News Scrapbook 1988

Los Angel (Los An

, CA

S n Diego, CA ( m 01 yo Co,) S 11 Diego Union ! Ctr . D. 217,089) Cir. S. 341,840) OCT 20 1988 11 111

Co.)

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

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1 Occidental Holds Off S_;i~Diego By s1i? Ki{MJ<~H. illlU'S Staff Wri ll' r

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Propositi ns 68 a d 73

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8) Daniel Slaff \l/rl1 r \ \ \() r SACRAMENTO - While on state legislator has gon to court lo en- fore a camp

PropositJOn 68 1s inoperative because it received fewer •·y " votes. Now, the University of San Die o Center for Pubuclnterest aw has filed suit on behalf of It.self and As- semblyman John Va concellos, D- San Jose7 lo require the state Fragchise Tax Board to complywitn Propo 1t1on 68. · The SUit, filed in the 4th District Court of Appeal on Sept. 27, seeks to compel the tax agency to mclude a line on 1988 personal mcome-tax forms so that taxpayers can contrib- ute to a legislative campaigr. fund. The tax ch ckof!, similar to one now u.sed to finance U.S. presidential con- tests, would be used to help fmance legislative races or individuals who agree lo abide py Proposition 68 spending hmil~. Proposmon 73 coolarned a ban on

rights by using his campaign treas- ury, rather than taxpayer funds, to send out mailings. Assef!!blyman Ross Johnson, R- Fullerton, said, "'l'hts lS a classic col- lusive lawsuit, and it's an outrage. Apparently Remcho is being paid tax money to throw in the towel before the first punch is thrown." Assemblyman Dick Mountioy, R- Arcadia, and three other Republican members of the Rules Committee filed notice on Tuesday with the colll't that the panel has not retained the Remcho firm to represent them. The committee has not met or taken any position on the ca.se, 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 .

use of '·public funds" to seek elective office. The FPPC said this means the checkoff system is invalid. But the lawsuit contends that the checkoff system does not constitute public fi- nancing and that Proposition 73's ban on pubhc funding of campaigns is un- constitutional anyway. In response to the legal action, the slate Franchise Tax Board ha.s al- ready agreed to postpone the print- ing of more than 20 million state in- come-tax form.s until Nov. 8. A rulmg may come m the next two weeks. Meanwhile, Assemblymau~ Klehs, D-San Leandro, has provoked anofner controversy through a sepa- rate lawsuit aimed at striking down provisions m Proposition 73 that out- law mass mailings of 200 or more with pubhc funds by state and local offic1al.s.

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 Administrative-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,m-fatef· lawsuit by R~ _paniel Lungren,_R.-· Long Beach, to wm the nght to a.s_- ' sume office a.s state treasurer after ·: his nomination wa.s rejected by the . state Senate. Lungren sued Gov. · Deukmejian in the case, even though_, it was Deukmejian him.self who nom- inated Lungren for treasurer. ·

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 a.s the defendant and proponents of Proposition 73 a.s parties with an in- terest in the case. On Monday, the San Francisco- ba,ed law firm of Remcho, Johansen & Purcell filed a letter with the court declaring itself the legal representa- tive of the Rules Committee. The let- ter asked the court to rule in Klehs' fa vo~ and termed the voter-approved initiative "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)

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SAN DIEGO-The bl ue and wh.lc towels were twirling overhead as IJniVt'rs1ty of an D1cRo quarterhark Brenda n M11rphy cpped toward the luw. The 'l'orcros were u ya r~I~ ,1way from upsctt111g Ocn de ntal Hh , l.J s1<'onds rernammg 111 Saturday ght s g,unc at 'l'orcrn l' 1r ld. But a few st conds lat,•r, tho t chee rs t 111cd lo boos and chants of "We wer r bbed!" ¥urphy's pass to receive r Kl'n Zarnpese 11,s?orl, and Occ1 ckn ta l had held 011 for ,1 ; 16 nonconfcrencc victory Zampcse cou :d no t co nc<'al hi~ color ,in gry r,,rt . , "I caught it, no 4ue ·11011 about n, " ai d of the p, s tha t was rnlt•cl lo vt: bounced off th,, turf "'l'hr side jud,w dn t wan t no p,1rt of lhP ca ll h<'ca u,r he' ch1ckrn " I fe d very rob bed." Murphy, who aftrrw,1rd was cl ose lo t ars. did not agree "It was a bad thrnw," he• sa id . " I dcr th rcw h m ll's v1•ry frustral111g to ge t l at clo,,-. ,md have good prolf'c t1on and tve ·v1•ryth111g click ' And 2 plays C,ll'itC'I' , l SI) wa !'VCIJ clo. er the Vl!'lory ,1t th, 2. but rc•ci VP r Ken nc. dropped a pct'll-t tly thiown pa. s in t back of the end zon,• On the ll!'Xt pl ay l,neback1•r David odges S,tcked Murp hy at Lh,-. 5. selli ng th<' !W fo r lht> c•on trov<'r 1al r•;i ll ' Occidental (!i- 1, 4- 0 ) took 2 consl'CLJ live lay 0 f:game p1' nall1es on its I-ya rd line 1th -1 mmutcs to play. l•'mal ly, punt<'r .Jeff T dell StPpp<'Ci out of the end I.Oil<', tak 111g •;~~en t1onal safely to mak!' the sco r!' The •_r1gc1s: who scored 70 poi nts agmn~ t omona last Satu rday, fa iled to score ni the conrc• s,11rl W1dolff ln trng lo his throat. " It was a great wu 1 hose 1lrP so rnc·e " Occ1dcnta l qU,trtcrback 'Iony WPrbc low as 17 for 22 for 17(j yards an rl a uchclown. Occ1d,-.ntal's Hoh Leinbach IC'd all rccpiv s with 7 c,1tchcs for91 yards. Rick l•'rceman made a leaping catch over fen ive back Ty Bark ·dale to give the gers a 17-14 advantage' w1lh ;35 ~econds mairnng Ill the fi rst half 'l'ht' spec t<1cu lar ab capped a 7- play, '1-l-yard drivt• that gan when Bt'JJ Whit<' returned a kicko ff yards. Barksda le> returned lhP ens umg kickoff yards but fumbled. Zampe C'

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(Cir. S. 341,84t.,,'

Oceanside CA (San Diego Co.) North County Blade Tribune (qr. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498)

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

OCT 22 1988

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OCT 21 1988

Toreros host Otc1tlental in a crucial game By Tom rasovic, Si.arr Writer • The wav each coach II Uniyersity C>LSan.J);,.a:3ac ed it, the loser of tonights aho~sli~~ ~1dental .&.a~e can forget berth. or a D1v1s1on III playoff And if the Toreros f I t can say good-bye to t:~ 7~~educe their mistakes, they coach, Brian Fogarty game at USD, Id their USD (3-2) could well be d fourth-quarter la es a . un efeated were it not for (17-10). Occident.:? (4-if't":1 Menlo (18-17) and Redlande opening loss to Azusa Pacifi wo~ four straight smce an m the Division rn West R 1~ an has been ranked No. i "If eg1on we don t win this , to have a winning seaso8:,•~• we re fi~hti~g for our lives we win, California ro ogarty said. My guess is, if the Division HI plai'ottsb(bly will not be represented in power lies in the Midwest) au~ th e r ion's balance of the playoffs last year wlt:et did have a chance to go to unusual. There are four ~o losses. But that was Divisi?n III this year." or five undefeated teams in Occidental, which has m d last five years, has the look~fe the playoffs three of the afford another loss said C haDplayoff team but cannot The Tigers hav; outscoac al~ W1dolff. They have two effective ri~~ their opponents, 128-29. the caliber of the backfield th I? backs - though not ol Vance Mueller, Widol[f said _: mcluded cur.rent Raider. back. The numbers: Tailback ~nd _an accurate quarter- 405 yards on 61 carries and fullb e~1~ Vegas ha.s gained on 24. Tony Werbelow has ac eorge Conahey 341 five touchdowns. Occidenta~o1pl~ted 31 of 44 pas.ses, fo Occidental which returns a_ so as two shutouts. ... coming off a '10-16 victor e~ght starters on_ defense, is But with its strong def:nagam.st Pomona-Pitzer. • La.st week in USD's 21 6 s~, USD usually has a chance yards on 42 rushing atte~ ~ctory, host Whittier lost 18 Dave Dunn had three sa ksp ,' mostly because nose guarr1 c ,or 25 yards n The USD offense can be . .

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!me with 3 58 left and Occidental ahead, 20-16 The Tor ros seem d up to the challenge. Quarterback Brendan urpby hit Sam McDermott !or 16 yards on fourth-and-8 at Oc'cidental's 39 and eventually the Toreros faced cond-and-4 from th 5. urphy rolled right Receiver Ken Jon was open in the end zone, and urphy hit hl,m. But cf ender Ronme Cunningham Jarred tb ball free. On third down, Im backer David Hodges sacked Murphy at the 7 But USD came ba with a strong play Murphy rolled nght, slot re- Cf'1ver Ken Zam cut toward a s1d of th end zon nd anoth r re- ed by b1m toward th m1ddl , cleanng Za pes Murphy, who was ru hed, relea d the ball to Zampese after th r ce1ver had made bis break Zampese came back to the ball and caught it, but simulta- neously the ball touch d the ground. 1ver er

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Accuracy a.s rarely a problem for Occidental's Tony Werbelow, who was 17-of-22 for 176 yard . U D had 284 yards of total offense 35 I than Occidental. The Toreros shut out Occidental in the second half, USD's second-half points came when Occidental took an intentional safety with 4·08 left and USO down, 20-14 Fullback Todd Jackson (20 carries, 107 yards) keyed a 68-yard USD touchdown drive late m the first half that made it 14-10 USD with 2:40 left Jackson gained 32 yards on four car- ri , setting up tailback Ty Barks- dale's 3-yard touchdown run. Occidental had 10 points by half- time After Ben White's 49-vard kickoff return, Werbelow capped a 44-yard drive with a 31-yard lofter to Rick Freeman m the end zone, over cornerback Chris King. Barksdale fumbled th ensuing kickoff after runrung 27 yards, and Occidental re- covered at USD's 38 with 27 second. left. Mark Collins kicked a 40-yard field goal as the half expired, and

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0( ceans_ide, CA NSan Diego Co ) Orth County · Bl~de Tribune lc C!r, D. 29,089) ir. S. 30,498)

Occalental's Honme (·un11111gham recov ed at the USD :J8. F'our plays later, \1ark ollmsworth kicked a •12 yard flel the score i: • -10. The _dnvc lasted ;3,55 and took 11 plays. KC>vm Vcgas scored from a yard out with 35 to play in the half. capp111g a 77-ya rd ive that gave Occidental a 10-7 IPad. Torero _ tailback Todd Jackson led all sh~rs with 107 yards 11120 carne~. USO took a 7-3 lead with 4;3 seconds left 1 the first qLiarlcr 011 a 9-yard pass from urphy to Virgil Ennqucz.

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recent turbule~f P.m on Thursd ~ainta,n their way o~J:rmer and n s ,n El Salvador p am,d the Tickets are $5 a1d Oct 27 ,n Cam,nc. Th;~:nted at 7 ,nformat1on call are ava ab e at the doo e information: call i;ttY Raurer at 260-,4 798 r ;or ticket "THE o oo coup~~-~nes at 260-4682. or more

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) OCT 24 1988

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Quarterback Doug Piper wh eff!c1ent, if not explosive. th~ flu, completed seven ~f 1i t1i:t not start because of- tailback Ty Barksdale g . d or yards last week and "H ame 43 yard · ' opefully this i·s th k s on rune carries t k " F ' e wee we 1· · · es, ogarty said. "(Occid • e immate our mis. t10nally fast. We're om ental s) secondary is ltl:cep,. by far, offcnsively.1f ;eto ha~e to play our best game defense, I think we'll be OK~.?ntmue to be consistent on

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Lost IfProps. D & J Pass B~2'!0RKAMBANBlBERM.AN Oflo O,u/y Tnuucript <•--= .,. An .,..,, w n..,r jobs over the next 15 years.

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Progress (City Ed.) (Cir. 3xW. 158,219)

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assistant professor n~m1cs at the Univers1t Diego said 100 000~ ,ewer new"Jo"E,s~ ~nt be created over the ~ex: ree years if Propositions D and J Pass next month. • d Speaking before a Business U . ate senes meeting at USO F 'd P H' professor Andrew AJ] n ay, ~n · residentia~ merc1al and . d -- • com- ment in ustnal develop- ~osition D could I' . dential b -1.,, . im,t _res1- u1 wng in th pora ted a e unincor- . reas to as few as 1 units after 1991 Pr - ,500 Id I' - · opos,t1on J cou im1t ·res1dential Const t · 1n the c · rue 10n . ity of San Diego to 4 000 units per year within the next four years. Propositions D and J both k lit . seeto m1 commercial and industrial growth to correspond to the I level ofresident1al construct · ower Allen contended that by h'?n. 1 cul t · is ca . a ions traffic would b percent less dense und:;o:gshlly 6 growth • ow. I scenario, but warned that on y about 1,000 net new . would be created Jobs th over the next e Y_ears ifD and J pass. f of eco- -...,tg • ne · b :; en said that w Jo creation wo Id be limited 1 • - . u severely co t n a11 environment of tight

Jonathan Sandy, another ass1s- . o essor ofeconomics at USD outlined a range of """·ib 'l•t · ' under yv= I l 1es o a_sy~te~ where residential gr wth I~ !muted, residential and commercial gt-owth are 1. • a d fr muted n a ee-market see · ' S d nar10. h an y seemed to conclude that w atever happens, the infr . tant pr r.

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OCT 2 3 1988

affordable ~e people_can't find an P ace to live and b . nesses may h • us,. ave to compe their workers for . nsate costs if the . higher housing h 'd Yare WIili ng to do that " e sa1 . , He added that if b . aren 't wilJin usmesses their workersg tod so compensate att ' an are unable to ract new ones the b . may have to reloca~e. us1nesses With limits on residential merc1al and industrial gro~ com- is being proposed . Pr .. h as and J S 10 opos1t1ons D he ti , andy_suggested that said orsees a situation where de I opers would line . ve . number Ii up 10 record . s or commercial bu'ld' perm1 ts, whether th I ing them immed'at I ey needed ., . i e Yor not. . This possibility is just a frightening to me .. S d . bit With . . • an y said. limits on comm . b ·1d· erc1al u1 mg, Sandy said the dwi d.J' supply would lead to high nl ing dr~tes which could have the :~ecetasef 1scoura

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the even of . m~rket were complete! ~n~egulated b Y d' . . . eca use of unm1sh.mg land for future dev 1 opment. e · a~a~dr,, who expressed doubts / u the blanket approach" of the measures, S8.ld after the I struction industry was hit ct~n- ba~mg industry would soo~ f; t1 v1ct1m as well a h "So much le~ding is based o~ the Qipe mortgage industry " S d sal!. , an y o!andy suggested that the econ- de~i:rould suffer the most if resi- . gt-owth JS restricted a d ~ommercial growth is not as - ben 1ng ·d , 1s . ) ':onsi ered in Proposition H I the c1ty-sponsore~wth in/ tiative. ----- - ~- urutmg residential rowth m one area, promotes ur I tr:'.:nS:~I in others, creates mor~ aUSe people have to dri f\Uther to their JObs and d ve the economy ofth • amages "O e restncted area ceanside, for exam 1 : receiving only about haJfpo;• this revenu 't e es I would be getting if tb. caps weren't in place," he said e Sa nd Y 88 id the two big wi . under th· . nners 1~ scenan4 would be (Continued Oll Par 4B) 'Sandy said 1· · · .

Senior George Vuklc (No. 8) scores the winning goal to lead 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- d ond In e Ion. u f; had to f gh rom behind after San Diego's Bob Welch opened the sco,lng with an unassisted goal at 35:47. The Dons tied It two minutes later when Olympian John Doyle headed a Ola Hen"'o corner kick to Ole Clausen who deflected It In. USF I~ now 11-5-1 on the year.

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tra esp1te many claims to the con- les.qry, Allen suggested that with , growth and fewer Jobs b . created h e1ng J - ' ome prices would actual. Y nse at a slower pace than in an unregulated market "Th . theee ere are some benefits to about ~asoooure~ but ':"hen you talk f; ' ,ewer Jobs the co ts aroutweigh them "All ' . 8 SD • ensa1d. Peter ~':fessor of economics, while ti ar . countered that ewer new Jobs will be created und Pr . th be er opos1tion D and J e num r is closer to 30,000 le~

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And what .about 1 P oyment prediction fewer jobs?

Allen's em- of 100,000

"This is what I think would h pen as based ap. wouldn't on a model, but I want to put Jui ~ line for that number ..mAyll e o~ the _ • en said. ,, .,q •

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