News Scrapbook 1988

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

San Diego 11_.A ) (San DI Co. Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) SEP 21 1988

SEP 1

SEP 16 1988

..Alklt, ,. c. 8 F.11. 1888 Toreros hold off Stag rail~ Interception aids 17-8 USD~icto By tev cott .L. ped I to The nloa f., 7 The nive tty of San Diego er lered last nights home opener loo~ 1ng to rebound from a heartbreakin, loss to Menlo Colleg a week age lthougb th Toreros accompli he< t feat defeating Claremont Mudd 17-8 In front of overfl w crowd o 000 at Torero Stadium, there were omentary had of deJ vu USD led, 17 0, late m the fourth quarter and the defen e had com• p etely manhandled Claremont Mudd to that point Stags quarterback Mike Pem- broke, operatmg from his 11-yard !me, threY. a pa aero the middle 1th four II'! nut s to play The ball bounced f of h receivers and I to the hand of an !:er Tim Bray, who camt:d the bal to th USO 1- yard lme Two play later, Pembroke ran the ball m for touchdown. On tb wng tw pomt conver- 1on attempt, Pemhrokc' pa again bounced off one receiver and into Bray's hands. The Toreros' lead was ut to 17-8 with 3 01 to play "I thought, 'Not again,' " SD coach Bnan Fogarty said. "Both play the ball as deflected" For Fo arly and his Toreros 1t got worse The Stags recovered the ensuing onside ktck and seemed deterrmned to duphcate Menlo's 18-17 wm m a game U D led 17-6 n the fourth quarter. But Pembroke's first-down pa · wa Intercepted by USD's Scott B dley to end th threat. The 1ntercept1on was a fitting end for th USO defer. The Stags were limited to minus 1 yard ru bing and 136 yards passing, 88 of which came on the on freak play to Bray. USO took a 7-0 lead in the first quarter when former University High standout Ken Z.impese ran 7 yards with a pttcbout for a touch- down. The sro capped a seven- play, 45-yard dnve. Two ser,cs later Zampe.e re- l :ned a punt 23 yards to the Stags' 29 ttmg up Jim Morrison~ 32-yard f eld goal for a 10-0 lead WJth 3:25 left In the first ha f Starting quarterback Brendan Murphy separated his left shoulder Jost before halftime and is expected to be out two weeks. Doug Piper, who played the second half, threw a 5- yard touchdown pass to Mike Hintze with 5:12 to play, g1vmg USO ,ts 17-0 lead. Ahe audience --- th<1 big debate with Ralph Nader, J111Tre) o· ·onnell and others an th1 f, II' rn urance propo 'tions Y.113 voca and clearly louder in support of Prop 103, Lhe so-called consumer re,olt rn1t1ative that , '11der support Nader dre" some of 1s loude t cl pping when he pointed out thut the msurance in- du. try,wntten Prop 104, the no• fault 1mliative, 1s more than 80 pag.., long, leaving ample room for "J)('t·n1c1ous intPrlin ars,' pre ·um• d to mean fine pnnt 'Do you ex pect each voter to rt>ud this?" ,der asked. O'Conn 11 "h wrole th• book on no-fualt• 11 said he th,nks Ca!,fornm'i; uld be th(' hf, t rn t ,, count!') at helping , ducu rates, answered that voters 'I merely read the summary as I• i;lators do Lawyer Hov.ard I !er proved an excellen modera• tot ofth,• h,ghlv chargPd event and ottu,,lly m,,de th morass of five c ,mpetin 'mt1 t1ve 100, 101, 111 J. 104 nd 106 'IIOr~ r. t les~, undt;rstandable with his uc,d ex pl 11 .,t10ns It neverthele , re- mained hard to chc)O;;c among the * Prop. 103 would require that the tat,· insurance comm,s. 10ner become an electt·d po t. * • * 1,000 pie al U D ~ y ;ight for San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) SEP 201988 ~ [f.t,.'• , . c. a F.Jr 1111

, . c. e

...Alt...·. , t

F.,r. 1188

I

f "

IUI

Follies o/ planners want cast of hundreds

Thread of hisGory The heartbreaking scene of Laotian villagers leaving their homes as an airplane swoops down to bomb their village is recorded in fine detail in this example of "Pandau" embroi- dery, at left, on display Sept. 23-0ct. 19 at Founders Gallery at the Univer- sity of San Diego. The Pandau artists are women ftom the Hmong culture of Laos who escaped from Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War and now live in Linda Vista, where they are neighbors of the university. Until 30 years ago, the Hmong did not have a written language; Pandau needle- work was their only record of history. At right is an example of the cut applique technique of Pandau. Dis- playing the piece are, clockwise from upper right, Mary Whelan, Jeffrey Compton, Betty Barton and Mary McGroarty.

1 Grove, C

n Ote

Co.) rove I? v1e , t, 84)

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) SEP 23 1988

Jlll.t,. ', ,. c. a

Spring Valley, CA (San Diego Co.) Spring Valley Bulletin (Cir. W. 2,708)

1:,r 18&a

San Diego, CA (S~n Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) SEP 2 3 1988

SEP 22 1988

~ll.t,. '• , . c. a

F.s , 1181

__,/

/ "Civil Lihe.-ties '88," the Oct. 1 symposiu~ f tunng Al Bronstein and a pane on "The ,Jail Crisis in San Diego," will be held at the Unh·ersit~ of San Diego's Univer- sity Center, not OCSD's, as incor- rectly reported !,1st Tue8day. Call 232-2121 for more info. The Tr . script regrets the error ----~--·- · . 'L...

San Diego CA (San Dicg~ Co.) Ev nin

..All....',

f,1 1881

' C 8

"Lowfy- ripke: It's clear they don't like each other mn

uc. Ch n r· n 20:07 for 5K t win th,e women's rare as t.: ·1 finis <>rl ·econd with 60 t,; to CSU SB's 30 points. /

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) EP 2 ~llen '• P. c. B

Low ry w

a member of the ,_......,________

Hou B nklng, Finance and Urban Affairs Committee at the time he rec 1vcd donations that Included ex- pense for a fund-raiser and air fare from Don Dixon, former president of

F.sr

1888

/ FPPC rejects voluntary tax checkoff to fund legislative races By Ron Roacn 1-. q~t:; take effect. The commission also rejected efforts to vali- ed by it." Stern added that he had not read all Tribune Sacramento Bureau Cb,ef Fellmuth, who also was speaking for Califor- date parts of Proposition 68 that are not men- of the points in Fellmuth's case. SACRAMENTO - The state Fair Political nia Common Cause and other supporters of tioned in Proposition 73, such as an aggregate While the commission's vote was on a draft Practices Commission has reiected pleas by Proposition 68, said his next step is to file a cap on contributions to legislative ca nd idates opinion that must be ratified within 30 days, supporters of Proposition 68 to validate parts lawsuit. from sources 0th er th an i nd ividuals. It held Chairman John Larson said it must be consid- of the campaign finance reform initiative that The commission was under pressure to act, th at provisions of Proposition 68 ei th er were in ered as the opinion to be followed because of passed in June but drew fewer votes than did a since the Franchise Tax Board must begin conflict with Proposition 73 or could not be the need to expedite action. rival initiative. printing tax forms this month. The commission severed from ei-oposition 68 provisions that The commission voted 4-1 yesterday in favor majority agreed with Assemblyman Ross were in conflict with it. Johnson said he is not necessarily opposed to of its staffs proposed emergency regulations Johnson, R-f'ullerton, a legislative counsel's Commissioners also eschewed $SOO,OOO, certain provisions in Proposition 68 that were that sided with backers of Proposition 73, the opinion and the commission staff that the in- not addressed in Proposition 73, but added: which Proposition 68 would have set aside to "I' t d" I sed M · · h other campaign finance initiative. come tax checkoff is banned by Proposition m no tsp ea . Y pos1tlon as always help the commission implement the new law. be th t th t 11 f p · Robert Fellmutb, director of the Center for 73's prohibition on public financing of cam- en a we row ou a o roposttion 68." Proposition 73 provides no new funding for the Public Interest Law at the University of San paigns. FPPC.

THE CONGRESS V rnon Savings & Loan Association. Lowery says he was told that the donations came directly from Dixon and b1 wife. Th congr man has returned $4,000 to the Federal Sav- ings and Loan Insurance Corp. which closed the troubled s&L last year. Tbe Fed ral Election Comm1SSion, l Knpke's request, i trying to d term1n the ource of the conlribu- t1 It tllegal for a candidate for federal ofhce to accept direct corpo- rate donations Two years age,, Kripke alleged that Lowery received illegal gifts from a company owned by George Straza, who has been convicted of de- frauding the goveriment. The f'EC investigated Knpke sf laim and ex- onerated Lowery. Lowery said he int ds to take the Plea ee 41ST: A,1 Col. I

Meanwhile, the commission expects a deci- sion by Monday from the state Office of Ad- ministrative Law on Johnson's petition to throw out a Spet. 8 ruling by the FPPC that allows candidates to carry over millions of dol- lars in cash and assets for future campaigns.

ron

Diego, tried to convince the comm Proposition 68's provision for a $3 income tax checkoff for financing legislative campaigns is not in conflict with Proposition 73's ban on the use of public money for campaigns and should at

Fellmuth argued that the $3 checkoff would be voluntary and should not be considered "public" funds from involuntary taxes. "Propo- sition 68 does not authorize 'public-money' campaign financing,'' he contended.

Bob Stern. former FPPC general counsel and a supporter of Proposition 68, described Fellmuth's argument as "creative and imagi- native, but at this point I haven't been persuad-

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) SEP 23 1988 ~II...'• ,. c. a Esr. 1888

----------------

/_ FPPC rules Prop. 73 takes precedence over Prop. 68 <--;). 15"'5"' By Michael Smolens taff \\ riter SACRA 1ENTO - A state politi- donate 2,500 per candidate each fis- cal year

campaign funds through a tax form checkoff should be allowed, even though Proposition 73 bans any use of public funds to finance campaigns. Fellmeth and Common Cause ar- gued that because the checkoff is vol- untary, the funds technically are not public monies. During the campaign, backers of Proposition 68 said the public financing would r~ly on the state's general fund. The commission also did not adopt Proposition 68's campaign spending limits, which can only be legally en• forced when public funds are provid- ed. The commission did agree to en- force Proposition 68's increase in ad- ministrative fines and tougher dis- closure reqmrements.

son, R-Fullerton, who helped wnte Proposition 73, said he was satisfied with the decision, even though he maintained that no part of Proposi- tion 68 should become law. Proposition 73, scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, 1989, would for the first time impose financial limits on cam- paign contributions and prohibit can- didates from transferring their polit- ical funds to other candidates. Its supporters say the measure will reduce the impact of campaign money on state decision-making and level the playing field between in- cumbents and their challengers. The measure caps coDtnbot1ons made by individuals at $1,000 to each candidate per fiscal year and per- mits political action committees to

lives on the same issue pass, the one wllh the fewer votes is enforced only wtere it does not conflict with the winning measure. Nevertheless, the five-member commtSSion struggled for more than two hours with what parts of Propo- s1t10n 68 should be allowed to stand. Backers of Proposition 73 said their measure completely wipes out the competing initiative. Supporters of Proposition 68 insist- ed major provisions of its initiative should be enforced, including the use of taxpayer money to finance cam- paigns. The commission essentially rati- fied the staff recommendation on a 4-1 vote, with chairman John Larson opposed. Assemblyman Ross John-

California Common Cause and other backers of Proposition 68 said they will hie a lawsuit to uphold cer- tain aspects of their Initiative. Spe- c1fically, they want the commission to enforce Proposition 68's limit on the aggregate amount of contribu- tions by individuals or committees to all candidates. The suit also likely will challenge the commission's ruling against Propo tlton 68's ban on non-election year fund raising, according to Steve Barrow of Common Cause. Meanwhile, University of San Diego ll1w professor Robert F'elrmeth told the committee that Propos1t1on 68 s proposal to raise

cal watchdog agency yesterday ruled that an mitiative to limit campaign contributions, Proposition 73, largely takes precedence over a broader campaign reform measure, Proposi- llon 68. For the hme being, the Fair Politi- cal Practices Commission's decision resolves the question of how the two initiatives affect each other. Supporters of Proposition 68 said they will challenge the commi ion's ruling mcourt Both initiatives were approved by voters m June, with Proposition 73 ainmg the most votes. According to e state Const1tubon, if two initta-

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online