the CoMlilulion," he said. oriented." said. '' A few yea rs back, Siegan wrote the Wben he decided to teach "I • tun time don't asree with certain parts of book "Economic lJberUes and the he came to the University of it as San 9riglnally lnteoded, or even Constitution." Now be ls writing one Diego. Why USO! He gestures more so u Interpreted by the Su­ about the . toward Supreme Court and the tbe view - Ille Pacific . preme ,,Collrt. But Ille basic Idea of Constitution. Solana Beach, CA San Dlegulto Citizen (Cir. W. 19,000)

Jl.llae '• P. c. a fat. 1888

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-:MS:ti{McMe&,f ' ';; :: . Nalllfid -a V~i~~- soLANA ·BEACH _:: Maria-1 McMeans of Encinitas ha·s beeaj named assistant vice- presiden i and bank counsel.. for- T~ Pines Bank's main offiC!'t at: ~ Santa Helena ·u1-Solana ~ accordin1 to Edward S. Georg.r.:1 president : · · . -. i{ In her position, she will pro-.._1 vide guidance-:on a variety of J legal, ma~~ -p.(tdaihina@Y:. ill_ the lendi:at:;...,~rte~J~e ' · served as assistant vt& pre~~ dent amt staff: attorney with ffi~ Bank of-San Dfego..:: .:~'7 ~ •· · . -1.:,1 McMeans ·-. received. heii-~ bachelor's degree from the ~ ~ versity· of California-;- Irvine-·a~ . == ... ~~----: __ -~-... ~ ( ''• ,,, . : _, .._ ,, ','"·" r•, - ' • ~~ <:!~.~!..'!:2 .. ~ the Lot Ancel,. Bon,..,nturo ~?..!!t~~~!~~Hockett, who pn,ctm cl,), • at .. ,hall Set, ~12'~.?,e!!~cizo(the 8an "A Woy Out: GeMral Nuclear • Mero inl'ormation it tvail- · ""1nben IPJ'ia t1nM ror meotic and per■onal i""'1 law; H•I. A-iatton. tlemenL" Don B,_r 1llhe OOlco of,. Diep Coant)' Ber Marilyn Huff, put club ~ 1blehm , 11, • • • ' bar, 551,· ,• Toaell fo«baD llutt. Oct. at Gray, Cary, Arnet I, Bar llalatlona, otate Yld Alt, rounding partner of and partner . ·_--: · with pa• ochedaled on S.tani-.r D ■ P•, • paat Fnu.lla9t.,SanFtanci.co,94J02 Alt, Brewer & Kincannon, Frye; and Chrutlne ... morninp. And the fflh Annual, Saxon, at •· , • • • · low at the club preoident and partner ; P-al ia Oct. 14 at Slnfl"II ia teochin1 bu1ir••• . San DI• at~ Walnwri1bt'"" Golr . A gnduite of nin~•. Engotrand & Henri"-i Hillo, check-in time 11 o.m, UCSD Exten1ion ■ ra Jr. or Procopio, Cory, · ~ Pi,go Law Judith a. Hl~m•an hM joined Plohh "perennial aolf Unlvenity ? black ·:·' Tho II.aw bar'• Eotale Pl..... Mtod ...... with Judge clal Law League of Americo .Ind pbotoo with their ' ' cludtn1 pri ..la dinner In«, Truat and Prollata IAw and while Goodman Nit­ the California A910Cietion of Thrill 11_..,.,, tho Tnnocripl ' Gil Haroloon: Tho Sectlo,a !1 sponeoring on 111-doy re/- (' 'Thia one coot■ ■ nd Loans. that It cannot ,uanntee . picken Special &emin11r on the UM or compUU!l'tl ia nwr,t«. • lot more 'ch ■ I • ·.·:- 1- but provldee theoe are•• of law. The -ion pub/ic,tionofallpholca. len,ea' and more 'appeal.' lntludet •• !? •.,,,.., mootina with Ted Todd ... no no verdict."~ tn,phiee, no dinner, Attorney Ronald P. Albert, Bonanza ("Na and The Bartolotta 1983 rraduer. of Boalt Hall, h .. no 10ld. ") diBDlt', no plf, npened an oflico al 525 B SI., Union . . . Son Bank Building, Site 2200, i....,... Cl■ b An~ · Wine Die,co. He will practice ci•il find ad ~ 8-ption lo oet ror ron,mercial litigation, emphuiz­ 11:30-7 p.m. Oct. II at Gny, Cory, ing real eallte and bonkrupley low & Frye, 401 B St., 17th Ooor. and debt o,llection. 'The Pociric Arnet Ronald Albert Honored ,.-. will be judpo D11VldAlt DeRCh reeident WM • Ulw Review Patrida Benke, Inn• Gonuln, editor and on the Moot Court boerd ' U.. G ■ J-8chall, Richard Hur. otBooll. ,-,., Sao ■ 11 Haruenor and throe WDU• ■1 Mudd and CommiMlonor Lawyen Club lo end°""ng the Unda Cabulon1. of it.a memben for election to ♦ •• San Dio(O County Bar "-ociotion Colin Wied, • former prewidenl of Jhe San Diogo County Bar A8!10- SANDIEG01 cl■tion, ••• sworn in at the St.Ate Bar con•ention to eerve a three­ year term on the B■ r 't Board of BARASSN. ao-non. San DletroCwntJ J-Pokorny, the lmmedlola R ■ r A111oclatlon •Ice pre.ident of the Colifor­ p■ot !'1,oetinp, Oct. U nia Young Lawyon ANOCiolion, wu 1l10 norn in for • one-ye.;. J Thundoy,Octoher3 term on the board u the CYLA ■ I Com'!llttee ...... -ntative. , llfedlcal!Lef noon, Conferenffl Room, Bar Office In odclition Superior Court Judge FamUy Law Section - noon, The William Todd Jr. and Municipal Wine Conffeclion Re1taurant., Courl Judge Ronald Domnlb Speaker: Murry Bloom, Concilli•­ were owom in u member■ of the RoMrt Wood• receiv­ Attorney lion Cow<, Subject: "Mediotion ·necutiv1 board of' the Californio e l!or'• Pro Bono BeMct! ed th and the Court Sy,tem - Con We Jud,ea AIIOdotlH and Deputy for volunteering up to 40 Aword E,•er Get lo He■ri n1? " , Dlotrict Attorney Bonnie a year of legn I i,ervicea to the ) houNJ ■l Court Committee - look the oath u ■ mem­ in San Di•go. • Foder Damaal1 VFW poot noon, Executive Hotel, Board ber . of the Boo.rd of Directono of ... ot.lorney Vlrclnla Room CYLA. S•n Diego be among the 8J)08kero Friday, Ocu,ber ~ All were IWOro in by Chier Ju• Neloon will el the California Tri•I Lawyero Attomey/Re oll<>r Cornmltte,, lice Roee Bird. Luce, ForwArd, •• ♦' AtulOC'iation convention Nov. 9 at nnnn, officee of ence ..... lh• Sh•nlon Palace Hotel, Son H1milt.Qn and Scrippe, Confer Fnmci8CO. F. Lee Bail'!y and Ri ch. Room. Commlttff - • ■ rd "Racehorse" HRyne1 (who Appellate Court 8ar Office didn't mAke the elate bar ronven­ noon, Cnnference Room , 8 tion in Stln Diego becauite of an in­ Tue.day, October - noon', jury I ore 1100 ocheduled to appear. T11.x ■tlon Law Section Club, Seminan will include crimln,1 Varsity Room, Unive"'ity Rm trifll p1111ychology , crOM-examina­ Spe,.ker: John Vrannfl, Pn>gT proo­ tion, legi 11 l11tion, diBCovery, jury Manager of Coliro Amneoty, ­ p eraua1ion and wrongful ently Monager of Compliance De di ochafJI". velopment Section, Subject: "Poot AmneetyfEnforC'ement l11uel!II Luce, Forword, Hamilton & Criminal lnvertl11tiona". Sc"fi°p'p8 'i~o\Jnct't' fl new partner: Worllen Compen1alton Lew Rnhf'rt J. Oarh,nn Jr., former Rtttlon - nonn , Lounp Room, p11rtner in Durh'flm & Durham: and Unlvenrlty Club Mlchael L Jeni,en and Military U ■ IIM>n Committee - ■l'"'Xiatea Office Fn1nne M. F1cara, rormer E9COn­ noon, Confen,nce'Room , Bar didn aNriltant city attorney. WednHClay, October 8 ♦ • • lmml,rotlon Law Sectton LaW)'en Alliance ror Nacleor noon, The Wine Connection Section Arm ■ Control ie hooting I brook -) Ronkraptcy Law fa•t •peech by retired · Admin1l noon, National Un l•er ■ ity, Noel Gayler al 8 a.m. Oct. 9 in tho Speaker. Victor A, Viloplono, : Californlo W...tern School o( Law Gray, Cary, Ame■ & Frye, Subject faculty reading room, 360 Cedar "Motion, for Relleffrom ~y" Greenberg Paul Grccnbcra bu been ap­ pointed to vice president/cor­ porate bankina at La Jolla Bank and Trust Company. He will specializ,c in coor­ dinating the bank's full ranae of corporate bakins services for ' small to medium: ,izcd companies. Pn,,ious!y, Grecobcrs worud for Bank of America in lcndmc; fLIWlc:ial services and credit' administration., He holds a bachelor's~ 1G buineu adminisuatioa from Wurun,toa University ia Jolla advcrn.­ depee ilt Thygerson Open· solf tournament i• Dooiina,' wbo joined La Jolla and secunues markctioa with the last four years. Schwartz man has joined La Lo111 and a muter's February 1986. Pacil'ic from Loan America Mor- Wall Sucet firms in the East and previously was a mari ne ing and public relations firm I(.,., ' business administration from tlk La Jollan Kenneth J. Thyacr- senior vic

(Cir. O. 12i •"""'

from V\iishington (letter museum director's praise Diego, stirs James M. for San law in Commerce Department erhibit, scheduled Diego who formerly practiced native and Ansel Adams tomorrow night at a fund- to Waters, 30, a San Dieg~ I f in Washington." rious role Sao D_iego, to be U.S. ambassador oT the_USD Law ~ raise in the of social prominence she _coordinated to . 1981 graduate Much of his work was centered ,,,did not n_iake the raising ball the Middle East state of Qatar appointed special Osborne na- . The 'Y,ilsons, alas for Mend1an House, a non- Cairo who &bool, has been By William West - Yosemite and Sequoia , which mcludes money Ghougassian, a native of Malcolm Bal- Service list of Superstars that helps . newly French, assistant to Secretary Copley News tional parks, the rugged Northern , the B_ushes pro!it orga~zation s~ks Arabic, Armenian, previously was legal Tribune Ari- the likes ?f -~e ~eagans diplomats adJust to direc- drige. Waters Special to The coast, the deserts of But ~e W1lsons ~mved foreipi Italian and Spanish, has been Republican ... Steve Brezzo, California set and the Tip O Neills. Umted States. Yemen counsel for the National COMING SOON and New Mexico - but the a farrly h~vy- life ID the tor of the Peace Corps in the . the San Diego Museum of zona to ar~ neve:theless o~ Congressional Committee director of Includes works from Alaska mcludes Cabmet Arab Republic since 1982. job will ntake the 75 Ansel Adams weight list that * require Sen- The $53,000-a-year Art, scanned Maine. Baker, Malcolm * * The nomination will department's liaison to in an exhibit that prem- piece in the members James Waters the photographs The most important Block and Caspar ate confirmation. House and olber federal here tonight and comes to San to Brezzo, is Bal_drige, John MO VIN' ON UP. . . President the White ieres exhibition, according only seven othe~ sena- Gbou- * * * .. He also will conduct spe- Feb. 22 - and verily bubbled of Half ~me," a Wemberger, will nominate Joseph agencies / Diego ."Monolith, the Face two other erstwhile ~n Reagan of for Baldrige. . ID 1965 to_rs, and · gassian, 41, an assistant professor . . And at the cial studies /". over . . . large print Adams developed Attorney General Edwm of Sao COMMERCE AIDE. Adams' work, be said, is "epic he shot of the sheer D1egans, philosophy at the University • · . .. almost relig- from a negative and bis ~ife, ~rsula. romantic ... poetic wall ~ Yosemite in t_he M~ when we got mountain cons1d- 'I Jumped nght m ious." , winter of 1927. It IS generally are times when I look , the museum set, titled . here, but there Indeed is ered his first masterpiece bailing out," Ursula l Adams: Classic Images," ," Brezzo forward lo "Anse get- "Ansel Adams' signature quoted as saying in refer- unquestionably impressive. And files a scene and Meese is of said, "is that be tirthe D.C. social circuit. ting it for the San Diego Museum it techmcally." ence of a coup. . manipulates a , Art marks something Indeed, Adams, who was also we have an exhibition com­ ' * "Anytime concert-quality pianist, often the national attention and to a * * that bas pared the photographic negative ENTERTAIN YOU ... It's that this has, it is terrific for to a per- LET ME scope be musical score, and the print to see bow Wilson, never Diego," Brezzo said. "It will not bard Sao formance. as much of a party guy in his great fun for the city." magic is perhaps known selected by That dark-room San Diego days, made the Washing­ The photographs were in "Monolith," but it is At a party - years before bis most evident . ton list of social elite. Adams in the five there on other works, as well posh J.W. Mar­ 22, 1984, to represent 'clearly and Tuesday night at the death on April "He bad such ap eye for scope money for the The set is "autobio- 't help riott Hotel to raise bis best work. ," Brezzo said. "You can the Republican Na­ in that it spans bis career. detail overseas arm of graphical" but be moved." · , several of the augmented by a group of rarely tional Committee It is and and wives put on a skit deal­ large images, mural prints senators the seen with a budget problem in screens loaned by the photographer's ing others. * * * Land of Oi , widow, Virginia, and YELLOW BRICK ROAD ... of the Cow­ was made possible THE U.S. Wilson played the role The exhibition The San Diego mayor-turned Sen. Ted Stevens of from Pacific Telesis, a · hlmself. ardly Lion, while by a grant senator is doing all right for a Straw Man and Sen. telecommunica­ Washington Dos­ Alaska played California-based The latest edition of Thurmond of South Carolina tions corporation. The first-ever high-society maga­ Strom Gallery of sier, the capital's Pop, the.Magic Dragon. Gayle showing is at the National Wilson and bis wife, played a girl zine, included Wilson had a starring role as Art here. the "A" list of its first col­ preservationist, Gayle, on named Dorothy. Adams, a leading of the Social 400, a list the on a more se- best-known photogra­ lection Gayle Wilson takes is perhaps the magazine said is "a' must indic~tion pher of the American landscape. J \ c.:;?iera S:hmi~t .of La Jolla has · been appointed. public airector of relations at t niversity San Diego. Schmitt of of will m charge the university's speakers and neighborhood bureau program. ---- /usi>,.~UC Ri .d . Vi II b. II A~ e:ht kills and ve:!h i:p:ed i~ re~!d eight assists, leading the U~- :8-3. ( Gina Trapletti had six side women's v9lleyball team to kills and 15-10, a eight digs for the Toreros (0-12) 15-6, 15-6 nonleague win USD . Friday had to forfeit its three wins of over the Univ~ity of San · the D~t USD. Melanie season earlier in the week, Jones aaded when one of its players I seven was ruled kills and six blocks for UCR, academically ineligible. · _ . losing' litical rookies a~e K, -- thank you BJ 0.. DaYII · "Il wu ...... · clear two neb before the TlleJ l!lld tbatl didn't have crlu-c:rosaed San Dleco ■ chance," Sim- c-ty a JUI' 1D0111 said ID Illa neat office ago, rookie polltlclam Uni'!!litJ at the ,_. ID I lud oC San Diego of liUla. , . where law ICbool, nt, llood on street iii, iilciA!i. T bad DO cornen ID 0e- TblDp lllllliona.l tober'a lll'llillnc tllat I had hoped would beat, huntlnc for a pen, hap, band to tllaa. Tbey called didn't Bat we were determined ,_ DeWI coo- not to wblinper ! reporten wOllld llllaa. or to tarn tall and to l'8llllilld 111eJ mue I pd u 1bow1ng la -..-. M pledcw u paaible." _, .. ol ~ WU pnimia o( lllppOl't tram defeated ID tbe 4111 baaorable people District by Rep. Bllf [RftrJ, evaporated wltll publlcaa, I Re­ tbe • ol political by a 2-to-1 1111J11D. Now wiDdL Simmoal, 1M __._, Mmpai,D • twiner Jadp wbo blllGa totally blllid; paaed ii ad aalorfal t • ,llid:eP and tboaght arw 1111d an, bu to tbat srim Taelda7 111111111 1M llll!IIIO- Nov. llipt of rill. Bob ,Sbr-. Dml I, 1984, wllen be at bl 1111 car N.illClmpllell Galllrle, wltll 1111 wile and ud Lola llmlpu-eJI lllteoed lo tbe elec­ tloas renltl e11 Km>O .. • ·• wn• -1 radio . ilad doblc 4alte pea,1e "'11lt.,; a1 ftll, tllant JOB. talnly 111a defeat •• cer- !acb raa for lleYutatlng. I felt Coacr- ID San lnveaton ute tllcse D11ao c-tJ lat,_.., ID J. David wllen Ibey IUIIIII Badl •to leaned ~'t __._.. Ill a tlnmlpln& de- · ptnc Id an teal their ~ bec:t. Everything lost• ,was -i bmt DO regret, abolt . U.. -, apendlac The lone Republican ar the time,• Q•~ a Neklng a 1, congnaional Nit, Neill recalled 1111 week. "It CaJnpbell, - aat1ac !ffllelllbend:October _"thine, erallllltalia-,Forlla&Dll'Wto be• parta(ae.,,. ~~~th al ame, ,oarapbdoal ·r-- ... ,._Dlllrtct.~!1:J" ~ mue illaa:- told - It-a llll I flat oat u7 OOP offlclala c>allirle: lloaor." . Wuhiaplll ID i.tlit, RepalllicQ...llep: tlrleted tllat Illa WU not an are& / o.. llllllllrlD for national llelp. Tbe proot Ill ~ Dlltrict Tbe SID Dill'~ by a_.. al that w.wbea President Huls J.11>.I marp1. campalped Reagan David Guthrie Loll Rm11111nJt pk$A111 Ill S.. Diego and Camp- at a Co1i11 bell, wllo lllillolD a Ba1Joa A.... 1faf ID a croc-, ltOre, __...., aterJ 11111 WU not iavlt8II day, in de9ert 1 1111 .,..., ,_. to lbue Ille stage the \~g Ult sun icall llll' ti alt11oqllllallleak GOP burn the politics draining." aald Humphreys ID-llilld Ollllpalp. candidates away. Humphreys had . "I were. • went home and "ha been up very urlJ in tbe "Wlla I -1111ed d a good cry as Inc and mont­ to nm far Con- "We much from relief worked anW late at night bad · difficulty In rahing u anytlllDg. • Emotionally =a;,•pmllege,•abe "Within 24 boun, !be disappoint , It wa bard "--we !U money • knew wha~ 11J Ille OdeNr, alll! amey ii credlblll!J," ment wu gone," aald the outcome WII It ClmpbeD AM. pGWlnc ~ who be. '1'11111 eolng to a prt,llefa.• . 11pr • Nlacra of returned to wwt I got ap tbe DIil marniDC ._..._.. 1nto·re.p of mra-ttroac a1mmt Immediate- and Rep. Ron Paek- fee. cof. ly, ''There WU the pbone w1111't rin&lac, ard, 11111 "So we llld DO delusions positive joy that all I toot bJ a S-to-1 labdlllde. of an the wort lnvol,ed ii easy unW tlle (Cllrlltmu) "&ldlll-...W -.y win. Ola eleetloa wu over and I boll- bltt1el all tile WllJ, nlcbt. I maln- could days..• • Wlils--, taJned an -Uoaal caution go,hack to a normal living llld llll8ble to pt-. tbroa&b­ C&mpbell ." Interestingly, none pad tram Gllltlleeftlllq." took a day off and alJo of the four have tile,._ and natlmw par- When ,went back to lost their spirit for political u. .,.. and .. - It wu over, be bad loot bis Alpha Beta Job, and combat IGctl _,,., - tlle Democratic to finding bis co-workers all would run again, alllloqb ,...... fom' lledllinl Rep. Jim Batel illDOlt sympathetic necessarily not mtdllatll by three to one. to wha_t be had been throup. for Coner-, ader cer­ taw 811 ca- - onr recognized "They lain cln:umstancea. befllw It - Finally, wbea It wu over, I wu 110111e011e wllo Bat tbeJ are time to tan GIil Ille the four done somethlDc bad smarter having left ._11111 IDllnc candidates about 0 their novice SU· \od: Ille campalp _._. felt a 9eDII! of ac­ raiber his convictions tus wlth 1be ~ complisbment at flllllblng than just complaining, debris of their lint dClar far Ille !alt a bard job u1d " be palgns. carn­ time. more than bart. . Gatbrle spent a few "It bad been emotionally and pllys- See LOSERS oa Pap A· ' . , LOs"ers: A yeat lat~~, 3Il is .OK ' I had _al'iVays wanted to run for Continued from A-3 ;;Z.,q ~~orking class and it hurt h~ chances . But among his fellow Rep_ublicans. Congress." . , ·• ' also made loans to his 11 promises, "It did make me angry. I was not Simmons Promises, monetary personal account I would want support in the same social element as many campaign from his are dirt cheap. although he out-raised all other front," said Campbell. "I was not Republicans in leadership and I and up challengers, he found that a $140,000 wise to all of the political machinery thought, perhaps naively, that differ- campaign chest wasn't enough. "Di- 1 involved." ences in social station would not "more have an impact," he said: "It made ·rect mailing, issue surveys, comput­ Guthrie said he has become that were active in me more realistic. Those in higher er targeting, finding things pragmatic" but remains anti-Lowery were politics. stations in life seem to receive more pro-Simmons and local Democratic expensive and we just didn't Simmons may resign from the benefits from the apparatus than the very have the money," be said. Democratic Central Committee but average working American." Even will remain active in such topics as so, he remains staun_chly Republican ran a low-budget cam­ .. Campbell court reform and anti-nuclear issues. and endorses President Reagan and Humphreys ran a shoe- · ! Democrats . paign "There are just so many hours in a Simmons said local string effort that actually ended. up day to divide up," he said. gave of themselves "full measure" to final check was a me in the black. Her · Ca,mpbell, who works nights, reads his campaign. ''The state .' .. left gift to· the North Shore Demo­ I had certain $1,100 ( and studies and looks forward to a rather bitter. I believed cratic Club. The checkbook balanced time when he can spend more eve- commitments and wound up wasting now wor at Claire­ he sal'd. at zero and she ning hours at meetings. Humphreys, a lot of time and energy," moot Hospital as directo{ of volun­ who is "making money for a change," ''That extends to the national party while holding down sev­ no help teer services is turning more toward the non~par- as well. There was virtually eral semi-political board positions. tisan politics of local government in from ~e Democ!"clti.c.(~on.gr~9nal) North County. Campaign Comm1ttee. That n~ to Each felt the media had been fair, She still recalls the problems of · be changed." • ~- overall, but was difficult to deal partisan races and bristfes when · All three Democrats· felt 'the with. "It is impossible to be objective talking of being jilted by the state Reagan landslide victory over Dem­ as a candidate. ,Any criticism is and national party bigwigs. ocratic nominee Walter Mondale viewed as an attack," said Simmons. ''We were all embittered to some touched their own races. But he remains angry that "no inves­ degree ... the most frustrating thing "To the extent the national c~­ tigating reporter was willing to look in the campaign was asking things of paign falls on its face, I lose," said into the material" he laid out about the lQCal, state and national par:ttes Guthrie. "I was still out putting up . the campaign record of Lowery. and not getting them," she said, "We posters at 6 p.m. when we learned "Sure, I. thought they were unfair. No were strung along, maybe help is that Mondale was about to give up." reporter was ever interested on get­ coming. There were so many small Money - or the lack of it - was a ting answers from 'Lowery on any of things that they could have done that common problem. the questions." ." Guthrie personally pumped in half didn't cost money feels they did as Just as Humphreys felt snubbed by of the $17,000 raised for his cam­ Each candidate as possible, · probably better women's groups at the Democratic paign. "I didn't end up broke," said good in San Francis- the computer consultant, who also than expected, against the heavily National Convention were dis­ felt that a class distinc- teaches at the Western Sierra Law favored incumbents. They co, Campbell , but . enjoyed it. tion existed between the elite and the --~hool "A house is what I didn't buy. appointed • ·, I ~ Construction has btgun .on the $9 ,million student center at theJJniveI=- \ :lfty of San Diego.,, The .~wo-story 'Duildiorwm provide for 74,000 \ lquare feet of space for student ser­ vices and recreation, 'including ad­ ministrative f offices, lounges; meet­ \ ing rooms, a 400-seat dining room and facilities for publication O( the dni~ersity's newspaper. Architects posber/l)rew/Walson/Ferguson de­ signed the project and Trepte Con­ $ruction Co. is the general cpntrac- l tor. Construction will be~.c~~,let~ lo _October~~ _1986~ :l.:o..1!J?,_/: .I ~ f') H elmsinen raised some cool cash By Janet Sutter Oct 19. Tbe wineries represented Spinoi"fs StaJr Writer Spindrift wm be DeLoach, Beringer. Cbateau Actor Buu_ess Meredith wu Ste. Michelle and Fetzer. Tbe place SL Germaine AaxlliarJ ol tbe Child Abuse Preventioo Foundation bugging a penguiii''tl,iollier mgbl loon; a private tour of Joan Em­ wm be the James Hubbell-

Laura Anne Howe and Gregory Charles Alcorn were married at Point Loma Pres~yterian Church on Aug. 10. The bride, who received de­ grees from UC Davis and UC San Francisco, is a law student at the University of San Diego School of 1 Law. She is the daughter of Gerald and Elsie Howe of San Diego. The bridegroom, son of James and Judy !\lcorn of Del Mar, is a graduate of :he University of Utah. He also is a .aw student at the :.aw. -USD -School--- of New judge in Vista VISTA - William Dra~ ~ ~eputy district attorney and former Marine, became a municipal court judge here during ceremonies Friday. Draper, 50, was appointed to the position by Gov . George Duekmejian and sworn in by the presiding Vista Municipal Court Judge Victor E. Ramirez. Draper, a 1966 graduate of the UnivEU:§ity of Sal!, Diego Law Sch~gin his duties as judge at the Vista courttrouse on Oct. 21. He was a deputy district attorney for seven years before his appointment. For two years, Draper served in the district attorney's appellate division before moving to the Vista courthouse. Draper was in the Marines for 21 years before he retired from the service seven years ago. San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

eve arvey, Monsignor Rich­ ard Duncanson, and developer Harry Summers have been ap­ pointed to the usp Board of Trust- I ees. Each will serve three-year terms and will bring the tot~ of board membE'rs to 33. ~::::,_,..., * * * ~ 5 , a Vista ;.,---William Draper Jr., 1978, deputy distnrei'~f/o~~ince to the has been appointed Court by Gov. George Municipal was Deukmejian. The appointment replaces announced Friday. Draper who had Judge Zalman Scherer, Superior been elevated to the from Court. Draper graduated 95_7, _earned Dartmouth Colle_g~ in (Continued on P. ge 6A) 1I\1s-yitro prOcess moves By Mary McGrath to doctors' nmes staff wnter offices debate. There WALNUT CREEK is no human concepti (the fertilized - Seven years after the first outside the egg) n1be baby was test• body, only the egg and the sperm," born, streamlined medical procedures Zom said are moving the operation out of the hospital and Gary Jones, the doctor's office into a Ph.D. philosopher and auth . medical ethics ority on And it is now possible at the University of Sao Diegn. for fluids containing the egg some people object said and sperm to be mixed to in film fertilization because and immediately replaced in the believe the embryo they woman, so conception is a human being from the moment can take place in the womb rath· of conception. er than the glass petri Creating it outside the womb and dish - the so-called test tube serting it is wrong, rein­ which gave the babies their they argue, since it resultrm preg­ nickname. nancy only about 20 This process could change percent of the time. the foundation of ethical "You don't hear debate over in vitro fertilization, much about the concepti that do~•t which some poeple ob­ make it To the Catholic ject to because the embryo is Church these are human be­ created outside the moth­ ipgs, so this is at least er's womb. reckless homicide," Jones said. Another But these arguments have force new procedure allows doctors only if in vitro fertil­ rather to use local ization leads to a higher rate of failure than general anesthesia while ception, than natural con­ woman's retrieving the Jones said. And this is not eggs, making the operation possible clear. tor's office in a doc­ The body naturally selects out and . percent destroys about 75 The procedures of all fertilized eggs before one reduce the cost of an in vitro womb attaches to the nancy from about preg­ and a pregnancy begins, he said $5,000 to between $4,000 and . Both procedures $4.500. In vitro laboratories store frozen are available at the John the embryos to use if morial Hosp Muir Me­ first transfer does not work. John ital In Vitro Fertilization Program has Muir's program ing to doctors , accord­ reinserted two into patients, but at the hospital. a pregnancy, neither resulted in Five children have Zorn said. been born through the program, The transfer which is less than two procedure reduces the cost of years old, and a Concord woman fertilization to in vitro is pregnant with test-tube less than $4,000, since there is no triplets. tory charge and labora­ If the pregnancy is no doctor's fee for the reinsertion carried to term, it will be the first The procedure . birth of triplets in the cannot be performed on hospital's 20-year history. blocked Fallopian women with The woman, who tubes, but offers hope for asked the hospital to withhold her low sperm counts men with name, has blocked Fallopian . tubes and struggled with Another new infertility for 10 years technique simplifying in vitro for . women is transvesical some She underwent in vitro aspiration, a 2-year-old fertilization in August, and of removjng eggs method seven weeks later an from the womb. ultrasound exam found the three heart beats and three sacs. The conventional method involves "She caJJed inserting a device was, to say the least, speechless GLENN a laparoscope through the . We had al­ ZORN, director of the in v Time, photo/Alan Gn,th woman's navel and ready told her there was more itro fertilization program at Joh filling the stomach with carbon than one because she The hospital n Muir Hospital, sits in his laboratory dioxide, so the ovaries looked so big. At first she said, hopes to achieve another . can be seen. • 'How am I going to take month when first this sperm while the woman care of all these children?' But it performs a Gamete intra-Fallopian is still on the operating table A needle then she talked to her transfer. The tube The sperm and eggs . with a suction device is husband and they are already procedure is so new there have are reinserted at once into the laparoscope inserted through planning everything. It 10 published been only uterus, and fertilization the and guided into the ovaries was a bit of a shock," said accounts worldwide of most likely takes place inside tion . The suc­ Dr. Stephen Weinstein, her achieved pregnancies the womb, rather device removes fluid containing the Walnut Creek obstetrician. through it. than in the glass petri dish, eggs. With Glenn Zorn, an embryologist, said The eggs are then She is expected to deliver this technique, eggs are removed who is scientific director taken to the lab and fertilized in May. woman's from the of the in vitro glass petri dish in a ovaries and mixed in solution with laboratory. with the male's sperm. They are the male's "It could change serted in the woman rein­ some of the conditions of ethical 72 hours later, after the embryos have undergone ~veral cell divisions. ___ SaltDt.go, f$o11Dtego

/Gulls' hockey coach • :?,95'§ • k 1s warming to tas If he Isn't already, Brad Buelow may have to become the best sales­ man this side of the Canadian border. Colleges How else Is he going to talk San Diegans into leaving the great out­ Rick Hazeltine doors and silting in an ice rink to watch college hockey? banks, Alaska-Anchorage, Northern "I guess I really like challenges,'' Arizona, Air Force and the said Universi-' Buetow, who is starting his first ty of Arizona (which has a season club team) ' as USIU's coach. "You cer­ as possible league members. tainly learn here the meaning of the At least there's one word area in which challenge." Buetow doesn't have to worr Buetow's y about : challenge starts Friday a hard sell - recruiting. "Not when only the Gulls travel to play No. 2- the weather, but the quality of ranked Minnesota-Duluth life . in a two­ and the town," Buetow said about re-· game series. The Gulls' home opener cruiting pluses. isn't until Nov. • 29 against Northern "I called back to Minnesota yester- · Arizona at the Mira Mesa House of day and it was snowing Ice ,'' he s aid. . "We'd be runr,ing hills Challenges in the sn 9,w. are nothing new to right now instead of running along · Buetow. He's the gliy who replaced the beach like we do here." : Herb Brooks as coach at the Univer­ sity of Minnesota . Remember Brooks? He coached the U.S. team to VOLLEYBALL - USIU's Erin · the gold medal in the 1980 Winter Tomblin was named the West Coast r Olympics Athletic Association I at Lake Placid, N.Y. 's voll ey ball Buetow compiled a 171-75-7 record player of the week. Tomblin, a fresh-· in seven seasons at Minnesota and man from Huntington Beach, led the · won three Big Ten Conference and Gulls to wins over Boise Stale and two Western Collegiate Hockey Asso­ U~Q..!illLJI .491 setting percentage ciation championships. He twice was ijiercent of sets that result in kills) in named WCHA coach of the year. And the two matches .. . USD has had to last year Minnesota fired him. He forfeit its three wins because of an says he still doesn't know why. academically ineligible player, a Like any good salesman, Buetow community college transfer student. has Caith in his product. The Toreras now are 0-13 ... San "It's a good hockey area out here,'' Diego-area volleyball teams have es­ he said. "There are a lot of closet tablished themselves as the premier hockey fans out here. We're just blockers in the nation. Despite their trying to rebuild on that a bit with a record, the Toreras are ranked No. I quality Division I team." in the nation with a 6.8 blocks-per­ The Gulls are 11-54-4 over the past game average. San Diego Slate is No. two years. Well, Buetow said he liked 2 at 6.4 . .. The Aztecs will try to end challenges. their losing streak at four when they "We have a young team," Buetow compete in the 18th National Invita­ said. "We're primarily sophomores. tional Volleyball Tournament, which but we're going to be exciting to starts Thursday al UCLA's Paul ey watch. We have limited talent as a Pavilion. The Aztecs will pl ay team. but I think by the end of the Lamar, Oregon and Cal Poly-Sa n year we will be a good team." Luis Obispo, which defeated SDSU in USIU's top offensive threats are five sets last week, in pool play. center Kevin Poirier of Vernon, Brit­ ish Columbia, who led the Gulls with TRITONS STAY UNBEATEN 18 goals and 20 assists last season, The UCSD men 's soccer team and wing , Doug Hannesson of Lang­ ranked No. 3 in the nation and No. I ley, 8.C., who had 10 goals and 17 in the Far West among NCAA assis Divi­ ts. sion III schools, won four match As part es of his rebuilding plan, Bue­ last week to Improve its record to 14- tow is working on getting two things .0. be believes are Important for USIU Tritons goalie Alberto Gomez hockey (Mt. - an on-campus rink and a Carmel High) has allowed just thr league in ee which to play. goals, two of them to Division I The rink is "moving along,"_ and teams (USIU and UC-Irvine) _the . Occi­ league is in the talking stages. dental scored the third, on an Buetow "own mentioned Alaska-Fair- goal." / ~ - ... .,1:1 \~ ·:t--,i;•. ~ .. r· , , ...... :-.: ... ~·· . .;"41"' ·•·. ·~111t: , ... 94?~ Superior Court's Senior Judge Says Farewell Standarda, 656 Franklin SL, Al\

lilt, ,u,

South African violence caused by apartheid ~~~ e_xami~ed tomorrow at ~;t;Jir' discussion sponsored by the World Affairs Council at 7_p.m . in the Manchest­ er Conference Center at.1!§.P.Jx­ perts on the panel will be Anthony Ngubo, born and raised in South Africa and now a professor of soci­ ology at Mira Costa College; former U.S. Ambassador to Tan­ zania, Richard Viets; attorney Paul Kerkstra, author of a study on the economic and political effects of a lJN proposed system of sanctions on South Africa; and UCSD politi­ cal science professor Arend Li­ jphart. Panel moderator will be retired senior U.S. diplomat C. Ar­ thur Borg. * * * BAROQUE ENSEMBLE : The Univ~sjty Qf San Diego offers the Schuster Baroque Ensemble playmg instruments of tl)e period on Oct. 31. In- , formation: 260-4714. ;;2'1 .5 ':) / • • • . The San Dieg9 McLuhan · Distinguisheq;dfi\'aer A wards will be prese~ov. 14 to 10 outstanding educators fom San Diego and Imperial counties at the Manchester Conference Center at USD. The awards, $1,000 each, : ~Ii be presented to winners from . elementary, secondary, public and private shocils. In addition, a grant of $500 will be made to each in­ stitution represented. Presenters will include Mrs. Corinne McLuhan, USD President Dr. Ar­ thur Hughes, California State Board of Education President Sandee Boe~, Chamber President Lee Grissom and Cubic Chairman Walter Zable. olumbus Day Parade Will Salute ~avy ~ ..; <:, By DEBORAH MOORS, Time, Staff Writer High-stepping horses, clowns and Spaln's "Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand" will march through downtown San Diego on Saturday in the 17th annual Co­ lumbus Day Parade. The parade, whose theme Is "A Salute to the U.S. Navy," will have more than 125 units, including floats, bands, equestrian units, drill teams and baton twirlers, who will follow the 1.5 -mile route on Broad­ W~Y. [rom 9th Avenue to Columbia Stl'Jiet. It begins at 11 a.m. J:.dditlons to this year's parade include the Al Bahr Shriners, radio announcers from KFMB -FM, and the Ocean Beach Geriatric Surf Club and Precision Marching Drill Team. Many area high school bands will participate in the parade competi­ tion. They include 1985 Rose Pa­ rade representative Patrick Henry as well as Helix. Mt. Miguel, Carls­ bad, Escondido, Orange Glen, Montgomery and Granite Hills. 1'he grand marshal is Johnny Seven, a writer. producer. director and actor. Seven was a regular in the TV series "Ironsides" and has made guest appearances on "Police Woman," "The Virginian," "Gun­ emoke" and other shows. The queen or the parade is Christina Adamo, an 18-year-old student at the Unive~r San Diego and a member of the United l~erican Assn. The association, sponsor of the parade, is also honoring the Italian American of the Year, Carmen Esposito, a 52 -year-old recording secretary for the association. Other· events during the week­ end in celebration of Columbus Day are a ball at the Sheraton Harbor Island West on Saturday night and a special Mass on Sunday. The ball begins with cocktails at 6:30 p.m. and continues with dinner and dancing with music by Kasmir. The solemn high Mass at noon Sunday will be at Our Lady of the Rosary Church, 1659 Columbia St. In obse.rvance of the holiday, ¥?deral and municipal courts will be closed Monday, but city and county administrative offices will be open. Most banks will bl' closed. - enneth~land, co-author of the 1983 er "The One- Minute M , · will speak at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 18 at USD on how to 1 apply the one-mlhute manager concept. A wine and cheese recep­ tion will precede the seminar at 6. Registration is $15 for the talk for $40 for the three-seminar series that will feature Marjorie Hansen Shaevitz, author of "The Super­ woman Syndrome" and Morton Shaevitz discussing men's responses to superwomen on Oct. 24, and Carl Karcher, founder of Carl's Jr. Restaurants, discussing how he parlayed his $!!26 hot dog stand into the largest privately owned restaurant chain in the U.S., on Nov. 18. ~ *** .,,..., San Diego, CA an Diego Co.) Tranac

Municlpal_~~dge Rich• ard Haden,~~elevated to the Superior Court by Gov. George Deukmejian, filling a seat vacated when Judge Daniel Kremer was appointed to the Fourth District Court of Appeal. Haden was ap­ pointed to the bench in 1983 by Deukmejian, after being a deputy state attorney general for eight years. He is a former county pro­ secutors' law clerk and earned his ... law degree from.JJSD iD 1974. A l (Continued on Pagt 6AJ •

(Continued{~:~ Superior Court '}lp-'earns $77,129 a year. ./ _.,,,.-- . . . ./ 2 Superior Court judges~ appointed -~½ By a staff writer d SACRAMENTO - Gov. Deuk­ mejian has filled two San Diego Su­ perior Court vacancies with the ap­ pointments of Municipal Court judg­ es Franklin J. Mitchell Jr. and J. Richard Haden. Mitchell, 48; of Vista, and Haden, 40, of San Diego, were appointed to the bench by Deukmejian in 1983, and now both have been elevated by him. Mitchell replaces Judge Alfred Lord, who retired. Mitchell is a for­ mer attorney for the California Farm Bureau Federation Insurance Companies and a partner in a San Luis Obispo ficm before that. Mitchell received his bachelor's degree from San Francisco State University and his law degree from Hastings College of the Law. Haden replaces Presiding Justice Daniel Kremer, who was elevated to a seat on the Fourth District Court of Appeal. Haden served during Deuk­ mejian's term as attorney general as a deputy, and before that was a law clerk and assistant project coordina­ tor for the San Diego County district attorney. He holds the rank of commander in the Naval Reserve and is a Viet­ nam veteran. He earned his bache­ lor's degree from California State University, Long Beach, and his law· jegree from the University of San Diego. ·-

'f_':':7{.• •• Conti'?~~ w - ., . text ~ will publish " . .ce,iN.i4.t.be monthly cal­ -- iaml-...... ~.i.r.nna­ , ~mtd.ka~,rheralt•n . . dailJ,~.n- .- ~""~~ ,,. _ . 'r' -~..L~: .,:,A,: t.t_t;, ~ ·~· :-1 ·.. . uc~w.... monity-~ .,.lnnd Yhl&or K --~ u .~ or buBineu .adminiatra- ' ' cllientcft ii -altlo ·pnaiaent of liilir9n.-.l'eundation-- r-~. . .'.J.-. .,... ~~. i _--:: i- i:• •.~ _.,..!,:: ~~ 'I I .r(: • hmitt baa been -ap­ . t ~

~ ~rvice t:=~~~ .,;.., ..: ·... ► -... - • .; • ~~ =• --· . ;; • - - \ ,fa ~4.. ~ ...... _ ...... - ,_..'.Yft"y Aade~n baa jeiDed The iGable Agency. Andenoa,rwho br- • more than 17 _years of public tions experience to his post, left eedict & Wells to take the new ,...... b vice ')tteill!e1it ffir "fJient iler.ric:ea. .... -:·. -- /:, ...... ~_- .. -~. C ·. r• ~- - • • ~ - • • ~-"Megatek ·corp.'• 'cbmptiter -.graphics product..s helped two 1984 ,'iJ!Cipients of the Nobel Prue in JPhyaics reach such heights. Dr. it:arlo Rubbia and Simon van· der tleer were honored for their work •· iaolating two previously -un­ ~vered particles of matter. -~ -credited ·Megafek'• ·computer flp-apbics terminals for playing a ~ in the process ·· -~'. · _ . ·~ --~---- . ~-· ~._- ...... _ •_· . ~ ~ ·~-- - .· _~rgy .Paeton ·19M · amwa1 ti,,port has been selected ~ the best . f:ita industry by ·the National As­ aociation of Investors Corp. The . ·wu'handled by 'l'lle·Qal,le • ,'~l>avenporl. Tom le and Kim""'Kerrill. • . : _; t·•~ if/)·• ...... "r;:r~.,,., ~ 1• ":,-' ~ :. --:a7aer ·=ianao1pb, -~i- .: -·t of •. il!P. }l.andolph -Com­ 'fllunicatiou;' hu -been accredited ~ the Public Relations Society of ~merica. · • , - - - - - r - ·. --·

Garvey, Qynginson, Summers are named San Diego P~'ff'fi? USD trustees baseman , Each will serve a three-year Steve Garvey, Monsignor Richard cis College Seminary. He has term on the 33-member board. Duncanson and developer Harry served as secretary to the bishop, Summers Garvey was twice named the have been appointed to · National on the diocesan tribunal, as chap- the League's most valuable lain to Uni~iego board 1 the Boy Scouts, and as an of player. trustees. Duncanson instructor in religious studies at is rector of St. Fran- USD. ~ Chula Vista Library slates Fall Chamber Concert series . ?--Cf '.) ') . The Chula Vista Public Disneyland over a Memorial Day Library presents the Fall ·1985 weekend. Chamber Concert Series, spon­ He has performed throughout sored by the Chula Vista City San Diego County, including Council and the Musician's Trust engagements at UCSD, the Fund. · Univer..sity of San Diego, Mesa The free performances will College, t'fie old P .B. Cafe and kick-off with a concert by the the Carlsbad Cultural Arts The Peter Sprague Jazz Ensemble Center. on Sept. 23 at 7:30 p.m. in The The String Trio will play Oct. Auditorium, 365 F St. The group 14, with Robert Haffenden at the will play music by Chic Corea, piano, Glen Campbell on cello jazz standards, original composi­ and Frank Garcia on clarinet. tions and jazz interpretations of The Early music Ensemble will classfcs. play on Nov. 18 and the Trio de _Sprague studied at the In­ Janeiro will play Dec.9, with Lori terlochen Arts Academy and with Bell on flute, Fred Benedetti on Pat Methany and others from the. guitar and Jeffrey Mcfarlane New England Conservatory of Johnson on cello. Music. In 1984, Chic Corea in­ All performances will be in the vited him to, and he debuted at auditorium at 7:30 p.m. . / al Western Searches For New Dean A ~- will meet to protect them.wtv.. agalnat at.- eonteated races, for Dietriet 1 Om­ next ,..1, to .tart 1iftin, throu1h tomey•. perial and San Diego eountle■) ere ■ome 70 appllcationo from can­ Geo.._e AndnM, Dan Cuey clidatea to rep!- Erneat Frieeen, Attorney■ Charlie Bird, Robert Jr. andCralcMeClellaa. dean or (lal Wc,t,,rn Law School, Deem• and Judy Lau were . . . who will be lllppin, down afler 11.x honored recently by Battered yean. Women ' ■ Servicee at a community Bankruptcy Accordin1 to Manfred recognition breaktut. Judge Loul ■ e Sehnpp, head of the ei1bt.­ Malupn will Iliff ■ome bank­ member ruptcy tlpe ror the general practi­ Narch committee, be­ Attorney I ■ aae Braddock hao tioner during a noon program Oct.. tween eix and ten applicant. will joined the La Jolla firm of Wilea, 22 at the Eaot County Rec\onal be invited to vlait the echool for in­ Circuit I: Tremblay aa an Courtbouae cafeteria. The -ion teme,n with (acuity, ■tudent■, the uaociate. Braddock, a greduata of la ,rponom-ed by the Eut County Lawyen Club. Law Briefs .,... by Martin Kruming

board or trueteee and the ■earch · Vanderbilt Law School, formerly committee. practiced general civil litigation By late November or early De­ and insurance de(enee law finns in cember, the committee hopee to San Diego, San Franciaco and preeent three canclidatea to the Booton. truotee■ . The new dean is expected . .. to ■tart Aug. 1, 1986. Television Watch: Wyoming at­ "Dean Frieeen will have been torney Gerry Spence will be in­ here tilt yean, and if you know terviewed at 4 p.m. on Channel 51 anythln, about law echool deana, this Sunday. On Oct. 27 attorney that' ■ about one or two yean more Brian Monarban will di,cua■ un­ than deana_ ue staying," say1 lawful job termination . Schrupp, former dean of the School . . . or Education at San Diego State. Profe880r Barbara Babcock of ,After a year' ■ aabbatical, work­ Stanford Law School will talk lq probably In the area oC judicial about the role o(the defenoe lawyer admlniatration, Jl'r!-n says he'll at 12: 15 p.m. on Oct. 25 · at the ' return to Cal Western where he is County Law Library. Babcock wee a tenured profeMOr. an aaeiatant U.S. attorney in the . . . civil divioion or lhe Juotlca De­ Some 500 penona from nine partment and wao aleo director of weatem states are expected to at.­ the Public Defenden Service in tend the l~th annual Far West Re­ Washington, D.C. gional Conference on Women and ... the Law Oct. 26-27 at USD Law Harvey Levine, vice • School. Among thoae epeil1nga1· preaident-aouth or California Trial the conference will be deputy dio­ Lawyerfl A880Ciation, ia running biet attorney Melinda La ■ ater, for preoi dent.-elect of the statewide attorney-author Judith Rowland group. Aleo running, but i.n un- and Weatem State University law pro(ea■or Judy... DIGennaro . J The National Lawyen Guild will , hold it■ Western Regional Con- 1 (erence here Friday through Sun­ day. Seaalone will be devoted to Immigration law ekillo, political aoylum law and legal rights in the workplace. The ,uild lo a national aoaoclatlon oC attorney,, law stu­ dent■ and legal workon Interested in 1iuch iMuee u labor law, women'• rights, military law and immigration law. I , , 1 • ... , • ! •• ' Two Callfortila Sllpreme Court jmticee are due I~ San Diego thia ,.week. Stanley Mook will addre■e a management development con• ference at t.he Bahia Hot.el tomor­ row at noon on Education and the Law: A vital partnenhip. On Friday at 8 p.m., Cruz Reyno■o is to diacuaa the role of the hieh court during a talk at the UnivenityofSan. . Diego . . Thie Sunday ailA,moon In San Carlos, Cltlzena ror Legal Reform will be cliecuaeinr the attorney monopoly and way■ for conoumen I San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

:OCT 1 71985

[la,'• P. C. B far. 1888 I ~rsity ,E.f San Diego will present a talk by , Kenneth Blanchard, co-author of the best-seller "The ; One Minute Manager," at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the : university in Alcala Park. Cost is $15. To register, call ~ : 2~~~ - ~ -· - . . .:Z'/55'~_ Unive~an Diego California Supreme will present p.m. Court Justice a talk by tomorrow in the Cruz. Re~osut Center Manchester Executiveonference8 auditorium on campus. tion will follow. A wine and cheese \._, Cost for the reception recep- jnformation, ca~l is $5. For I J_?hn Nunes at 260-4682 more . . -~-~.,,.c.:', Las Vegas, Nev. (Clork Co.) Vegas Vtsitor (Cir. W. 4~) •

OCT 18 1985

.JllJm's P. C. B. Est. 1888

a different situation." Ron Is every evening can tell you how looking for more exposure as strongly he comes across as an HORUS · ar\ actor in the future. "l don't actor. In between his bu~ like being typecasted, or locked schedule, Ron also teaches ; Into one category of.talenl rm classes at Backstage Dance working on looking for a Juicy Studio at Eastern & Sahm'a; · · role in a feature- film. stage or "Come and see the show," . .,,~ · television." · smiles Ron. ·'ihat ~ It aUr ~ One thing · Is for sure, this · That's what we call a sure bet, . 1 1 ' f/. · .. . young talent loves his work, ahd . anytime. . •·:,. • .. ' / I , ·;, . f'f, ,' ttie appla~ f_!'O~_th~~~nce -Laurte·~• Edtpr , I · . ~·•- tt ·~,v\•-1 · - ---...: Ha Dst d credentll,ls range . frof"!'\ major stage produetJons, where's he's , appeared with "· . . DIMd Coppmfteid, Wayland & Comic, Murray Langston. That Madame, been a lead dancer doesn't Include his television for heac:mners·In the Las Vegas appearances, musical videos tllt.on, and \W1ous musicals - and commercials. he appeared to films where,'he appeared In In Madonna's 'Material (ilrl', 'Oetting Physk:ar for CBS, which was up for the 1985 MTV •· 'Dcx:tor Detroit' (CJ~rsal)and · Awards for best video. 'Night Patrof ~ the CJnlaiown Ron plays the role cl Paul In . 'Chorus Une.'.. and cdmes . cross· - as ~ very special · character to his audiences. 'It's a role; rm an actor, but I feel Paul Is an Identifiable character: 1 E~ryone has faced the same · ~ ua~-~ even If It ls·I.!!_, / U~i~~.,rsiiy of San Diego Helps Parents finance By John L Nunes both new and continuing full time stu­ are based on Uniwni!y of Son Diego dents. ' Freshman awards scholastic achievement News Bureau Oireclor SAT/ ACT scores, and a financial need. financial aid continues to take I Student I new forms, as the private sector is gradu­ - THE BISHOP Leo T-. Maher ally taking up the slack created by the fed­ Catholic Leadership Scholarship, avail­ eral government's reluctance to increase able lo freshmen and transfer students its role. who ha e demonstrated leadership in their Herbert Whyte, director of financial parish, school and community. The aid at the llfliyecsit~ San Dieg~ thinks awards range from $200 to $1 ,500 per year, that's good , priman{6ecaUse ·students depending on financial need and grade can much more readily identify with a point average. private business or individual than the fed ­ There are also athletic grants at USO, eral government." a merrtber of the NCAA . Most of USO sports teams are in Division One. permit­ USO, a private independent university ting some 500 students to receiving athlet­ with an enrollment of about 5,300, offers ic gra9ts. ncial aid package that is represent­ a fin a I assistance provided by col­ ativew of the - TWO TYPES of student employ­ across the nation, according to leges ment, financed by the university and the . who has worked in this field for 16 Whyte federal, government, are available: . ( years - Work-study, in which students take For more than 25 years, packaging a jobs on campus. The work is oriented to blend of state, federal, institutional and student's major, when possible. ate grants. scholarships and loans is a priv - Off-ampus employment service, in the most common method used to deliver which USO assists students in finding al aid the students. financi weekend or part-time employment. An estimated 60 percent of USD's stu­ The loan program at USO a~e: re on financial aid, which equates dents a - Guaranteed Student Loans. which to about $14 million annually. Whyte re­ are insbred by the federal government and ported. To maintain a healthy cross-sec­ available through lenders such as t.ion of students, half the enrollment are unions and state agencies. should be on financial aid, Whyte said. banks.I credit undergraduates may borrow up Students do not have to take the trou­ Qualified per year. ble to package their aid. It is done by gov­ lo $2,500 Repayment and interest (at 8 percent) ernment agencies and college financial aid months after the borrower which process and evaluate ap­ begins ' six offices be al. least a half-time student. plications. ceases• to \ TWO-THIRDS of &he grants and schol­ - ;NATIONAL DIRECT Student arships made available to colleg students Loans. a federal program providing long­ is st.ill . by far , from I.he federal and state term low-interest (5 percent) loans to un­ governments. dergraduate and graduate ~tudents who at USO, I.he largest. single source of fi­ have d1?monstrated financial need. Stu­ nancial aid comes from the state govern­ dents may borrow up to $3,000 for the first ment. More than Sl.5 million in aid comes two years and up to $6,000 for their under­ lo the San Diego campus from the Califor­ graduate program. USO expects students ni a State Grants office. USO has some 500 to applf for a Guaranteed Student Loan students receiving money from this state before they may be considered for a offi ce. based on financial need and grde Direct Loan. point average. The maximum award is Procedure for applying for financial $4,110 per student. aid is similar at two-year and four-year in­ For the financially neediest is the st itulions throughout the United States, PELL Grant, a federal program that Whyte reported. "Two principal agencies awards a maximum of $2.100. This grant process the aid applications: the Ameri­ money is lransferrable to any college. can College Testing Service and the Col­ Also from the federal government is lege Scholarship Service." the Supplemental Educational Opportuni­ ty Grant. " Only schools with complete fi ­ FORMS FROM both services are . nancial aid packages offer this grant," available al college financial aid offices noted . USO has 330 students receiv­ for high school students, the best time to / Whyte ing money from the supplemental grant apply for college financial aid is about one program. year ahead of time. USO, as most colleges, also has its own The best month of mail applications is grant and scholarship programs: January, Whyte pointed out.. " If you miss/ a deadline, even by minutes, you're out,7 - THE USO Scholarship, awarded lo he said. / uror, ·Fascinated by Law, I~ Now Part of Legal Tangle ~~c-/ - By~i .WEINTRAUB. Times Staff Writer ~ ,, ,..- . After taking a few law courses at roughs pointed her out to fellow the faculty held her in high esteem. study on the future use of two :he Umvecsi!y Qf San Diego and Jurors as a possible holdout for Rea said he was not surprised to county-owned pieces of land working five months as a paralegal, Hedgecock, and she said the bailiff hear that Saxton-Calderwood came downtown. Kathy Saxton-Calderwood was ea­ drank wine and beer with most of forward with allegations of wrong- Nick Marinovich, Saxton-Cald- ger to learn more about the inner the jurors and provided hard liquor doing. erwood's supervisor at the county, workings of a legal system that she to three of them. "I would expect · her to be a described her as "very conscien- had only observed from the fringes. Because of her and other jurors' person of convictions," Rea said. tious." • ·Tm very interested in the pro­ reluctance to Lalk since the verdict, "That fits ·in with her professional "Kathy is a very competent, cess to see how il really works," li ttle is known of Saxton-Calder­ nature as I know it." hard-working, meticulous person," Saxton-Calderwood said while be­ wood's role in deliberations while He said Saxton-Calderwood is he said. "She's somebody who mg _questioned in August as a the jury was sequestered for more active in the department's honor takes her job very seriously." potential juror in the second trial of than six days at a Mission Valley society and recently helped organ- Marinovich said Saxton-Calder- Mayor Roger Hedgecock. hotel. ize a panel discussion on the me- • wood surveyed several other juris­ Two months later. Saxton-Cald­ But the chairman of the Depart­ dia 's influence on public affairs, a · dictions to try to determine the erwood is learning how the process ment of Public Administration at topic she also probed for a research county's options for financing de- works-Lo a degree she could nev­ San Diego State University, where paper completed last month. The velopment of the downtown par- er have imagined. Saxton-Calderwood is a graduate honor society also staged a forum eels. He said she was good al Based on sworn statements by student, and two men who super­ on campaign financing reforms, but · following up when th~ information her and by the lawyer for another vised her work as a student intern Rea said he believed Saxton-Cald- / she was provided was incomplete. -..c!Pr.­ Juror detailing allegations of jury for San Diego County described her in f " If she wasn't sure, she'd ask by tampering, Hedgecock's attorney, in interviews Thursday as a seri­ erwood played only a minor role Distraught Kathy Saxton-Calderwood is helped from court questions," Marinovich said. "That Oscar Goodman. on Thursday filed ous-minded person, skeptical by that event. husband Peter, left, and her father after jury returned verdict. . If motions in Superior Court seeking nature. honest and conscientious. At the county. where she worked ·\ was one of her characteristics she didn't understand something to overturn the mayor's conviction Apparently shy and slow to as a student intern from early her e'd ask about it." Marinovich said he spoke with next week. / on charges of felony conspiracy establish friendships with people summer until midway into the briefly before the latest turn of ·•1 hope she comes back," he said. and 12 counts of pe.rjury. she knows only through work or Hedgecock trial, Saxton-Calder­ Saxton-Calderwood has not re­ events. She said at that time that "We have plenty of work for her to Saxton-Calderwood, a 28-year­ school, Saxton-Calderwood enjoys wood performed research for a rned to work since the verdict. she planned to be back at her job by do." old nauve San Diegan, has stead­ reading murder mysteries in what fastly refused to speak with the spare time she~ left between her media since she left the third-noor 20-hour-a-weel\ job with the courtroom of the County Court­ county Office of Special Projects house in tears nine days ago, and the night classes she takes in having just agreed with her 11 pursuit of a master's degree in fellow jurors to find Hedgecock public administration. She lives in guilty of conspiring to funnel tens North Park with her husband, a of thousands of dollars in illegal professional studio photographer. contributions into his 1983 cam­ "She is one of our better stu­ paign for mayor. dents,·· Louis Rea chairman of the In her written statement, Sax­ SDSU Department of Public Ad­ ton-Calderwood alleged that bailiff ministration and Urban Studies. Al Burroughs helped her define the "She has a quiet bearing, a profes­ crucial legal term "reasonable sional orientation to her." doubt" and gave her an anecdotal Saxton-Calderwood worked for illustration of the issue which was two semesters as a graduate assist­ later discussed by several other ant in the department office, a job Ju rors. She also alleged that Bur- for which she was selected because (

San Diego, CA (San DlegO Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir, D.127,454)

l!§J)Jootball: Winning is kept in -a proper place on school's priority-list By T.R. Reinman "We're ,;z.9.!35' trying to build like we want The idea still is to win. Now we're getting a much better makes I Tribune Sportswriter to build here," it simple. There's no tempta- want to transfer to a major college, a says Fogarty. "Doug Fogarty's is a young team that has blend of the two." lion, no room Brian Fo art honest! does not Scovil, to screw up. You know lot of times they don't accept your gee, I kind of feel sorry for suffered its injuries this year, espe- As the Aztecs did a couple of years where know the a!wi to the fuestion So him. Ever since you stand." credits. I got here I've been cially on defense. And although it has ago, the Toreros last year got caught Tom Hamilton he oes to the third drawer dow~ in bearing if be doesn't win , an inside lineback- "And besides, I've talked to a lot of soon he's moved the ball well, it's come up short - short in numbers, experience er who last year was bis gbattered old olive drab file cabi- gone. We don't have that kind of USD's most guys who played major college ball," short of the end zone often enou_gb to and talent. And wins. They were 1-8-1 valuable defensive player, knew neL ulls a folder and searches prE!$lll'f here." be 2-3 says DeMorst, a tight end. ''It's a job ' beading ~to tomorrow rugbt's last year. All of that is changing, as it where be stood almost as soon as he there tbrou~ the team's ~eekly press re- Here is Division III football. No home game agamst . Spring ball, meetings, film ses- . : 2-2 La Verne. is at State. But the similarities end walked on at Tulane four years ago sions. We watch lease. Tiie USD football coach is scholarships, no _chartered airplane And like Scovil's San_Diego films, but we don't looking State about there. . ... on the outside looking ~ - have the pressure, the up b.is three-year record at flights, no telev1S1on contracts, no team IS head games. , Fogarty's one ID transition. "Tbe school's philosophy isn't all "I was about 185," Hamilton says. USD pressure from alumni and until this Both coaches They know there's always someone have switched from the bad," says Fogarty, without compar- "I lasted about five days. li I totally behind · year at USD no full-time assistant programs of previous regimes them, ready to take their job." ' that ing USD's to State's. "We're not going devoted my life to football for a year Says Hamilton, "It's "It says here we're 6-16-1," says coaches. Just schoolbooks first, then primarily recruited junior college definitely not · Fogarty to compromise at all academically or two, worked out all the time, lived like playing at Notre Dame, but , standing in b.is office with playbooks. kids to an emphasis on high school to I've . two assistants. have a good program." football, I might have bad a chance. enjoyed my time here." "Can that be right?" "It's easier to coach here," says players. That The office bas means there are no breaks, But it just wasn't worth it. There are And Fogarty is enjoying bis. He's a VCR for game Fogarty, "because the kids who are "We used to have two kinds of no special admissions films and , no extra en- so many intangibles." not looking at this stint as a stepping .> a few desks and chairs. It's here want to be here. We've heard all players here," says Fogarty, who is trance small, but that tests, no remedial classes. Lionel DeMorst of Kearny High stone to the bigs, although some on 's OK. So is Fogarty's that stuff, the 'Their grade point av- compiling bis prospect list now, one This year _, staff. , a backup quarterback was heavily recruited by junior col- bis staff are and one former assist- · erage is higber than their yards-per- be expects could reach 1,000 names. from "No way," says Texas-El Paso wanted to trans- leges. But he's one of USD's growing ant, Dan Henson. made the jump. The ·' Kevin McGarry, carry' stuff. They're not running 4.5s "We'd have the good junior college fer to USD. He the one had a 2.465 grade number of local players, a priority former Christian Higb coach was a 1 full-timer among seven as- (for 40 yards), but they're playing players who would be here for a se- point sistant average. He needed a 2.5. He market for Fogarty. He chose USO USD assistant in the spring of 1984 coaches. "We bad five wins just as bard." mester or two. but then couldn't cut didn , our first vear." 't make it to USD. for a number of reasons, some more went to Michigan's Hope College last Says Tom Burke, USD's vice presi- it academically and would leave. "There's always the thought that So the· three of them add up the dent tangible than others. season, and is now at San Jose State .• for student affairs: "It's what And we'd have the smart kids who maybe this one guy can help us be a W's and L's and come up with: college athletics "What if you go to a JC and get No, low-pressure Division III is originally was _in· tbougbt it'd be fun to play football. better team," says Fogarty. "But •it hurt?" be "Whew, 8-16-1," says Fogarty. tended to be." said. "li you can't play and fine with Fogarty and his kids. · / "See, I thougbt we were better than So USD's brand of ball is simpler •------/ six." He's grinning now, a comfort• than the wars waged in Division 1 able grin, an at-peace grin. Bot I it's not without its frustrations \ .

• ~ Toreros Seek · ·I rfhird Football Win Tonight ",.,:J_q_s-5 . . . By TONY COOPER SAN DIEGO-The University of S.an Diego football team (2-3) will try to return to the .500 mark when it plays host to the University of La Verne (2-2) at 7:30tonlght. · -rlie'USD-La Verne series is tied at six wins apiece. Last year, La l Verne beat the Toreros, 31-13. Both teams' wins this season 'have come against the same oppo­ nents-Claremont-Mudd and Po­ mona-Pitzer. La Verne defeated Pomona-Pitzer last week, 35-14. Leopard quarterback Mark Van Allen passed for 257 yards and: ➔ three- touchdowns. Thomas Brown is La Verne's top receiver, with 14 catches for 154 yards. USD is coming off a 'J:7 -14 loss to Occidental last week, and the To­ reros have been having trouble scoring poin~. "It's up to our offense to control 1 the football and put points on the board," USD Coach Brian Fogarty said. '.'We're moving the ball, but we're not putting it in the end zone. Our stats look good on paper, but the points aren't there." Injuries continue to be a probl~m for the Toreros. Strong safety Tim White and defensive tackle Brian Laliberte both have bad knees and won't play tonight. Tailback Mark Covarrubias, who is still hindered by a sprained big toe, will be in the starting lineup. • f- J , ♦• • l ~ • t. • • • \. f J;9r.,~~go for 3rd win· ~aillst Leopards & • tonigli1 • Th~ll team opens · a string'1,f -(our -straight home games Loeal Briefs tonight l(°7:30 against La Verne. ' The Toreros (2-3) will be attempt­ ries. · ing to triple last year's win total - 'Toreros linebacker they were 1-8-1 in 1984 - Mike Macie is against the doul>tful with a head injury Leopards (212) at Tored> Stadium and de­ . fensive lineman Brian Laliberte .La Verne's chief threat is quarter­ and , cornerback Tim White are sidelined back Mark Van Allen, who threw for ·. 2~ with k ee injuri~s. yards and three touchdowns in a 3~14 victory over Pomona-Pitzer last week, 1 •• The T,oi;eros, who defeated Pomo­ na-Pitzerrt0-7 on the road, are com­ ing off a 27-14 loss to Occidental. USD, however, has won two. ' or' its last Uiree games1 an on the road. . USO is 'led by -tailback Rog~r ' Cloutieri who has played only in the last two games. Cloutier has 210 yards and two touchdowns in '· • I 51 car- A.O. ·Reed also reported that it -began $1 million in plumbing, heat­ ing, ventilation and air conditioning work at the Univ~rsity of San Diego's University Center. Trepte Construc­ tion Co. Inc. is the contractor and , Mosher, Drew, Watson, Ferguson and 1 Barker is the architect on the two- ,r story, 96,000-square-foot building. Completion is expected next Septem- , ber. .-:2,~ ./ women into the role of over-achiever from 9 a .m. to noon. 'A companion followed by Dr. Morton Shaevitz count~ course on creating a more efficient off­ ering with a man's response. The lecture ice by simplifying paperwork and im­ begins with a continental breakfast at proving communications systems will be 7:30 a.m. on Thursday. Fee for the semi­ presented from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. The nar is $15. For registration information fee is $40 per class, $70 for both class­ contact the USO Public Relations Office. es. For registration contact the San Diego State University Department of Interpret those crossed arms and Extended Studies. averted eyes with a course on body lan­ Be the life of the party ... learn to roines will be the topic of a lecture guage. Pathways to Learning will pres­ , What kind of shape are you in? Find make balloon animals for fun and profit. Wednesday at San Diego State Univer­ ent a seminar of how people reveal their out with a Health Status Profile from Bay A -ttiree-week course on balloon sculpt­ sity. Dorothea Kehler will discuss four emotions and intentions through pos- , Hospital Medical Center on Oct. 28. The ing will instruct participants in this skill. " shrews" from the Bard 's writings, ex­ lure, gestures and eye movements. The comprehensive computerized evaluation Mitch the Clown will preside at the work­ amining how their sympathetic depic­ course, which costs $24, will meet at 6 will include a blood pressure check and shop, which begins Wedn esday at 6:30 tion challenges traditibnal Ideas on p.m. on Thursday. Advance registration blood cholesterol test. The fee for the p.m. and continues Oct. 30 and Nov. 6. women's behavior. The free program is required; contact to Pathways to Liv­ check-up, available between 9:30 and The fee for the class, offere j through the begins at 3 p.m. in Room 221, Hepner ing, Learning & Earning, listed in the 11 a.m., is $25. For registration, contact ACCESS learning program, is $35. For Hall on the SDSU campus. phone book. the hospital's health information center, registration call ACCESS To Learning, 1180 Third Ave., Chula Vista. listed in the phone book. Take the "A" Train back in time with The art of poetry will be showcased in - Robin Kleven a Harvest Moon Ball on Thursday night. a presentation at San Diego State n,­ _,,./ , Livid? Furious? Just plain mad? You The big band music of the 1940s will fill versity on Thursday. Poets Au stin Straus can learn to control anger and channel it Sea World "s Nautilus Pavilion from 7 to and Wanda Coleman, hosts of a monthly into useful energy with a workshop on · 11 p.m. Tickets fo J the dance. spon­ poetry radio show in , will ( Wepnesd~y. The seminar is designed to sored by KPOP Rabio, are $10 in ad­ present their works at 7 p .m. The free help participants handle their own vance and $12 at the door. Advance program, part of the Living Writers Lec­ anger, explore various coping 'styles and tickets may be purchased at the KPOP ture Series, will be held in the Casa Real learn to deal with angry people. National station offices, 7150 Engineer Road, or on the San Diego State University c2m- ti University-North County will presen t tlie at Sea World. pus. class from 5:M to 8:30 p.m. at 2022 (' University Drive, Vista. Preregistration is The "Super Woman" syndrome will Pull yourself together with a seminar I necessary ; contact the university's de­ be explored from both female and male on organizing your time. San Diego partment of continuing education. The viewpoints as part of the U~f State University will present a course for fee is $10. San Di_,eg,o's Distinguished Speakers Se­ professionals on strategies and ries. Author Marjorie Shaevitz will dis­ shortcuts for getting and staying orga­ Shakespeare'• sharp-tongue~ ...,. he­ cuss the traditional values that lead nized. The class will be held Saturday

.. mml .. q,. . . Forme_!: ~ent to speak on 'Secret Wars of CIA' °'-q ~s · 1 John Stockwell, a former Central at 8 tonight in Salomon Lecture Hall, I Intelligence Agency agent, will inside DeSales Hall at the Urtjversity 1 speak on "The Secret Wars of the alSan Die1to. "-.__,, e"'f A· Frnm ViPtn:im~t.n Nir;ir:ivn:i." Tlierecfure is free. ,..,. / Shaevitz, usband to speak her itz, author of "The Superwoman Syndrome," and to 9 a.m. tomorrow at the husband, Mo evitz, will speak from 7:30 Center at the University of San Diego. Manchester Executive Conference as well strategies for women to gain cbntli:Jt ot their lwes, She will discuss that cause women to as traditional values and comtemporary pressures symptoms mentioned in her book. · experience the stress their lives. about men's responses to the "superwomen" in He will talk of !:!,SD's Department of The event, which costs $15 per person, is part Continuing Education "Distinguished Speakers Series." .. ~ ••...., ...... , .. ~ .,.,..-~I!' ~ ~ f percent:•~~- ' . the ~ few years J the iD)- . :"q of the MX 1pro :pijpul- , sion; the effect of codjnecl 111unl­ tioda on ordnance, and~ satellite s~~ for:~~ ~ pointed . out. ~-~ , ·, • , . "We believe," he ~cl; ·w.at Aero­ jet• will :position i · tn , many growth .secton of this enormous $100-billion market, - particularly IC within propulsion in the Strategic Defense Initiative (commonly dubbed Star Wars) Progmrt." . ~ These expec~ changes at Gen­ I • Corp come on the heels of a new ' chief executive officer, A. William Reynolds, who recently replaced a . CEO who had By Janet Lowe been at the helm of the company for 25 years. , - 11 : TRIBUNE FINANCIAL EDITOR Reynolds, observed Oppenheimer, t "played a key role in the turnaround at TRW (where he'd been executive vice president), in its autQ parts seg- · ow WATCHERS haven't ment, and we believe he bas a plan of .. Dknown this past summer . asset exploitation .to better realize whether to duck out of the way or the earnings potential of GenCorp's · dive for their wallets. The recent • growth segments." · ...... ,- ~ jump in the Dow Jones Industrial Av­ • Rose anticipates tha~ '"!be princi- · erage took a few by surprise and left pal long-term ~ategy will.lie ~t­ a few others wary. ed toward speeding the growth of Elizabeth Hennigar, a technical Aerojet and DiversiTecb··(a manufac­ analyst and .~late · prof~r of turer of wall coverings l!ld fabricat­ finance at the University of San ed plastics),-bJ ·botJrinternaI .~el~ Diego, has uplifting words for those ooments and acouisition. ' it who feel squeamish about buying "We project earnings will reach $5 · stocks now. · per share in fiscal 1986 and grow 15 "Looking 'at the information I percent annually over the next five have," Hennigar said, "the market years due to the growth of Aerojet will continue its upward trend. There 'and DiversiTech,'' be said. "We are no short-term indications that project retiµn on arr:Je egui!J will there ls any weakness. Things should_ be 12.a pe~t 1ia 1988 vei:sus · continue as they have been. You can 10.5 percent· in fiscal•.1NS and will , always have a short correction - approa~~ )5 . per~ ,rithin two that can come any time - but the years...... major trend is still bullish." . · ' Trading on the Stock. Hennigar will explain the tech­ Exchange under the sym!Jol of GY, niques of technical market analysis .GenCorp cl~ yesterday 'at 551/•, up as a forecasting tool at a breakfast 3¼. .. ' , " ·, . seminar at USD on Nov.8. For more . - informatior,"contact tlie university. . . . H an undenalaed "yuppie play" is r • • • what you're hankering for, _Morgan Stanley has a tip for you. Loµis Vuit­ Thanks largely to shining pros­ ton, the trendy French leather goods pects at La Jolla-based Aerojet Gen- 1 and luggage manufacturer, .is com­ eral Corp., Oppenheimer & Co. ana­ .pleting an expansion program which lysts are high on the purchase of will enable the company to bring in GenCorp Inc., a company which once strong sales growth over the next depended on its General Tire division two years, according to analyst for major revenues. ,Roseanne Sagar. . . . • "We expect GenCorp to evolve into For ·those who haven't_heard yet, a major industrial products/aero­ Louis Vuitton is doing for handbags space firm with a reduced depend­ what the Izod alligator did for knit ence on tires," wrote Charles J. Rose, shirts. .; • .... • · .~. an Oppenheimer analyst. Consumers aged 18 - 30 account In the last fiscal year, tires con­ :for 55 percen~ oJ the COIJ)pany's sales, tributed 41 percent of sales and as: Sager pointed -out. By modernizing sets, but qply.16' percent of to~l 01; production plants and · adding 19 erating income, he noted. AeroJet lS 1 shops to its boutique chain, the com­ one of five principal subsidiaries of ] pany will lower its costs and hike : this~ billion diversified company...... - . .. . -- profits, she predicted. . /•· ;: 1 -' ' . . ~. l>ioneer5 Is...... Honored- /.:·,~- ' Not ~any attorney, today on the bench, employment diacrim- ,.-cemember Eugene Daney. ·But, ination, eex in the workplace, · according to Superior Court Judge women in the corporate structure Douglu Woodworth, thia im- andcomparableworth. migrant boy from France went on ~e confen:nce g~ts under way to become one of the leading law- Frida mormng ~th ~ all~ay yers here during his time .. He died seminar on baa1c tnal skills. · 1946 Millett will speak at 7 p.m. follow- After 7~ years, Laura Wetzel ' haa left Battered - m At 4:15· p.m. tomorrow in the ed by a reception. Costanza de 1 iv-· Women's Services where she was the legal services lobby of the County Courthouse, era the keynote addres_s on Satlu-- COUMelor whose job was to locate Daney will be honored at the day afternoon. attorneys to assist women at the unveiling of a bronze tablet. • • • shelter. She started in January, Daney was one of the early or­ David Davenport, who previ­ 1978, .even though the shelter ganu.era of the Coul)ty. Bar Asaoci­ ously practiced law with Gray, didn't. open until July. Wetzel ation, which he aerved as president Cary, ~es & Frye, has become recently received her master's , degree in social work from San Law Briefs . ~~ Diego &ate ·and is now working for the county's child protective ser­ by Martin Kruming vices. • * • Don'aJd Smith has been re­ for five terms, and was San Diego's the sinh president of Pepperdine elected presiding judge of Superior only president of the State Bar. Univenity at age 34. And Chris Court and Harley Earwicker has "He stands miles above his con­ Calkins, a partner with the firm's been elected presiding judge of the temporaries," says Woodworth. La Jolla office, has been elected a North County Municipal Court. Haney came to the United States director of Medical Biology In­ Both for 1986. from France with his parents in stutut.e. • * * 1865, eettling in Silv~r City, Nev._ . •. . Political activists Midge He went on to receive his laJV Virginia Weber, an attorney for Costanza and Kate Millett will degree from Hastings and--practic- six years who practices corporate address the 15th annual Far West . ed law until 1940. Daney twice law, wrote the following letter to Regional Conference on Women declined appointment to the Supe­ the State Bar regarding its legal and the Law set for Friday through rior Court and once to the Califor­ services trust fund program: Sunday at USD Law School. More nia Supreme Court. "I am appalled at the unmitigat­ than 400 coiilerees, about 75 per­ • • • • ed gall that thia program is con­ cent of them law students and at­ · Retired California Supreme sidering the elite act of purchasing torneys, ·will gather· from nine of Court Justice Frank Newman real property with these funds. the western states, including a will lead a symposium tomorrow "I was opposed to the program at large group from Texas. afternoon at UCSD focusing on the its inception and now I realize that Workshop topiat include women role of the United Nations as a we have all been duped to expect a vehicle for world peace: Newman is group of lawyers to keep their word currently a professor of interna­ in using the funds for the defense of tional law at Boalt Hall. The occa­ the indigent. sion marks the 40th anniversary of "For what will this real estate be theU.N. used? A gym for San Francisco at­ torneys. Really now, perhaps you are going to build a hotel for the poor? If so, we have some street · people in San Diego· we could guarantee as tenants. I will gladly allow interest on my trust fund to pay the.rent for this guy that likes to sleep on the front porch of my of­ Davenport Newman fice!" The reply, according to Weber, was "Thank you for your com- ments. If you have any questions _, please call us." . -~ 1 * * * /'' R~giorial meetinQ df1°w0men ·at USD By Carol Fiala bench, the crime victims' move- l Special to the Times-·Advocate ment and women in the military. Kate Millett, All the workshops will take plac~at and Gloria Allred will be among ' USD's law school. t he speakers at this year's Far Midge Costanza will give the West Regional Conference on keynote address on "Human Dig­ Women and the Law. nity - A Right Not A Privilege;" The conference, which is expec­ Saturday in the Camino Theater. ted to attract 500 people from nine Costanza became the first woman western states, will be held Friday to serve as a full assistant to a U.S. through Sunday at the Uniyer.sity president when she was chosen as of San Diego. Members of the pub­ an adviser to former President lic m~nference events, . for a fee. · Local speakers for the work "The purpose of the conference shops include Melinda Lasater, is to exp.ose people to the issues president of the San Diego County that affect women," said Cindy Bar Association; California As- i Traxler, a member of the board of semblywoman ; Janu­ directors of Women in Law, which ary Riddle, president of the Na­ is sponsoring the conference. "The tional Organization for Womeii~s main objective is to make people San Diego Chapter; Judy DiGen aware and then try to come up with naro, a law professor at Western some solutions." - State University; feminist attorney Kate Millett, author of "Sexual Gloria Allred; Paula Rosenstein, Politics;" and "The Loony Bin member of Women in Law and co­ Trip," will open the conference ordinator of this year's conference; with a discussjon on the involun­ and Victoria Garcia and Judith tary commitment of women into Rowland, who co-founded the Cal­ mental institutions, at 7 ~.m. Fri­ ifornia Center on Victimology. · day at USD's Camino Theater. A reception featuring jazz and Admission to Millett's speech blue!;) singer Ella Ruth Piggee w,ill and the reception that follows is follow, from 8 p.m. to midnight. $5. More than 40 workshops, fea­ Registration for the entire con­ turing 120 speakers,· are scheduled ference is $50 for students and $80 during the conference: Topics in­ for non-students. The university is clude abortion clinic ten:orism, 1ocated in Alcala Park in San Die­ prostituti01;1, bar as~ociation poli- go. I , tics, the child custpdy rights of For information and registra- gays and lesbians: women on the , ., .. .. ti~n, cal~ ~60-2~~• ~xt. 4457./, .. ------' -~ ~ :, 4 lJ.Sp ~rofessors assail. Meese some discussion" about the Meese re­ ~~1~::t~::::::~:e =~tr~~;~he~! T~~:j~ui~t i::~!':r~~n or political marks among the university's profes­ ril:r1!~hn ~1 s sors but that "no formal action has San Diego, saying," Oddo added. "But the consti- fight. We are people who find this Fourteen lJ.!!!!~rsity of ttat been taken by the faculty." are upset with recent tutional lawyers aren't agreeing with very dangerous to the liberties professors who years," said U.S. Attorney General this simplistic view of a right-wing, have protected us·for 250 · He said Meese no longer has any comments by 1974 can­ Meese III have signed an open law-and-order fanatic." Simmons, an unsuccessful formal connection with the school al­ Edwin the 41st Congressional Dis­ letter dissociating themselves "from· Although the letter ·appears on a didate for though he occasionally comes to USD his monumental igQorance and dis- USD letterhead, the signers said they trict seat. to talk and give lectures and, as a tortion of the law." · were speaking for themselves as pro- Meese, who has held his position member of the Board of Visitors, pe­ • · "We don't want the public to get lessors at the university and not for eight months after being a spe- riodically meets with university offi- the idea that all of us here think that making any-statement on behalf of . cial adviser to President Reagan, cials to give advice. · way," · explained political science USD. · created controversy most 'fecently Constitution and by saying, "We have "His views on the Professor Gilbert L. Oddo. It conciudes when he said that suspects don't need were published and he a · woefully' incom­ Bill of Rights Because Meese was director of the in Washington 'to be informed of their rights, illegal­ made statements while at USD,'' USD Center for Criminal Justice Pol- petent Attorney General who is mak:­ ly obtained evidence should be al­ of Simmons said. "The fact he came icy and Management in ·1977 before ing an oxymoron (contradiction) lowed to be used in court, and that adminis- . of Justice_." from USD (to the Reagan joining the Reagan administration, t~e words Department the Supre~e Court was on "intellec­ coincidence. I think he Robert Simmons, tration) is a and remains a· member 9f the law \ Law Professor tually shaky" ground on some Bill of a contribution to USD. But it is also signed the lefter, said: ''He made school's Board of Visitors, many peo- who Rights decisions. important to make a stand because are held in comes out representing the Adminis­ pie assume his views dean of the USD he frequently identifies himself as on with many USD faculty, tration and says he doesn't under- Sheldon Krantz, common said t~ere"'~inly is leave from USD.'' Oddo said. stand the presumption of innocen~e. Law ~hooi San Diego, Thun,day, Oc 111E•TRIBUNE Blacjf tie, costume a~rydress choices at 'Masque Ball' HE SAN DIEGO Commit­ A calendar of social events tee for UNICEF (United T Nations ChUdren's Fund) wUI sponsor a "Bal MasqiM" Sat­ urday at Hotel del Coronado's -up Crown Room. The black-lie or costume dinner dance, planned as and coming a kickoff for National UNICEF Day - Hallonm - will begin • By Nancy ScoU Anden,on with cocktails at -'7 p.m. Dinner and dancing wlll follow at 8:30 more lnformaUon, pbone Salk are cerl For p.m. Dr. and Mrs. Jonas 454-2858, 27f>.3706 or 756-M. honorary chairmen, and Shannon Rockcastle heads the committee. St. Madeleille Sopble'1 Trailllng Tickets are $150 each for "Grand Center for lhe Developmentally Ma,quf' aeatlng, $100 each for Disabled will benefit from a di.o­ "MuqiM" reservations. For more ner dance and performance by the Information, pbooe 5l3-5I08. Pacific Chamber Ensemble Sun­ day from S lo 10 p.m, at Rancho ne Women's Aulllary of tbe Palo Verde In Alpine. Tickets are San Diego Hebrew Home plans a $50 each. For more lnforrnaUon. "Casino Royale" night Saturday phone 298--0858. tbe Sberatoo Harbor bland at Yong CoollOIAnn of !be San Easl CocktaU hour is 8 p.m, fol­ ca­ Diego Museum of Art are having lowed by dinner, dancing and The prize for the a Halloween party Oct. 31 at sino games. Grand restaurant, 801 lf>.day Mediterranean Golden Lion party is a Tickell are $15 each two. For more inform•- Fourth Ave. cruise for nonmembers, $10 each for , pbooe 582-5168. for • lion members. For more lnforrnajion. 277-5208. Reservations Sas Diego Opera Aaoclatloo phone will have a pre-perlomiance din­ close tomorrow. ner Saturday In Ille VenaUles TIie Uaiyenlty of San Diego Room at Uttle America Westgate Aufliary'1 29Ui aiiiiml1- fashi on Hotel. The event celebrates the show is set for Nov. I at lhe Town opening of "Eugene Onegin." El­ and Country Hotel. Carol Al~io eanor Mikkelsen is chairman for is chairman of the luncheon . the dinner, which begins with a "Wine, Women & Song." Social 5:30 p.m. cocktail hour. For more hour begins at 11 a.m., followed information, phone 454--0231 or by lunch al noon and a I p.m. 223-6970. ' . ramp show of fashions from Rob­ inson's. "Angel" reservations are Saa Diego Madres will cloie $100 each, regular tickets are $25. 1985 season's activities with a For more inlormation, phone 260- luocbe<>n and holiday boutique 4808. Saturday in the Sports Club at San ne tblrd auaal lrelud Fond Diego Jack Murphy Stadium. dluer dance will be held Nov. I Doors open at 11 a.m., and the at the Sheraton Harbor Island event ls open to prospective mem­ East. Honored guests will be U.S. bers. Lunch reservations are $8.75 Ambassador lo Meiico John for non-M~dres, $8.25 lor mem­ Gavin (Southern California Irish­ bers. For more information, man of the Year), San Diego Coun­ phone 278-5342. ty Sheriff John Duffy and A.J.F. O'Reilly. TIiied "Linens and Reservations are ,1111 available Lace," the black-lie party will for the gala Nov. 2 opening ol benefit the Ireland Fund, de­ Sympoony Hall. Guest artists due scribed as a oonpolitlca~ nonsec­ to participate in the evening's fes­ tarian or·ganlzatioh aimed at tivities Include Diahann Carroll, lostering peace, culture and char­ Joel Grey, Hal Linden, Toni Ten­ ity In Ireland. Cocktail hour is 7 nille, Ben Vereen, James Galway p.m., followed by an 8 p.m. dinner and Oscar Peterson. The celebra­ and dancing lo Bill Green's or­ tion, sponsored by the San. Diego chestra. Dan Broderick Is chair­ Symphony Orchestra Association, man. Tickets are $150 each. For gets under way with a 5 p.m. more Information, phone 291 -9191. at Hotel champagne bus boarding on . The reception TIie fi!tb annaal "Celebrati Inter-Continental Critters," a benefit for the in the newly refurbished Sympho­ for the p.m., when San Diego Zoo's Center for Repr o­ ny Hall will last until 7 e<. performance will duction ol Endangered Speci , the lnaugur~I I In the Town . A dinner dance follows will be held Nov. take place Convention Center. at Hotel Inter-Continental. Tick­ and Country include all Hosted cocktails and hors ets at $1,000 per person 7:30 's activities and a per­ d'oeuvres will be served from lbe evening enterta in­ brass plaque Inscribed lo 10:30 p.m. Music and manent unlll 11 p.m. with lbe donor's name, which will ment will continue In Sympho­ Tickets are $50 each and are lim­ be Installed on a seat atten­ Umlted seating is also ited to 3,200 (last year's ny Hall . Rolf Benlrsehke available al $500 per reservation dance was 4.500) reception. is honorary chairman, Katherine - which Includes the com­ and post-concert A. L'Hommedieu heads the performance more information, celebration - and at $250, which mittee. For Includes the reception and con- phone 231 -1515 ext. 254. --- Diego, Thursday, Octol>er 24, 1985 ) San Bowl committee has big job ahead Holi1ay ■ ■ ■ less than a In pass completions (423) and passing ■ ■ ■ lT~le never catch name n! an I ·w month lefl before the Holi• yardage (5,603). But he'll SCOTT - USO bead bas• 600 CLUB - That's the Purdue leader In all those cate- GREAT college \ day Bowl selection com• the Egan is fretting the exclusive membership of That would be Charger ketball coach wins or mittee gives us two football guests gories. injury to his big man, football teams with 600 backup QB Mark Herrmann, who about the back has 599. Nebraska for the holidays, executive director Scott Tbompton. Tbe Hoot, 255· more. Penn State over the re- · but the Cornhuskers have Job Reid isn't fretting junior injured his back lifting has 598, 1 pound lo gel credited cent developments in the WAC. and has been ordered to take petitioned the NCAA in 1-----~ weights some of their lopsid· You may remember that back it easy for a week. for two wins for May, the broke away ed routs such as the 63·0 job on Ore- ■ ■ ■ hasn't from Its original agreement with the BOWL_ Woody Widtn• gon earlier this year. Oregon televi• LOSERS since. Already in the WAC in order to get a sweeter (Hj at Missouri, bot he has a been the same hofer is Notre Dame, sion package with Lorlmar Sports to win a game this week. The 600 club are Michigan, - group. :.==~!!I chance . Network, the Dallas•based Tigers face winless Kansas State. Texas and Alabama gives the confer- 1----=:....;:::a.._...;..:.==...:::!!:!:.~ The new agreement Both Widenhofer and KSU's Les • • • champion the right to go to any C II ge for their first col- WORm REPEATING - Asked ence S Moon are hunting about Oregon·s game with bowl this year, and likewise, ii gives O e _, lrge victory, Missou demolished this week the freedom to .______a 63--0 humilia• the Holiday .Bowl State last year 61 ·2I. Nebraska this year, Kansas by the Cornbuslt- search the land for the two most en- ■ ■ ■ lion for the Ducks JI.3 mlllioo completed 772 passes for 9,946 yards former University City High star · · lertaining teams that career. • en, for ad! team~ and 71.llluchdo!!ns. Not a bad Malt Brock, now a defensive end . , CID buy (M50,000 SOONER FRIED CHICKEN talk that two WAC teams - Air ■ ■ ■ visits Kansas this with Oregon, sald: "We don't Seeing Oklahoma State here. Force and BYU - are now in the holds the series edge about that game much around FL YING ZAMPESE - The Ken week. Kansas , they Top 10 and could be in the Top 5 if the Jayhawks haven't de- I'll tell you what, thoug'h Zampete on the.JJSD roster is the son 22-18-3, but than us. We the top teams keep falling the way the Cowboys since 1972. Mak- weren't 63 points better the of Charger coach ~mpese. feated in the first quar- they have recently, it would seem his first appearance ever in Law- played 'em tough out on Zampese, a S-7, 165•pound lreshman ing Holiday Bowl is going to miss rence, Kan .. lhis week will be the ror• ter." another na• out of University High, Is getting C(}Jleges column ap- the possibUlty of getting four mer San Diego Chicken. now the (Ed Zieralski's or a very highly- some playing time. He has every Ttmrsday in The Tri- tional cham~ion touch• Fa moos Chicken, fresh from his vie- pears learn to play here on catches for 42 yards and one bune.) ranked footbai! down three of his tory in lhal recent lawsult. Dec. 22. down . He pulled that the catches in the Occidental game. Bui Reid said yesterday • • • • crying in their This week's USO game with Azusa Sweet­ local bowl folks aren't next Sat- PRIMO STUFF - Former they lei the WAC get Pacific has been changed to Primus is eggnog because Toreros flip.flopped water High star James away. urday. The among Pac-10 ru shers Cal Poly Pomona and now fourth For one thing, the Holiday Bowl games with his 75.3 average. Primus is play the Broncos this Saturday with stlll has the option lo invite the WAC will UCLA 's leading rusher with 452 what's-fair-In- at USD. That gives Brian Fogarty ver• , champion. Bu~ in the for yards in six games and he has a game, the WAC and his crew a chance to prepare his last five love-and-bowling Okoye, the aged 88 yards in each of bas the option to tell the Azusa•Pacific's Christian champion back from Nigeria. games. j Holiday Bowl lo go take a ride on a phenom running poinsettia if the bowl committee were to ask, say. the Falcons lo land here in December. "Sorry guys." Air Force might say. "We're going to a New Year's Day bowl." Said Reid: "We knew that possibili· ty might evolve, especially with BYU being the national champion last . And a national magazine, predict• - This BYU IIOLIDA Y SCOUTING year. In spite of that. we had to do mg this year's bowl learns, said team selection committee in Holiday w~k. the what we did. No bowl game in the would meet West Virginia will be at Minnesota to see Lou history of bowl games had the same Bowl VIII. Gophers play Ohio Stale, and 't play in Hoilz's team in It seven straight years, as we _For one thing, BYU can lhey'II be al South Bend. Ind .. lo see had with BYU." th1s game because it's on a Sunday, play IISC. Also the play Notre Dame Unlike some people in this town, and the Latter Day Saints don't s will visit Los Angel.;. to . scout Reid reels Air Force would be a good sports on Sundays watch UCLA (5•1-1) play California. Air Force beat Another thing, West Virginia• scout­ draw here. Should · Thus far, the commillee has Utah. San Diego State and BYU In Utah? C'mon. following teams Air Force has ed the the upcoming weeks. the Falcons ~u~ no question I he commiltee Arizona, Arizona Stale. Alabama. and instance. the could climb high in the raLings a big chore ahead. For Army. Indiana, Minnesota. Nebraska ' bowl a top Pac- IO be one ol the more attractive ideal matchup would be Ohio State. Oklahoma State. Purdue: teams in the country. team with a Big Ten team No way State, Tennessee Texas with th~ San Diego •"When we made this new agree­ says the Rose Bowl contract A&M , UCLA, use. Utah and Wash­ ment, we did it hoping it would bring two megabuck-making conferences ington. M>lllt'lhlng good ror both parties," "Polenlially, that would be the Reid said. "II gives us variety and It bes! package," Held said. "We're I ■ ■ It's gives them variety." fighting to get that rule changed. MT, EVERETT - Purdue senior Despite getting a huge media blitz the Rose Bowl hammerlock." a high school teammate than Jim Everett. here when the bowl toned down it's Meantime, Reid said more of San Diego Stale wide receiver agreement with the WAC by opening 30,000 tickets have been sold for Holi­ Warren, is climbing the Pur­ are about Vince it up for two oUiet- teams in 1985 and day Bowl VIU Ticket sales ~ue career record charts. He's fourth • '88 an~ making a WAC team (and not on pace ~1!)1 all prior years, he said. offensive yards (S.505) and in get 10,000 '" total necessarily the champion) an option­ ~he parhc1pating teams to~down passes (35~ and he's third al pick In two of the six years be­ llcke.ts each. BYU always sold its tween 1991 and 1996, word somehow 10,000 tickets annually and usually hasn't reached the East County sub- popped for hall the other school 's • · urbs, much less the East Coast. One share when lhe ducats were avail• East County paper said this as re­ able. Last year, Michigan sold its cently as Oct. 16: "Holiday Bowl offi• share. eials plan to scout eight teams this weekend as they continue a search for an opponent to face the Western Athletic Conference champion (BYU, Air Force or Utah) in Holiday Bowl Vflf." ()'SD Theater-esent AnarewLewlie' F. , es Field," of the a tale c Southern Baptist who finds himself with working a group of German nuns, open­ ing Thursday and running Nov. through , 3, Camino Theater, USD. Per­ formanc·es: 8 p.m. Thursday through Nov.2, 2 p.m. Nov. 3. Tick­ ets: general, $4; senior citizens, .students, $3; , children and military, $2. I Information: 260-4600 ext. 4296/

14.busines~·· s form~~~.P~:, "">Jl((O ,~ _s -~- ~rt~·er~ip, s' with schools The city schools BoarTo . I Educa- The new pairings tion has recognized H businesses ,are: . and Loma that - California First Bank, Portal Elementary School; will act as "partners ill educa- North Park San Diego tion" ,. branch, and Jefferson City Guard-Noncom- with local schools. •·· Elementary •missioned Officers ~ Under School; ·' A~iation and a program begun during the the San Diego Center 1982-83 school The Green Tiger Press and for Children; year, the district en- moot Fre- San Diego County courages outside Elementary Schoo~ Bar Association bus inesses and Holsum and Marvin Elementary School; groups to "adopt" public Baking Company and St. schools to Vincent School Target, Balboa store, and w~ich they can offer ; bergh Lind- special opportu- Home Federal Elementary School; nities, such as tutoring, tours Savings & Loan and Target centive and in- Martin Luther King , Kearny Mesa store, and prograuis . · Elementary Cub~rly Elementary The School; Schoo~ 14 partnerships announced Torret., Pines this week International Business Bank and Torrey bring .the total number of Machines Pines Elementary partnerships Corp. and Hoover High Schoo~ Schoo~ struck in the Partner- University of Sao ships in Education Long's Drug Store Number 154 Diego and Car- program to 107 in O'Farrell and son Elementary School; cily scbe<>~ Countywide School of Creative and , the pro- Performing Carrier Airborne Early Warning Arts; · · . Squadron gram.~I~. a~.t-~ ~~rings. 116 iDQ .J4ir11mar Ranch .Jf' · Pacific . :'& ..- 'Southwest -. • ~ ,:i, ...J. I • 'f Airlines l , .. ,.. Ir , ~ 1; \ 1 :.. :,. (PSA) ....,luir \-.: 'f4 I ,, ,~~~~~t~ ~ 4 r.., .L.. ~ ;;) i f j ·:·:· t'~· \ -~-.. •·: _...... ,_ . ... '../4 Photo show at USO · . _. - _, I , SAN DIEGO .3>~Levin- ' · thal's "Moc:fflnr~omance" photography show can be seen in I Founders Art Gallery at the Uni­ versity of San Diego through Nov. SAN DIEGO - David Levin- . thal's "Modem Romance" ~ ...... :. .. I photography show can be seen in Founders Art Gallery at the Uni­ .versity of San Diego through Nov. 1. -2?56' /' (Fro.!'" page 53~ ' ( , The show marks Levjpthal's ·West Coast debut. ::2..._qt:=,~ _ The New York aftisi."Y'work are Polaroid pictures of miniature ur­ ban scenes that Levinthal built himself. After constructing the miniature, he projects a video im­ age of it on a screen, then photographs that image with a Po- / laroid SX-70. The surreal images depict urban scenes of New York. The gallery is open weekdays from noon to 5 p.m. There is no ad;.-· mission. charge. / '/ • i .... Have women made any signific~t caus~ of arthritis she has suffered legal advances in the past 20 years, since she was' 10 years old, told of or are they actually losing the efforts, including civil disobedience ground they gained? - movements, to win state and federal Those were subjects touched on by regulations prohibiting discrimina-· nearly 200 women who gathered at : tion against people with disabilities. the University of San Diego over the She said favorable regulations and weekend for the 15th Annual Far- court decisions since . 1977 have West Regional Conference on Women helped discourage discrimination and the Law: against the handicapped on issues The th~ee-day conference, geared such as bus ramps and elevator lifts ;1 ( to an aud1enc~ of law_students, attor- as well as employment. An impol.'t1 neys and .educators m related legal , ant . advance in schools,. she said;),is fields, was attended by Kate Millet, that while not all school classes must! author and pqlitical a~tivist; _Midg_e be "physically acces.sible': ,to the Costanza, former advJSer to Pres1; • handicapped in many cases p~ · de~t ·fimmx_ Carter; ,and P_:ostit~~~ grams must~, , ~ .:'..- ... ', ·acttvJS~ Ma~go St. J~es. - ''That means,thatlif the professor

About 44 workshOJ>S dealt with a1 teaches on-the second floor that has. wide range J of wries', :including •di- no elevator be must make arrangeL vorce mediation; -employment dis- ments to m~t with the disabled stu­ crimination, lesbian and gay child dent on the first floor," she said. custody and adoption, advoca¢y _for But what is. .discouraging, she said, the agi~g, pro~l~ms, confrontmg are proposals to take back many of women _m. the IDJhtary and .women the gains of the late 1970s. and addiction. She was followed by Sherri Soko- One speaker at yesterday's work- loff, a lawyer who frequently brings shop on legal and social issues of lawsuits against businesses or people people with disabilities was Cathe- who discriminate against the handi­ rine Johns, former president of the capped . . Association on Handicapped Student . Her advice to law students who Service ·Programs in Post-Secondary · may wish to follow her footsteps: Education with the Community Col- "Hit the wrongdoers in the pocket- lege Distrjct. . book" using~ California civil rights / Johns, who uses a wheelchair be- . -codes. / tie The \ Deana' Ball, a black e Hotel social event for SD at 15, will in- Inter-Co ·_,.,.,.,..__""' ov. and state's - . ve; ip i s - go to all five •·future. Proceeds will . Edward ( schools at the university School of DeRoche, dean of USD'a I pro-' . Education,. plans to earmark designed to · ceeds for scholarships college for a lure students back to "In Califor­ degree in education. teachers is nia, the median age of ~at' iil 10 years~·~ 45; 'I'hli; mei'na. .will • estimated i.10,000 teachers the \ he said. "In San Diego retire," as critical, teacher shortage ·is not in rural . the problem is severe but ./ areas o(California." • * * ~ ·~Jz~!Jn~~I~t~~.~!~!~~v~? ~" pontiaa ..Ji • a 1aw· tlrm er Hutto. ddecl tliat'la•·ftmill t'all . prNent Richard Schmalta, . who pbyakiau' ,roup pnerally lboull . • lntothe-caf.etOrY. ' ' will ipealt on "Get II Jump on ellcl& to diltribute NrJUlllla ta ka , e. pndlded that problema with 1986" at a lUDCbeon tomorrow at . ~ . 11 • MluJr . the IRS will arlat when ~ ~y tha W91tpte Hotel. e. la Tice · ratller titan dlvldanu, HJa held oorpantion pt.a ,larpr and pl'Nident and · chairman al the · IOellMI Bllttoa, HuUoa, Pau.- maretmploy-anadded. ,. ltock 119lection committ.ee for the - • C.. accou.ntiq llrm put.. ''111,e further :ro,i pt away from firm: · Prior to joini111 Kidder In i>allu. the company be(JII the result aCthe PNbody In 11181, ht WM an Bot quNtiona etlll aria~ tft'Qft al one or two penona, the . tquitlea analy ■ t at Morran the Interul Rnenue Senlaa bM , more riak you run In, havi"' tJie Stanley. not defined pnc:iNly what -- Alux challen,ecl· by the ~- II • • • ■tltute■ .-in Alary fer MKb ther:e I■ an altanwin ~wNn Julianne II. Adamlk ha■ joined . ■harebolder--,loy-, huay■• . ulary and diYidend, the c,orpora- ' the San Dieao office a( ~~o • "lf U-. l■ a-,,andon'that ii■ tion ~d alway■ al ■d Alu.y," Hi!I!!!!,_ H employ- beiiel'lt■ -rnily■t . She'will be re■pc)Nible for ' ' ■o'.aly ■is of client rroup health, life and diubillty progr■ m■, co■t COD· ~ · Money Minders tainment feature,, premium neptiation, and employM com• ;JP , by Herbert W. Lockw~ municatlon. Prnioualy, 'aha wu ■uperviaor of employee benefit.a at Solar TurbinN.? cloNly held and maltee an awful lot Hutton aaid. 1 • • • or money, the beat way to- ' IRS qent Larry Chriatenaen CPA David B. Laraea ha■ bNn dl■t:ributa that money froal a tu aay■ the iaue baa become a ■ubjec- · named principal in the ftrm a( A.V. i lltandpolnt Is to do it In the r-al tin rather than an objective teat Ariu a, Co. Fannerly a partner ularleeand notdividenda." · becauae the term "reuonable 'with Coopen & Lybrand, Lanen 8alariN an tu deductible by . compenutlon" baa not bNn deftn- will be -or-.-amr-Dwt IICCOWltiq the ~tion wherNI dividend■ ad and bu become a controv-ial principal and will a)80 be reeponai- ue DOt. While *e indlvi'dual am- ' queatlon. · , ble for the firm'• quality control . are many facton that ro proceduree. 1 1>'°>'- will be liable fdr !Jlcome "There tu reranll.. at whether they . into determinina that," he aaid. • • • receiw the money u Alary or div- · "Such ai what la lhe expertiae of "IRA•, America'• Belt ln- iclend, a carpara&ion'1 tu liability , the Individual receivinr the com- v..tment" will be the aubjed of a cu be rreatly reduced IC the penutioli, hi■ Cl? her prior em• er.. community aeminar Nov. 6 at diabunament la abown u aalary, ployment, how long the corporation 7 P,.m. at the Tierruante Library, ~ the accountant aaid. · · · ha■ bNn in buaineee, what eervicee 4986 Le Cuanta Dr. CcHponaon "A clONlJ held ' corporation · are beinr rendered, how much time ' an the library and The Foundation u■ually ha■ .,.,., r- amploy-. l1 beinr fl)eDt by the individual for Financial Education. Often then la only one llharebolder and la that time beinr spent dlNCt- • • • or maybe a family. The ■harehold- ly or indirectly for the corporation, David F. Wllaon ol Chula Vi■ta ..--.,1oy .. would be one 'at the the corporation'• net income and will eerve u at.ate national director thrN or four who own all the 'lloclt • ma profit, what la the'ratio ol the • of the Independent Inaurance and allO dnaw a Alary &o,D the coq,enution to that of the com- A,ent■ and Broken a( California · corporation.,,. pany'a Alea, comparison with aim• in 11186-86. He wu electecl by the • Hutton Mid IOIDI tu court rul- liar companiee and eo on. · · DABC melllbenhip at a recent inp have revened IRS declaiona ' "All theae f'ac:ton are not 811• ·• conventioninVaocou:ver,B.C. that went apinat a ciltpdntlon cluaive. One factor standin1 alone • • • that clime aalary over dividend. doel not -,ily mean tha Prudential-Bache 8ecuride1 HOW9'f'111', he warned that the·IRS compenaatlon la reuonable or \ID· ' will ho■t a aeminar titled "Sa& 'reclaaify u diTidad a, reuonable. Many fact.on can be Money Alt.ernatlvee for Jncome. can alwaya I •lary it deem■ in ~ at a _,... conaldered and not all th- fac:toa:. Orinted Inveat.on" today ■tartlnr -■hie~ mfptb,e~ntlnuitua~" , at 7 p .m. at La Jolla vm.,. Inn. "Bat wbat l1 a nuoublt ' ' • • • · Ttit tree aeminar will cover I varl• · amount er an nceulve amount I■ • Pamela Hamilton will preNnt a ety . of the mo■t populu alter- DOC clear," aaid Hutton. ''In- ln· lecture titled "Overview or native ■ to CD ■ and mo~ey ll&alllCII a ■hareboldeH~ wlu Dowtown Development" at the ' markets. Speaken will be ~ paid more than $1 millillla, 1'!il the, Nov. 7 dinner~ of the Coi- Kett, vice preaident and 111.11111&111' court ruled in Cavor altbe ccirpon. ' pont.e Pbumoe Councll ot San of tha firm'• La Jolla, affica; and t~ after the IM. had l'9da■-lfted · Dlefo _at the U~venity Club. She Robert · McCall, a1, iuurance the ~ u · dividend and I■ · ailll■tant nee preeldent for ~ill. ; -.-h~iti~ ,~.,,_,~ ·• ~ of die Cen~ City De- •. · • • • l;jQ,ocaj~- ► • ; ,,. , .,,.,; ~-, ulopme°' 1-G~~!M~lh,~ .fo~, 1 1, Tile board of"ciirea&aw of~ .,., . ,,. , . , " ""'\ ~'- ,.,.,. " "'t..t..• .OOOO-ll!i e'wuillrectot''cif' "•· ·•dm... .. · • L--· •·L·.,·' "After ~ it Dal become .,...... _ . . . A IDl&traton 1DC ..... appoln-. pnctieally impo-■lble to bow bowlinr and reclanl~~. ~ ~ , . Kenneth D. 01- chainun at w1w ia - Alary. Tbe court c:ityaCLaMeea. . the board and CBO. Beuy -P. wu-._y lnient ht haldiq ihat , • ., • Ji-a bu been named pra1. whataftl'rneyw~earnedby~ Nick lmmo and Brian Yul dent and ~00, W- ■ le:, ~• corporation probably · ,ru the hav• been prolD(lted to tu ■uper- llaahbarn 11'111 be e-Uve VIOi re■ ult a( the direct effort f! the in• vl■on in CooP!!!+ Lybrand'• San pl'Nident, Paul N. Conner vice di~ and tience the-ia,y coald ~ offlce:11nipo I■ a ,raduate of preeldent and CFO, JONpb P. DOt ~ dwned ; ~ V111 tbtt.UJPU):bnpl of Law, while Ylli l! Wolonali;r la vice prwidni and 111&19 dodon are incarparated. ~ bold■ l"ilwter'a ae,r... in \nation 'l in-bouae COUDal, and Lan, G. I~ be arrmd tiha& Ii ,,.i~ , . la vioe preaident el man- ~.... ~~~ ~•• · · -":'.:~1a.a:~~~!J,t;~IJWl1iu4.•M•~~~::O'.: , BAROQUE ENSEMBLE: The UnixersitLof ( , San I)iego _QJfers the Schuster Baroque Ensemble playin~ instruments of the period on O<:,b..31. In- format10n: 260-4714. . ..:zft~ __,---