News Scrapbook 1988

1988

CT 7

Jl[/ai',

OCT 7

P. C. B Est. 1888

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

Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) Solana Beach Sun OCT 7

Oceanside, CA) (San Diego Co. Oceansicfe Breeze (Cir. 2 X W.)

1988

1988

OCT 7

OCT 7

1988

1988 1988 Pardee ll'ames new vice P'resident Stepher ~r:?i: Doyle has en R I E p . named a VICe president of Pai-dee ea state eonle 1969, is ?ne of the nation 's leading Construction Company accord·ng =-------e....:;_;=-:::..::::_..=-.::::...:~.Y-==~:===:-::::::::::-::::-:- homebuilders with 1987 sales of to Vance Meyer, Pard~e's exe~u- '""W!ii:c-,.,: -~~~--~---- nearly $250 million. The company tive vice president. community, Del Ma r Hi'ghlands. H I JS a prominc-nt developer of D e is a so a registered civil t J d · · oyle serves as assistant legal HeJ'oined Pardee ,·n 1985 as en

• 1 /.,- c;ommon Cause asks totigh ethics laws for legislators, officials P, C, I Fu IUI ~1 ~< ..

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and Ventura counties. and in the

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for North City West, overseeing manager of the development.

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By Danie l C. Slaff Wrher SACRAM~:NTO

arson

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agencies. Current law, for example, does not apply to lawmakers. Specific proposals are to be draft- ed by a newly created special ethics committee within Common Cause. Thal panel will include John Phil- lips, who will take over as chairman of the political reform group in Feb- rua ry; Angela Blackwell, executive di rector of the Urban Strategies Council in Oa kland; Jerome Falk Jr., former president of the San Francis• co Slate Bar Association; Howard Daniels, an antitrust prosecutor for the U.S attorney's office in Los An- geles, and Robert Fellmelh, director or the University of San Diego Center for Public Interest Law, "We want to involve ma ny ind1vid· uals ann org:inbati ru. in the lonnu· lation of this ethics package," said Cowan, "Our first goal will be to sur- vey the field and list, for each issue area, the toughest, most far-reachi ng proposa l that we can devise. We will then begin the process of analyzing those propo:;als and combining them Into a comp rehensive and reasonable ethics package that can win broad public support." The renewed emphasis on ethics comes amid a continued FBI invesli- galton focusing on whether legisla tors and legislative aides extorted campaign cont1 ibutions and honorar• iii in trade for as 1stauce in pa:;sage or legislation According lo several parties in- volved in the ca e, federal authori- ties created dummy corporations which spon ored phony legislation in 198ti and 1988. The offices of four leg isl a tors were searched by the FBI shortly before the end of the 1987-88 sc,sion Assembly Minority Leader IJ!I Nolan, R-Glendale; Assembly• man Franfltill, R-Whittier; Assem- blywoman Gwen.Moore, O..Los Ange- les; and Sen. JoseruL,MontJlya, D- Whitller ·

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native o ew London, Conn , In his new position, Doyle will Doyle obtained his bachelor's .

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e o . eva a.

a residential, commercial and retail development for Pardee's 1, 4 00-acrc master-planned

d · · ·1 egree m c1v1 cnginPering from earned his juris doctorate degree from the Ulli.ver~ity of Saa Diego Doyle resides in Carlsbad with his wife, Lynne, and two small Del Mar Highlands combines residential neighborhoods, parks, an elementary school, a 116-acre business park-San DiPgo Corpci- rate Center-and a 32 acre retail shopping center now under construction. The community will children.

continue to coord1·nate all plan-

Reacting to an

ntng, processinganddevelopment San Diego State Uni crn1tv and

ongo.!Pg ~'BI Cl!E_1lol CQ!TU !ton probe, California Common Cause has announced plaus to seek 1989 legisla· lion enacting tough new laws to cn- 1ure lawmakers and other state offi- cials observ •thical standards •·we are deeply concerned that public conhd nee in our California 1ovcrnment is r •aclung dangerously low levels," decl.ired Geoffrey Cowan, cha11 man of the public watchdog group. "We be lieve the late Legt~lature and the governor must lake drarnallc steps to rc,tore pubhc confidenre m our government- al 1nshtut1on · "Serwus <·un,1deration of, uud ac- lton on, a comprchen 1v ethics package could be a mo ·t appropriate first step 10 that dtrcctton," he stated. The group will foc us ll attention on drafting lcgi. lat1on to • He,trict honorar1a and gifts given legislato, , and require more frequent d1sC'lo ure of gifts that are pcrnutt d • l.11111t outside tn ome earned by lawmakers, while po'sibly increas Ing lcgislattve sala ries and lll'ncf1ls in compl'nsatton • Hestndtons on pohtical acltvi- h s ml'lmhng fund raising by l gisla- ltve tall members • Crea tion or an Office of Spcctnl J>iosccutor to enforce state ethics laws • 'fighter ru les on th use of cam• pa1gn fund for the personal benefit of c ndidates and morn spec1f1c dis• closure requu e111e11ts about how campaign money 1s spenl and raised • So called ''r,cvolYll!g door" Jeg- 1slation to strengthen current rule that prohibit high-level public offi- cials from lcavmg their Job and 1m• mediate ly lobbying their former -----

activities for Del Mar Highlands and other landholdings in North City West. In addition, he will be responsible for legal counsel and representation of Pardee in San Doyle is a member of the Cali- fornia Bar Association, American Society of Civil Engineers, San Diego County Bar Association, San Diego Engineers Club, a director of Save Our Heritage Organization, the North City Diego.

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 34 1,840) OCT 8 1988

Jlllai~ "· c, B far. 1888 -College eoccer _ The USO m , te~~ (6·4/ scored a 3-1 vi~:: v1s1ting New Mexico (3-8) in a conference game. Mike 8 11 non- two goals for the T ri e scored Duke added anoth~;er~S;d Chris home game is tomo · s next ag!1nst UCSD. ').... 'lf 0 l/;-:j- 1 p.m. _,. ---'-.•-•• 'f'IL .,. •-.,. ..

provide housing for aproximately West Community Planning 13,500residentsandemployment Group and serves on the Neigh- for about 6,000 people upon borhood Advisory Committee for completion around the year 2000 the San Diego Community Pardee Constmction Companv, Foundation. a Weyerhauser Company incc

San Diego. CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123.064)

ocr 7

198£3

.Alie.~ ' · c. •

Esr - ~he language of Mr.-&-Ms.-communication .:<15'? The gender gap in th e hbeearts of certain people, 75-85 in and count the number of times you mentioned terms "What's bee d • J d num r, who are meetmg at the Ha- say "uh" or "you kn .. Th tak · ome WOr S JS exp ore cienda Hotel in Old Town through notes on your vocabi1:~y T~ry fig: ~~ly~;.~epc~f:., ,~ow," she offers at USD conference :~~s ;:;:~!~li~~e~o~reth~e:~~s ~! ure out hwhy you kept Y?Ur maiden . But heat generated by such debate Communication Lan · name w, en you got mamed. Or why 1s an indication of the importance of By Jeanne Freeman Gender (OSCLG, ~s it is f~:~ t:ri r:i... can t stand the term "chairper- :,:vords. Perry ~alls communication 0 Tribun,,:11;:t~s10,, slicks and iri:ntts) or anyone short on time or .Chairman;wom~n/person, says .;~:Jlf~~:h::=~~fn~~.ut~!:~~~~ to es f bl H r a . . L1Dda Perry, associate professor of do we h ve f t' t· . h h n are pre era e. e was _OSCLG ts a na.tioaal orgamzation communication studies at the uru·• other?." a or nego ia mg wit eac wrong, that neighborhood kid w th be h f h who sang out childhood's wisdom as T~irta mem rs ip 0 1. more t an 300. versity of San Diego, is a reffiticlc- And words act as mir~ors of how h d f th f f y-nme umvers1 1es across the mg pomt for Some people They get I th 1 c race or e sa etv o hts front nation are represented at this. its very emotional about £he !ions peop e see emse ves and their porch "Nyah nyab. Words can never 11th annual conference. The confer- emotional that a colleague opf Perr.y~s sewortledds. Fttohr examfpie, one study pre- hurt me... Grown-ups know different- e c be d f n a econ erence co-authored ly Words can do considerable dam- ?Ile gt_an yeslhter ahy a ternoon a nd was once driven to refer to it as ''fhe by Karen Foss of Hu~boldt State w1 con mue roug Sunday. C-word" · · age. Members of OSCLG are delighters Pe · h . d. Umvers1ty and Belle Edson of Cali- , au /

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i Linda Perry, language conference director, communicaf g by phone -- • Tribune photo by Don Kohlbauer

fornia State University-San Bernar• found that women who take Ple;se see WORDS: D-4, Col. 1 dino

osc{JY, o is d!recttor of the con erence, 15 P ays no emo- tional investment in any of the afor-

in words Analvzers of words Nit-

Or good.

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These are topics near and dear to

ey pick sentences apart

pie ers.

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She meant all mail. Even that from Women who hyphenate their birth names and their husbands' names see the merger as "incorporating their her i·n-laws

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What. he a.-:,,.;11.~t:u~v;;:,~1Uu:,;-:;;;duiiiwu-~1it••;.;-;--,iii1iu:-;; ..: .... .._,.,_ that suggest of the black experience? In communication, there is the naming of people and objects. And then, Perry noted in an interview at heLUSD offu:e Tuesday, there is "the way we paste our words together. Most of us tend to use language with- out consciously thinking every time

and damned if you don't." Sister Sally Furay, professor l)f English and adjunct professor of law as well as provost and vice president at USO, was enlisted as keynote speaker for the conference. In a telephone interview Tuesday, Furay focused on the discrepancies

Evening T ribune (Cir. D. 123,064) OCT 1 0 1988

but also preserving

relationships .

Jlllat '• P, C, B I 888 - -Stu~ents ~rom the Uni~f ~!! D1e~o will offer their services to semor c_11tzens Saturday and Sunday, They will volunteer time to do odd Jobs _such as gardening, light house- keepmg, moving furniture cleaning yards or doing small erra~ds. Those mterested in assistance shoulJI, call 236-5765 to make an appointiue'ilt5 ;/ fH.

we do." between the reality of the position of That matters. It's revealing. Perry women and children in the United explained, "Communication is behav- States and communication of their ior." situation. And there are masculine and femi• "I meet all kinds of people," Furay nme behaviors. Society has expecta• said, "who are convinced that the tions of when it's going to see certain women's movement has brought men behaviors and from whom. The work and women to equality." That, she --

San Diego, CA !San Diego Co.) Eveni ng T ribune !Cir. D. 123,064) OCT 12 1988

Jllt.', P C 8

f ,1 1818

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217 089) (Ci r. S. 341 ,840) OCT 12 1988

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-10 San Diego, Wednesday, October 12, 1988 ?irst part ofPBS series exploring mind is schizophrenic A BALfi ~f ED, nme-parl PBS se- Then mat encephalitis destroyed his capac- Edge" programs, as the series is called, ment specialist and weekend news co-an- r1 called "The Mmd" gets started tty for memory. scheduled are: Oct. 17 - Lionel Van Deerlin chor for Channel 1! on a schuophremc note at 8 tomght Wearmg's wife, Deborah, describes the af. .-------- an~ ~b Schuman commenting on partisan on KPBS (Channel 15) with a one-hour pro- flicl.Jon 'Clive's world now consists of a Joe poli~cs; Oct. 24 - Betty Pengelley, former OOPS: Due to transmission problems, we gram that fascinates one moment and bores moment, with no past to anchor it and no president of the League of Women Voters, weren't able to carry yesterday's TNT I xt future to look ahead to ... He sees what is talking about the initiative process; Oct. 31 schedule as promised. The new network's Thi follow-up to 1984's Emmy-w1Dnmg right 111 front of him, but as that informa- s te•·n - Supervisor Susan Golding and Council• listings begin today. 'Th Brain" begins mdeadly dull fashion as tlon hits the bra1D it fades. Nothing makes woman Abbe Wolfsheimer addressing TONIGHT'S TURN-ONS an art t and an anthropologist CJ:amine an• an Impression, nothing registers. Everything ,------- growth m San D!ego. The 8 p.m. shows, pre- National League Championship Series, clent painting ma cave In France They're goes tn virtually intact and he perceives his TV/RADIO CRITIC sented as a public sernce by Southwestern, Channel 10 at 5:20 - The New York Mets totally enthr II 1th wh t they see, but world as you or I, but as soon as he's are ~ing distributed via ITV, San Diego's face the Dodgers in Los Angeles in the sev- the r esoteric d1 cu n is hk ty to send all percen·ed 1t and looked away, it's gone, Learnmg Channel, to other cable systems enth and deciding game. but th most scholar viewer on quest for too.' rent heights or reflections on the early days throughout the county.... The Learning "Highway to Heaven," Channel 39 at 9 - other channels And that would be a ptty, In tbi moment-to-moment consciousness, of the magazine. Channel also is carrying a two-hour debate OK, this isn't a slice of heaven for everyone, because there's much to be learned from Weanng thinks he has been awake only a For example, before true color photogra- between consumer activist Ralph Nader but it's a clean, feel-good show and, best of ' The Search for Mind," th1 first install few mmutes and greets people he has seen phy was practical, colored pictures were and Virginia law professor Jeffrey O'Con- all, this is a new episode. In the fifth-season m nt called mmut before as if they had been gone for published by hand-tinting black-and-white nell on the confusing insurance propositions opener, Jonathan (Michael Landon) gets in· Of particular mt r t are the ca stud- ages prints to match the notes photographers had that voters face on the November ballot. volved in politics. Jes, mcludmg on mvolvmg an au 1stic San made in the field. "Tourists found these pie- TheU~iego Law School "Destined to Live," Channel 39 at 10 - D1egan who Jae normal understandm of ORE El\TERTAI ING than "A tures artificial," says narrator E.G. Mar- event, which took placelast month, i Jill i enberry ("I;.A Law"), who was diag- lturnan emot on ll Ir nam 's se rch for md' is the 90-minute shall, "but readers lovM them just the scheduled to be aired from 9 to 11 p.m. Oct. nosed as having breast cancer two years Ed, and he spends much of his tune r1dmg PBS program that follows, a salute same." (Shades of today's colorization con- 30 by the following cable companies: Ameri- ago, is host of this documentary about his bike throughout th county motivated to the atlonal Geographic Society on its troversy.) can Cable (17A), Cal Video (23), Carlsbad women recovering physically and emotion- by b ts that he substlt.it for ocial mter- 100th anmversary. "The Explorers: ACentu- Most of the program tells of expeditions (23), Cox (23), Daniels (23), Dimension (15), ally from the disease. aclton ry of Discovery" blends still photos, black- and the explorers who have contributed to Julian (4) and Southwestern (34). Southwest- TONIGHT'S TURN-OFFS Ed, 24 follows a Chambc of Commerce and-white footage and vivid color film in the magazine over the years - Robert ern, which already aired the program Sun- "Look What's Happened to Rosemary's map and h1 rule to v t briefly every- this ch onicle of humamty's curiosity and Peary's discovery of the North Pole, Rich• day, will show it for a third time Nov. 7, Baby," Channel 51 at 8 - Another example thmg ID alphabetical ord r towns, stores, ense of adventure. ard Byrd's flight over the South Pole, Jo- starting at 6:30 p.m. USD and Southwestern of trying to cash in on the success of an etc 0th r plac down the hst might be ID Equ lly 1Dteresting is the htslory of the seph Rock's Indiana Jones-like journeys are working together lo distribute video- original, in this case "Rosemary's Baby," th same r a, but Ed 1gnor th m until attonal Geographic Society, how its maga• through Chma. the conquest of Mt. Everest, tapes of the debate to cable stations without the same cast. script and quality. their alph bet1cal place com up Dr Eric ztne evolved from a oney-losing reposito- descents into the ocean, among others. throug!!opt the state. Stephen McHattie plays Satan's son. Courch ne of UCSD 1 111t rvl wed and ry for dry, scholarly articles to a successful, "Blondie & Dagwood," Channel 8 at 8:30 hown in discussions with Ed vital chronicle of people, places and things. CABLE CARDS: Southwestern Cable KGTV's Adrienne Alpert will be honored - CBS must be reaching the bottom of the M t Intriguing of the ca studies ts 'The Explorers" becomes a bit self-congrat- began a four-part look at pre-election issues as San Diego State University's "young barrel in filling time before its new shows Cbve W ring, once promment Briltsh ulatory ID that respect after awhile, but not Monday when KGTV's Michael Tuck and alumna of the year" at a luncheon starting roll in. Frank Welker is Dagwood and Loni m I n one udrrunng colleague re- the tory of Alexander Graham Bell's role KSDO Radio's Stacy Taylor fielded phone-in at 11:30 tomorrow in the Omni Hotel. Al- Anderson is . , guess who? (It's not Mr. marked, 'Tb mu c flow d out of him mh Ip ng to elevate the society to its cur- questions about media coverage. Other "On pert, a 1973 graduate of SDSU, is govern• Dithers.) ----~~- - ------~ ---- THE$TRIB :NE

Jlllat '• ,. C. B

Est, I 888 Egan fields young USD team By Cb~is CJ_arey, SlaffWrite!,.zq~ The ll.~ers1ty of San, Diego bas~~tball team will begin practice at 6:30 a.m. Satur ay, and thats no symbolic gesture. The Toreros will continue to practice at that time throughout the preseason. "The pl_ayers wanted to do that - seriously," said Coach Hank Egan. "I have an idea that the thought of being with me for two hours in the afternoon or evening was enough to ruin their whole day. I guess they decided to get it over with early." The actual reason: Early practice meshes 'better with the team's weight-training program. USD's roster again is made up primarily of underclassmen. There are seven _freshmen and five sophomores among the top 16 players. Sem?r guard Danny Means (12.1-point average in 1987) is the only returmn~ starter. However, senior guard Efrem Leonard, junior swing- man Cr_a1g Cottrell _and sophomores Kelvi1. Means (guard), Randy Thomp- son (swmgman), Keith Colvin (forward) and 6-foot-9 Dondi Bell (center) all played their share of minutes last season. Forward John Sayers, the 1987-88 West Coast Athletic Conference fresh- man of the year, has transferred to Cal. "I think we've improved ourselves athletically" said Egan whose team w~ 11·17 la~t season. "We've also upgraded our ;chedule a little bit and I think that will help us get better. ' "We've got the makings of a pretty good ballclub sometime down the road, and I can't tell you exactly when. This year we're just a young team We'll have to fight our way through." · The Toreros open Nov. 7at home against Athletes in Action at 7:30 p.m.

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