News Scrapbook 1988

Los Angel (LosAn

. CA sCo.)

San Diego, CA (S n Diego Co.) S n Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) OCT 2 O 1988

Times (Valley Ed.) (Cir. D. 1,064,392) OCT 23 1988

Jlllc,. '• ,. C. a , RRB 1 Occidental Holds Off Sa9Diego By~r,fr.Ml

I' C. I

f.,1, 1611

sueo e ret

a d 73 However, both Klehs' personal at- . torney, Joaquin Avila, and Robin• Johansen of Remcho's firm con-.• firmed that the method of filing the'' case was prearranged by the com- mittee. Johansen said her firm was em-· powered by Rules Committee Chief Admimstrative-Officer Bob Connelly to act in the case, and she termed the tactics "perfectly legitimate. It's ex- actly what the Republicans did in the, Lungren case." She was referring to the

Pr positi ns 6

B} Damel C. Car on '\ \0 r SACRAMENTO - While one state es, another has flied suit to wipe out newly enacted r tr1chons on legisla- l1vc newsletters. of hhgat1on lo com m the wake of voter pas. age of Propo i- t10 68 a 73 -- De pll(• lhc1r conflicting approach• e to campaign reform, both mea- sur won the backing of a majority of the voters who went to the polls on June 7. Th J-'air Political Practices Commission (FPPC, h • state's po- htica1 tchdog ag nc}, has ap- proved regulation lo implement Propos1bon 73, and has ruled that / 1 I _ Siar! Writ r legislator h fom• a campa1 gone lo courl lo en- reform initiative lu hmit spending in le&IS a The la III su1ls constitute th first wav

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Proposition 68 is inoperative because it received fewer •·yes" votes. Now, lhe Universit of San Diego Center for Pub 1c nterest Law has filed suit on behalf of itself and As- semblyman John Vasconcellos, D- San Jose~ to require the state Franchise Tax Board to complyw'itlf" The suit, filed in tte 4th District Court of Appeal on Sept. 27, seeks to compel the ta>. agenq• to include a line on 1988 personal income-tax forms so that taxpayers can contrib- ute to a legislative campaign fund. The tax checkoff, similar to one now used to finance U.S. presidential con- tests, would be used to help finance legislative races of individuals who agree to abide by Proposition 68 spending limits. Proposition 73 contained a ban on Proposition Gt" '

use of "public funds'· to seei. elective office. The FPPC said this means the checkoff system JS invalid. But the lawsuit contends that the checkoff system does not constitute public fi. nancing and that Proposition 73's ban on public funding of campaigns is un- constitullonal anyway. In response to the legal action, the state Franchise Tax Board bas al- ready agreed to postpone the print- ing of more than 20 million state in- come-tax forms until Nov. 8. A ruling may come m the next two weeks. Meanwhile, Assemblvman Johan JSlehs, D-San Leandro, has provclced anofner controversy through a sepa- rate lawsuit aimed at striking down provisions in Proposition 73 that out- law mass mailiogs of 200 or more with public funds by state and local officials.

rights by using his campaign treas- ury, rather than taxpayer funds, to send out mailings. Assen_:iblyman Ross Johnson, R- Fullerton, said, "This is a classic col- lusive lawsuit, and it's an outrage. Apparently Remcho is being paid tax money to throw in the towel before tbe first punch is thrown." Assemblyman Dick Mountjoy, R- Arcadia, and three other Republican members of the Rules Committee filed notice on Tuesday with the court that the panel has not retained the Remcho firm to represent them. The committee has not met or taken any position on the case, they said. Klehs said he was unaware of any communication with Remcho's firm before the suit was filed, and had no idea beforehand how the Rules Com- mittee would respond to its filing.

Klehs contended yesterday that the measure infringes on his First Amendment right to communicate with his constituents. He filed suit Oct. 13 in the 3rd District Court of Appeal in Sacramento to invalidate all restrictions on the mailings, nam- ing the Assembly Rules Committee as the defendant and proponents of Proposition 73 as parties with an in- terest m the case. On Monday, the San Francisco- based law firm of Remcho, Johansen & Purcell filed a Jetter with the .court declarmg itself the legal representa- tive of the Rules Committee. The let- ter asked the court to rule in Klehs' favo;: and termed the voter-approved mitiative "unconstitutional." Proposition 73's backers intend to contest the move, saying Klehs should exercise his First Amendment

La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W, 9,336) OCT 20·1988

..Allot'. ,. C, 8

Ecr 1861

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Peasant of 1-:1 Sal,ador'·' will be pre ented in J.lSll:s.. Camino Theatre on Oct. 27 ar 7 p.m. t·or information, c.:11 260-4682. ?-o/ 5":) /

it was Deu. inated Lun

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

Oceanside CA (San Diego Co.) North County Blade Tribune (C!r. D. 29,089) (Crr. S. 30,498)

Siln Dieyo , CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OCT 2 3 1988

OCT 22 1988

..Allot'• ,. c. a

En. 1888

OCT 2 1988

Toreros host 06Bflenta1 in a crucial game By Tom rasovic, Staff Writer The way each coach !I • Uni~rsity oL.san_n;.,.,~~ ed it, the loser of tonight's abou1alreaily-sli~~~1dental. ga~e can forget berth. or a D1v1Sion m playoff And if the Toreros fail to d . . can say good-bye to the 7.;/ uce their nustak~, they coach, Brian Fogarty · game at USO, said their U,)D (3-2) could w~ll be fourth-quarter lapses againsi°;defeated were it not for (17•10). Occidental (4-1) h enlo(18-17) and Redlands ?pening loss to Azusa Pac~ wo~ four straight smce an m the Division IIr West R ic an has been ranked No. 6 "If eg10n. we don't win this game , . . to have a winning season " F, we re fighting for our lives we win, California rob; ogarty saJd. "My guess is, if the Division III pla/orrs (~awill not be_ represented in power lies in the Midwest) W t;e regions balance of the playoffs last year wlth i lave a chance to go to unusual. There are four ~o osses. But that w~ Divisi?n III this year" or five undefeated teams in e the playoffs three of the afford another' loss said C otaJlayof~ team but cannot The Tigers hav; outsc:1c al~ W1dolff. They have two effective ru~~ their opponents, 128-29. the caliber of the backfield b~cks - though not ol Vance Mueller, Widolff said - me uded cucrent Raider back. The numbers· Ta1"lba k Kand .an accurate quarter- 405 ds · c evm Vegas h • yar on 61 carries and fullb k G as gamed on 24. Tony Werbelow ha ac eorge Conahey 3U five touchdowns. Occiden~~orr;f/~ted 31 of 44 passes, lo Occidental which returns a_ o as two shutouts. .. coming off a 70-16 victory a e1_gh: ~tarters on_ defense, is But With its strong defens!a!DS omona-Pitzer. • Last week, in USD's 21-6 . • USO usually has a chance. Occidental, which has mad last five years has the look

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F.,,1. 1888

1/~~~~E~Ja.campaign funding . ::VT~ (MNSJ Th Appeal m San Diego was e state Court of ked Thursday to cn- ~eform mitiativ~ Passe~Ptsl11on 68, a campaign fmancrng for legi lative n June _allowing public voluntary tax check off pla~ampa1gns through a The .state Franchise T· . del_ay printing next vcar'a~ Board ha.s agreed to wh!le the court considers ~h=~ for~s Until Nov. 8 F 1led by Assembl awsu1t San Jose, and the c:7anf John Vasconcellos, D at ~oiversrtir ,,c" seL 0 ~.Pubhc Interest Law among at least four suits . iego, the lawsuit is of the muddled outcome ·o/:king interpretations force provisions of Pr

left and Occidental

line with 3 58 ah ad, 20-16.

a trap) - chest."

it should have gotten to his

The Toreros eemed up to the challenge Quarterback Brendan Murphy hit Sam McDermott for 16 yards on fourth-and-8 lit Oci:Jdental's 39, and eventually th Toreros faced econd and-4 from the 5 urphy rolled right. Receiver Ken Jone was open m th end zone, and Murphy hit m. Bul fender Roome Cunningham jarred the ball free • On third down, linebacker David Hodg sacked Murphy at the 7. But USD came ba with a strong play urphy rolled nght, slot re- CP1ver Ken Zampes cut toward a 1dc of th end zone nd another re- 1~ r crossed by b1m toward th middle, cl anng Za pese. Murphy, who was ru hed. released the ball to Zampes after the receiver had made hlS break. Zampese came back to the ball and caught it, but s1multa- n ously the ball touched the ground. '.I thought it hit e ground " Fo- garty said Said Murphy, who played with a sore throwmg shoulder· "It was a lousy throw. He wa wide-open . . It never should have been a question (of

Accuracy wa rarely a problem for Occidental's Tony Werbelow, who was 17-of-22 for 176 yard _ USO had 284 yards of total offense 35 less than Occidental. The Toreros shut out Occidental m the second half, USD's econd-balf points came when Occ1dental took an intentional safety with 4:08 left and USO down, 20-14 Fullback Todd Jackson (20 carrres, 107 yards) keyed a 68-yard USO touchdown drive late in the first half that made it 14-10 USO with 2:40 left. Jackson gamed 32 yards on four ear- n , setting up tailback Ty Barks- dale's 3-yard touchdown run. Occidental had 10 pomts by half- time. After Ben White's 49-yard kickoff return. Werbelow capped a 44-yard drive with a 31-yard lofter to R,~k Freeman in the end zone, over cornerback Chris King. Barksdale fumbled the ensumg kickoff after r mng 27 yards, and Occidental re- covered at USD's 38 wilh 27 second. lefl. Mark Collins kicked a 40-yard field goal as the half expired, and

n

e June election.

Rcean~ide, CA NSan Diego Co) 0 rth County · Bl~de Tribune [CC!r, D. 29,089) rr. S. 30,49B) OCT 2 0 7988

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arksdalc punched in froni :3 y,irds. Jim 14 ~~1~son addccl the PAT to make lh<' score The _drive lasted ;3:55 and look 11 plays. KPvm Vegas scored fronr a yard out with 3fi lo play in the half, capping a 77-yard 1ve that gave Occidental a 10-7 lead. Torero .tailback Todd .Jackson led all resh~rs with 107 yards in 20 carries. USO took a 7-,3 lead with 43 seconds left 1 the first quarter on a !!-yard pass from urphy to Virgil Enriquez.

9583.

"A PEASA

OF EL SALVADOR" hisfa,.,(;/y ~~~f;ers m a story of how Two actors ~e~ent tuTrbuie~f~v~n~~~nt;;n 5 t~e,r way~~~,::~~ a vador Prese t d n e at 7 information. cal/ nd are available at the d:,ire clLUSD 1nformat,on, ca/I f ~dy Rauner at 2 6 0-4 798 ;or ticket "THE ODO CO~p~~.~nes at 260- 4682 _ or more c.omed· "'rh wome on hursday O 1 . Tickets are $5 a c . 27, m Camino Th

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Occidental had a 20-14 lead.

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) OCT 24 988

. The rewrite of the N.-,.., _S_____ n 1 e, imon

yards on 42 rushing attem ~ctory, host Whittier lost 18 Dave Dunn had three sacifs f~~;;~~r~cause nose guarp The USD offense can b . . . Quarterback Doug Piper w:/ff!c1ent, if not explosive the flu, completed sev • might not start because of, tailback Ty Barksdaleen ~f 1~ for 88 yards last week and "Hopefully this i·s tghame 43 yards on nine carries t k " ' e week we 1· · · a es, Fogarty said. "(O .d ' e immate our mis. , t10na1Jy fast. We're goin c~1 entaJ s) secondary is excep,, by far, offensively If ,; o haye to play our best game de'--·- • ,. . . :.. . e contmue to be con . t --- · SIS ent on -

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--<: USD P!,.ofessor Speculates "f db,ooo New Jo~~~ 1 d Be Lost If Props. D & J Pass B~.:!OR KAMBAN BIBERMAN "'o DIUly r,,._ript s•--= . An . _, "nter jobs over the next 15 y J ears. . assistant professor f onathan Sand

Job LOSs-. !Continuedfromi2BI owners ot multiple dwellin and single-fam·t h

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San Francisco, CA (San Francisco co_) Progress (City Ed.) (Cir. 3xW, 158,219)

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g unitsi

I Y ~meowners who

live near

areas design t d

a e as sen-I

si;.~e lands.

ta t Y, another assis- n .professor ofeconomics at usn a_ sy~tem where residential growth l~ !united, residential and commercial growth are r ·t d and a free-market see . uni e • S d nar10. an Y seemed to conclude that whatever happens th .nfr outlined a under range of possibilities

.

nollllcs at the U . •ego said 100 000 0 .

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ommerciaJ growth mig t slow aiforda~a~e people_can't find an P ace to hve and b . nesses , may h • US1- ave to compe t eir workers for higher h nsate costs if they are . 11 . 0 us111g he said. wi ing to do that," . h down h

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OCT 2 0 1986

e created over the nex years if Propositions D and J t •

three

pass next month.

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Speaking before a B

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dat

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e series meeting at USD F .

•f professor 1ndrew All new job creatio

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He added aren't wiJlin busmesses their workersg tod so compensate attract n ' an are unable to ew ones th b . may have to 1 ' e US1nesses . re ocate. With limits on reside . merc1aJ and . d . nt1al, com. . be . in ustr1al growth a is ing proposed . Pr s and J S d ,n opositions D he fo , an Y_ suggested that said rsees a situation wher opers would line . e devel- numbe up 1n record permit:~ f:h;:::e:taJ building them immedi t l ey needed " . a e Y or not. Th,s possibilit · · frigLte . Y is Just a bft n nmgtom "S w · . e, andy said 1th limits · building Sa d on commercial ' n Y said the dwindlin supply would lead to hi h g rates which could h hg er lease d . ave t e effiect f 1scouraaing b . o . .,. usmess growth With all these pr d · • · ever, both Sand ed 1ct1ons, how- t Yan Allen adm't ed that forecast. . I - . ing is at b t very inexact science , es ' a that "f . I

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en said that n would be severely '1 environment of tight

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limited in a

get

worse.

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~n resident·

. s only the rate of th · JS worsen- over "S d might have a control mg that we .

.~m- ustriaJ develop-

ind

' mercial and

ment

• an Y said. Sandy said prices would continue to .

Pl'oj,osit1on D could 1. dential b ·id · . ing in th u1

.

1 m1t res1- e unincor- .

rents

and

porated ar

increase even if

th

eas to as few a

e market were c u_o·re g'u lated b ecause of ' tnmishing land for future devel OJ>ment. · Sandy, who Fxpres d d about "the bl se oubts / the anket approach" of I measures, said after h struction indust t . e con- b n1c· . ry was h1t, the a mg industry would victim as well. Boon_ fall h "So much lending is based on th ~e mortgage industry" S de salll. , any Sandy suggested that th omy ld e econ. wou suffer the m t if . dential . os res1- . growth 1s restricted d comm · 1 an . erc1a growth is not . be _ considered in Proposition H the c1ty-sponsore~wth in;' / tiative. - · ~- ~andy_said limiting residential omp etely ~ .. mg ,as1s 1

1

~. ,500

Pr

units after 1991 could limit resid

opos1t1on J

. .

f Sent1a~ construction an Diego to 4 000

in the Cit

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,

units per year within th

Senior George Vuklc (No. 8) scores the winning goal to faad USF to a 2-1 West Coast Athletic Conference soccer victory over San Diego Friday afternoon ar USF's Ulrich Field. The win clinches second place In the WCAC for the Dons, who finished conference play with a 4•1 mark, losing only to champion Portland, rank- ed cond In ha n . USF had to f ght from behind after San Diego's Bob Welch opened the scoslng with an unassisted goal at 35:47. The Dons tied It two minutes later when Olympian John Doyle headed a Ola Henmo corner kick to Ole Clausen who deflected It In. USF I~ now 11-5-1 on the year.

e next four

Years.

k

Propositions D and J both

to

see

.

limit corn

o merc1al and industrial I level ofresidential construct~o:wer Allen contended that b h. . culations tram 1 Y 1s cal- 1c wou db h percent less dense u de roug ly 6 growth . n er a slow- I scenario, but warned that on Y about l 000 net 1 • new job wou d be created s three years if D and ,;;e:s the next gr wth to correspond to th

•·

"You can forecas~ . 1 blue in the face, but t~:t; You are Just can't know h ~ct 1s you ow things - 11 turn out until lJ · . WI is said and done .. . a pre ction of 100 000 , "This is what I think would h pen as based on ap- wouldn't a model, but I , want to put my life on t ~ne for that number "All . he • en said , ,;.is ,. • S d an ysa1d. , And what .about All ' ployment ewer;obs? ti . di . ens em-

Despite many claims to th trary All

e con

en suggested that with '

'

1

ess growth and fewer Jobs b . ~reated, home prices would act::1~ y n at a slower pace than

bgrowth In one area, promotes ur ansp 1· - tram :;:: in others, creates more f ic ause·people have to drive Urther to their Jobs and d economy ofthe nistricted s:.::es r Oc~anside, for example is ece1ving. only about half or' revenues it would be getting if:he caps weren't in place, "he Said l,ie Sandy said the two big W:i · under this scenari4 w l;nez:s (Continued on Paf e 4B~u be

m an

unregulated market

"There are

these m

to

some benefits

abo easures, but when you talk h far outweigh them "1011 s, t e costs SD , ensa,d. P professor of econom eter a var 1cs, wh 'J fi • countered that i ewer new jobs will ~~eated under Proposition D and 1; e number is closer to 30,000 les; ut 100,000 fewer . b

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