News Scrapbook 1988

Sacramento, CA (Sacramento Co.) Union (Cir. D. 93,501) (Cir. S. 92,580)

AUG 29 1988

AUG 27

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It's ti.Jne o exmnine everyday contributions around the Legislature ;µ;r»- lt was med1,1 feeding frenzy time at the Capitol last week .

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Saturday, August 27, 1988

anel of. Christians, Jews to discuss anti-Semitism Wed. night

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Afler nighlt,me 1-'BI ra ids of some legislative offices, the rush top· s new laws in the fina I days of the ses ion had lost its usual appeal. A poli ical corruption scandal be- came "th" story." • Two obscure bills that few people, m- cluding legi lators, read, understood or reme.mbercd, were in the spotlight. They were pa sed with little scrutiny or opposrtmn. They were vetoed by the governor because of their special interest nature benefiting only one company "Th story" turned out to be a phony setup by the FBI in an elaborate lhrcc- year-sting operation aimed at gathermg evidence of illegal shakedowns and pay- offs. Th ram1f1cat1ons whether any one is arrested or prosecuted should give legislators pau e tor -examine the manner in which they do business. "Money- bbing transcends <'Very• thing else," one V<'teran aide told u. m the wake of he scandal. Lc~lators u e both taxp yer and spc 1al interest dollars to stay in power. Because of legis1ative inbreeding a third of the lawmakers are former staffers - ome citizen feel they have lost control. Could the real culprit m this who! mess really be the media? The C'E!nter for Publjc Interest Law, based at the University of San Diego School of Law, ·o contends m a com- mentary mits quarterly, the California Regulatory Law Reporter. It asserts we are in the "midst of the worst crisis m political corruption m the last H years of American government. "The overwhelming evidence is that the real culprit i · the media " This may be sour grap The ci>nter unsuccessfully backed Proposition 68, a political reform measure calling for vol- untary taxpayer funding of campaigns as one of its prov1s1ons. Still , the center does make some sa- lient pomt.s about the inadt•quacy ol news coverage that has led to a situ- ation where "special inlerPsls h:n,,.

ews San Diego County Administration Building where the walk will begin Proceeds of the walk will benefit eight AIDS-related charities in San Diego

will precede the Mass. • The San Diego Community Church of Religious Science will begin holding its Sunday services aboard a boat. the William D. Evans at the Bahia Resort Hotel on Sept. 4 Church leaders said the intention is to move to a different location quar- terly throughout the year in order tc reach tourists, as well as residents with the principles of science of mmd. Rev. Sharron Stroud will con- tinue to bold 7 p.m. Wednesday er• vices at the church's Clairemont Mesa Boulevard headquarters Stroud is also preparing a television program, '' Pas.;por to Life," for pub- lic access television. orth The Rev. Jack Lindquist will teach an eight-week course entitled "Luke· Gospel of the Spirit." at 7 p.m. Sun• days beginning Sept. 11 at the Lu• theran Church of the Incarnation in Poway. The course is being spon- sored by the Institute for Christian Ministries at the University of San Diego and will explore the gospel's historical settmg, sources and forma- tion, maJor theological concepts and contemporary relevance. • A " ay N to Drugs Walk and Run" will be ponsored Oct. 8 by the North Coast Presbyterian Church in Encinitas. The walk will begin at 8:40

a.m. at the church and the entry fee is $9 if pre-registered. Entertainment will be presented by Dr. Feel Good and The Interns. Proceeds will bene- fit San Dieguito for Drug Free Youth. • Temple Sole! in Encinitas will offer a class in parenting called "How to Be a Jewish Ima/Abba" at 9 to 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays beginning Sept. 28. Moira Solomon wil: teach the course designed for par nts of children 18 months to three years old. • orth San Diego County Church of Religious Science will present a seminar, "Getting Well Staymg Well" b Terry McBnde at 730 pm. Monday at the church m mean Plaza. • The North Coast-Oceanside Chapter of Women's Aglow Fellow- hip will hold a breakfast meeting at 9:30 a.m. Friday at El Camino Coun- try Club. Verna Young will speak. • Margaret Rainey will discuss a new way of looking at devotion at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Mystical Rose World Healing and Miracle Ca- thedral in Rincon Plaza Encm1tas. • Recordmg artist Michael Byers will perform at 10 a m tomorrow at the Seaside Church of Rel g1ous Sci- ence mSolana Beach Byers ha done several productions at the Old Globe Theatre, including h1s one man musi- cal, 'Insight/Out" The chureh meets in the Total Health premises on

South Cedros Street. East

Michael Otten

The California Wesleyan District will sponsor a Marriage Enrichment Retreat Oct. 7 to 8 at the Irvine Hil - ton Hotel. The fee is $89 per coupl including room, book and worksh materials. Reservations and deposit must be made by Sept 7. • Christian Youth Theater will begin a season of classes in theater arts Sept. 12 in three location, Mesa, Escondido and Chula Vista. Students 6 to 7 may take 1ntroduct ry classes and tho e ages 8 to 18 ma,Y audition for student productions. Christian A u t Theat r will beg classes in the East County Sept. 12 at First United Methodi t Church in M a South The Rt'v C. Brinkley Morton bis - op of the Episcopal Diocese of San Diego, will Install the Rev. Michael G. Ka hr as rector of St. John's Par- 1 h, Chula Vista, at a 4 p.m. Eucha- flSt tomorrow at the church. The ser- vice will be fo owed by a reception on the East Lawn • Park Hill United Methodi t Church in Chula Vista will hold a spaghetti dmner at 5 P,M. tomorrow m the church fellowship hall on 1 aplcs Street. Proceeds will benefit the building fund.

• The Church of Today, Unity, will begin holdmg services in its new home at 10 a.m. tomorrow, 123 Cami- no de la Rema m Mission Valley Rev. Wendy Craig will lead the ser- vice and Roz Aronson. plani t and compo er, will provide music on the church' n grand piano. • A panel of speakers will report on the Tenth World Humanist Con- ference, held recently at the State University of New York, at 7:30 .m. Friday at the Henry George Center on Morley Street in Linda Vista. • Boy Scout 'Troop r-;o. 33 will be re-chartered after an 11-year hiatus at the 10:45 a.m. ervice tomorrow at Unive ity Chr1Sltan Church. More than 500 fo mer scouts have been in- vited to attend the rebirth of their troop Ron Brundage, a $<:Out execu- tive for San Diego County, will pre - ent the charter to the Rev. Robert Mayo, nior interim pastor of the c ur h. Areception for scou will be held at 10 a.m • A Trid ntine Latin High Mass will be cdebrated at 9 a.m tomor- row at Holy Cr Chapel by the Rev. lons1gnor Tullio Andreatta and a video ca ette will be made of the erv1ce Confess.ions and the Rosary

ly $25 million in c mpaign conlnbu• lions These contributions from many husinesses, government.al enlil1 • , labor groups and so forth n e Just pa rt of ti e cost of doing busm" s >ecause specinl leg1slallon can mean millions, some- times h1llion , of dollars in tax breaks or other economic profit opportunties. The center crillcizes the media for too much emphasis on the "rnan-b1lcs- dog" stori · that abound "The nm-of•lhP-mill campaign con tribution, followt,'<.I by a committee vol<· walk-away to benefit the giver is such an inbred part of the system that it is not reported," says the center's com- mentary. "There are few or no stories on the subject." The center rightfully notes that, when corruption is reported, 1t is usual- ly only when a U1ird party makes a pui:>;, ' "charge" or there is "a formal µr !(•ui, m underway or imminent." Thus, it tries lo makP a ca e that if those of us in the media are doing our job right, we might havl' a better sys• tern of mak ing public decisions based on the merits . The commentary concludes the me- dia are "a self-proclaimed sacred cow, self-righteously claiming the fabric of the constitution which it is doing it:; utmost to abuse." Though written before Sen Dan Quayle and his National Guard career became "the story" of the Republican convention, one comment seems to fit in with the media feeding-frenzy theory. Thal is : "The media love· to justify its political candidate/melodrama/ sexual orientation/trivia pn"Occupalion by citing the need to know the cimdi• date's 'character.' " Those arc harsh words for us cul- prits. Mrchael Otten is chief of The Sacramen- to Union's Caprio/ Bureau

San Di• o, CA (Snn Diego Co.) San Die o Union (Cir 0. 217,089) (Ctr . . 341 ,840) UG 27

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

·cally, athletically

ay finds USD just right siz acade

AUG 311988

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around the defense, which Day will help take charge of now that strong safety John Gutsmiedl, a four-year starter, has graduat- ed. McGarry said Day leads by example. "He always works hard," McGarry said. "Every time he's in a drill, he works his butt off. A lot of the young guys look at that. "It's not a verbal leadership. He's really kind of low-key. It's kind of refreshing to have someone that good not be a braggart." Far from that, Day appears to be embar- rassed by attention. Rather than be in the spotlight, he prefers to do the dirty work - literally. For bis work-study job, he does the players' laundry after each practice. "They usually put freshmen on it, but I requested it (last year)," said Day, explaining that he can study while the uniforms are being washed. Day hopes his studying will pay off when he applies to graduate schools~ -

tion is incredible;• McGarry said. "I think that c mes from him bemg so smart. He has a real ood feel for what's gomg on.'' Day attributed his performance last year to the new defense installed before the sea- son. The mult1ple-front 50 defense allows the free safety to play closer to the line of scrimmage. "How we changed the defense gave my spot an opportunity," Day said. "I was up on the line a lot, which gave me more tackles." Day and the rest of the defense were the key to USD's success last year. With the de- fense yielding just 10 points a game and shut- ting out four opponents, the Toreros fimshed 6-3-1 and were ranked 20th in the final Divi- sion III poll. They were denied a berth in the playoffs when Menlo beat them, 17-15, in the final game. With 15 starters returning - eight on de- fense - the Toreros have high hopes for the 1988 season. Much of the optimism centers

was too small to play at the ivision I level. Day's · e remained an issue even when be came to USD and was moved to defensive back. "I kind of got caught up in (that) when be showed up here," defensive coordinator Kevin McGarry said. "It usually turns out that a kid who moves from linebacker to defensive back because he isn't big enough is not good enough to play defensive back." Day's stock dipped further immediately. "The first (defensive backs) meeting we ever had, he fell asleep," McGarry said. "My neg- ative opinion right away was doubled." Not for long, however. By the middle of his freshman season. Day was starting at free safety. He remained there, and played some outside linebacker as well, as a sophomore. Then came bis big sea- son last year. McGarry said the same characteristics that make Day a classroom whiz also con- tribute to his athletic success. "His anticipa-

sure to perform. You can concentrate more on hool" And Day done jus that, mamtaining a 3.8 grad point averag over his first three years at USO. A bus1ness/econom1cs major Day bas e.xce ed on the field as well leading the Toreros in tackles (91) and intercept1or.s; (six) last year. Day's combined efforts earned him first- team academic All-Amenca honors, the first time a U D player had been recognized as uch And USA Today recently named Day as one of this a on' top 10 D1vi 10n III defen- SJVe players. Day didn't meet with nearly as much suc- c when searching for a college. Academ- ics was his priority, o he applied to several Ivy L gue schools. But the only one to offer him aam 10n, Cornell, was the one he had decided h didn't like. Other more prominent football schools, such as Notre Dame and Stanford, decided he

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, race but they're winning a battle that seems to be even closer to Sail America's heart. New Zealand is out with its line of T-shirts and souvenirs, and over the weekend at Super Shirts (Seaport Village) the Kiwi shirt wa outselling Stars & Stripes... . Sportscaster Ron Reina, radio v01ce of the SDSU Aztecs for more than a dozen football seasons past, will host this year's versjon of Aztec Coach Denny Stolz's TV show on Channel 51 The first ~how airs 11( noon Saturday, preceding the UCL J game. (Reina and Plill Stone are _ vying for play-by-play duties op tht three televised Aztec games over Channel 51 later in the season) Enlre news: The Bowery 'f!'Jeat faces eviction from the Fifth & I .., house that's b c , its hOme for fi e years. Theater backers have alrea~ found a new site l! basement o' the Onyx Bldg. on 16 er Fifth Ave but they need a f undat1on to make it work. A concrete foundation. The Onyx basement has a dirt floor. (The move to. the new theater is set for early 1989.) ... Attys. Lynn Schenk an~ Hugh Friedman, husband ant wlf~, s ent two months this summ r touring Japan, t.ere Friedman lectured on mergers and acquisitions. Those are subjects near and dear to the Japanese. According to Schenk, they found abundant evidence Japan is targetmg San Diego for its next wave of special attention - "with a significant increase in Japanese activity here in terms of acquisitions and plant location."' Poli sigh: That Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle was not widely known before his vice-presidential nomination 1s clear enough. Even Newsweek, among the major media, didn't know much about him. In its Aug. 8 cover story on novelist Tom Clancy - three weeks before the convention - Newsweek quotes one "Sen. Dan Quayle of Iowa." , .. Ardyth Ulmer does not say she's Republican or Dem crat. But she does say she's rooting for George Bush to win the presidency. "Just once," says Ulmer, "I'd like to see a First Lady ui the White Hou e who wears a dress larger than a size three." ... And LA consultant Lee Stltzenberger pose the political riddle: "What's the difference between actress Jane Fonda and Sen Dan Quayle?" Answer: "Fonda spent more time in Vietnam.

Tom Blair

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ifled: Science fiction master Ray Bradbury was at Piret's La Jolla restaurant the

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other night, celebratmg his 68th birthday over dinner with UCSD's Paul Saltman. And Bradbury's waiter turned out to be a UCSD tude!lt, who offereil a verbal birthday gift. Bradbury's books, the waiter told the author. are no longer a part of UCSD s Contemporary iterature' eUIT.)CU IIID ' efV een upgraded to "American Classics.'' Life in the city: Paul Apostolides is the Gree bearmg gifts. The owner of Paul the Greek's limou ine service has offered local Democrats use of 10 of his limos when Dukakis comes m for his Sept. 16 fundraiser at Hotel de! Coronado. All 10 of the cars carry GREEK on the vanity license plates. . . At a press conference on the Embarcadero yesterday, Carl bad businessman and jazz singer BiII Warren trotted out Mel Fisher, the controversial treasure hlll'ter to talk about a poSS!ble jomt venture Warren, of Valentino Commumcallons, and Fisher who ra1Sed more than 100 million in treasures from a 17th- century galleon m19 5, are try;ng to raise investors to b:ick a search for riches in shipw1 eeks off our coast. (Maybe they co •Id put their hands on some of t e 11 America loot.) Item• infinitum: Ralph i ader comes to San Diego Sept 18, carry1rg on his crusade for no-fault insurance ader will appear at U Ds Umvcmty Center to debate effrey onndl, the Umv. of Virginia law professor who's long championed no-fault. Nader and O'Connell back different no-fault schemes on the November ballot. .._...._.,..,..,,bP Kiwis mav no wn the boat

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San Di !JO, CA (San Di go Co .) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217 ,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) AUG 28 1988

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as 15 returning st rters, chance to make playoffs f~ am ) The defe bad four shut• outs, including three in a row early in th ea on 1988 SCHE~D:....U:....L_E___ 'There are nine

candidate but is not ready to play. If Murphy isn't ready for he Sept. 10 opener at Menlo, junior Doug Piper, sophomore Mike Hintze or freshman Mike Williams will get the call. Fogarty has been impressed with the throwing arm of Piper, a Bonita Vista High alumnus who tran (erred from Southwestern Col- lege ''Doug Piper's as good a thrower as we've had here in a long time," Fogarty said. "We do other things he'll have to learn." Sophomore Ty Barksdale and sen- ior Virgil Enriquez return at tail- back. Also back is juruor fullback Todd Jackson, the leading rusher with 405 yards on 88 carries. Jack on also scored a team-leadmg four touchd0WQS. The recei ers will be solid if Mira Mesa High alumnus Ken Jones stays healthy. Jones, a sophomore Fogarty describes-as "an outstandmg athlete" with 4.6 speed m the 40, has a shm injury the coaches fear may be

a stress fr3cture. Two-year starter Ken Zampese, the son of former Chargers and cur- rent Rams offensive coordinator Ernie Zampese, returns at the other wide receiver position. Zampese, a senior from University High, also re- turns kickoffs and punts. Senior David Nottoli, who has been slowed by injuries in the past, is healthy and will start at tight end. Fogarty is impressed with Nottoli s size (6-3, 220) and speed (4.6 in the 40). "We're expecting great things from him," Fogarty said. Only two starting offensive line- men return: senior guard Mike Cas- sady (6-0, 230) and junior tackle Mark Garcia (6-1, 250). Two of the other spots probably will be filled by junior Jeff Carpenter (5-10, ll6) and sopho- more Ray Smith (6-2, 255). Sopliomore John Gillis again will handle the punting, and sophomore Jim Morrison and freshman Dave Bergmann will compete for the kick- mg J0b.

(Division Ill teams) in California. We have as good a chance as anybody to go.'

The top defensive play r last year, mor Bryan Day, ls back at free safety Day, a first-team academic All-American, I d the Torero in tac- kl (91) and interceptions (six). Th r is a vacan J at strong afety with the graduation of John Gutsm1edl, the Toreros' second-lead- ing tackler last ason with 82. "He a hke the q arterback of the de- I n o h ' go n to b hard to re- place,' Fogarty 1d Junior ark Cr1 cl and sophomore Darby Barr tt, transfer from San Otego tate r competing for the trong- fety spot. Fogarty id th three down line- m n hould be the def ns 's strength, d p1te the loss of tarter Enk Peter- n 'We played four guys almost ually 1 t year (so In real ty we h ve three tarters com ng liack, Fogarty said Those three arc <'mars Dave Dunn

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Coach Brian Fogarty

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baseball. The other starters are back, mcludmg three-year starter Jeff Merlino. sophomore Frank Love (the No. 3 tackler with 75) and Shawn Re- za1an. In addition, senior Braulio Castillo, the backup quarterback last year and ex-fullback Don Macinnes have been moved to linebacker. USO is not as settled on offen e, though seven starters return. The quarterback picture has been m - dled by the off-season shoulder sur- gery performed .on sophomore Bren- dan Murphy, the starter in 1987. Fo- garty said Murphy is still the leading

(6-fcot, 237 pound ), David Gilmore {6-3 245) and John Gomez (6-1, 223). Gilmore, who has been clocked at 4.8 seccnds for 40 yards, has gained more than 30 pounds mce the begin wng of last eason and Gomez bas add

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