News Scrapbook 1988

San D1eg0; Calif. Union (Circ D 217,324) (Cm:. s 339. 788)

San Franc/ co, CA (San Francisco C ) Ctiron1c1 °· (Cit. 0. 630,954) (Cir, t. 508,500) OCT 2 8 988

OCT 29 1988

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and attorney who works with the Prisoners Rights Union. Who Gets Paroled "The arguments for the propo- sition make it look like there'ssome- thinR mandatory about granting pa- role," Comiskey said. ''There's not, and many killers are unlikely to ev- er be paroled." In 1986-87, the Board of Prison Terms reviewed 577 cases and granted parole to 38 inmates. The year before, it heard 798 cases and paroled 61 inmates. "We have a parole board and an established set of criteria for. re- lease so decisions can be made !a1rly and without emotions coming into play or making the process wholly political," Ehrlich said. Board's Mistakes Those parole boards have made lo of mistak in the past, Boat- wright argued. "More than 300 released killers have been returned to prison for major new offenses in the past 1.1 or 12 years " he said. "Life m prJSon should ~ean life in prison." DeukmeJ1an favors the me~- sure because "it pro\ides an addi- tional safeguard to protect the pub- lic's safet ," said spokesman Tom Beermann. ''It's a safety valve for the state·s criminal justice system.'' Boatwright sees the measure as another way to keep killers away from the public, although not as permanentlv a he would prefer. "I believe there are some peo- ple so twisted and perverted . .. th y b ve orfeited · t to hve " he said If Pr0Po.5ltlon 89 pass- es :, wont ile the wmn r- i i>eiie\'e lb~ pubhc will be thew er."

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WHAT IT DOES- The measure grves th go nor t e pow r lo overturn parol decis,ons concern• ing

decisions would be based on the governor's pol1tical interests rather than on the merits of each case. The governor already hos some impact on such decisions, because the gov· ernor oppoints the nine-member pa- role board. • KEY BACKERS - Governor Deukmeiian, Attorney General ohn Van de Kamp, state Senator Dan Boatwright and numerous law State Bar Commission on Carrect,ons, Ameri· can Civil Liberties Union, California Probation, Parole and Correcti?nol Association and the Prisoners Rights Union ' es, it does politicize the parole process, and that's the way it should be' uch as Singleton. for example, have th Ir parole dates et automat- kally by law. and the measure would have no effect on them. Sine 1978. comicted murder- ers have n req_ulred to serve at f three-quarte of their sen- tence before becoming eligible for parole. Arter that, they are entitled to yearly parole hearings bu typi- cally rv much Ion ntences th n them u 1 Ylhj;?aJd the R V. Paul Comiskey It prl t nlorcement agencies. • KEY OPPONENTS -

'The only time I notice it is when the sports information office gives me up- d~ted .stats at the end of the year. I did thrnk 1t mig_ht happen this season. 1 needed 15 victories, and f thought this team was capable of that.' - sosu•s Chuck Clegg

Clegg's 100th win the goal tomorrow By Chris Clarey Staff Writer

Slone. It would virtually assure the Aztecs an at-large berth in the NCAA playoffs next month. SDSU lost to Clemson in the NCAA final last year. "If we can defeat Santa Clara or UCLA (Nov 6 m WestwOOd), l feel pretty good about our chances " Clegg said. "If we Jose to both, w'e might still make it based on our performance m last year's tourna- ment. But I don't like to count on anythmg that goes to a commit- tee.' Santa Clara is no pushover. It's 10-2-4 after yesterday 's 2-1 victory over Usp and ranked 11th in the nation by Soccer America "They're a program on the rise " Clegg said. ·

Chuck Clegg says he doesn ·t care much about getting his 100th victo- ry, but theres a gleam in his eye when the subJect comes up. Clegg has won 99 games lost 36 and ti~d 14 in seven eason~ as the San Diego State men 's coach. To- morrow at 5 p.m he ll try to reach the century mark when his team pl~ys Santa Clara in Aztec Bowl, It really doesn't matter to me .. said Clegg, who took over the pr~- gram from George Logan in 1982 "All 1t shows is that the team has done well, that the program has been . uecessfuJ, and that I can keep m Job a little longer. · The only time I notice it is 11'.hen the sports information office gives me updated stats at the end of the year. I did think it might happen this season. I needed 15 vic- tories. and I thought this team was capable of that." It could be capable of even more. With three regular- eason games remammg, the Aztecs 114. 2 • 2) are ranked fifth in the nation in the coaches' poll and sixth by Soccer America They ha\'e out- scored opponents, 35.7. A victory tomorrow would not only allow Clegg to reach a mile-

. SDSU could tie a school record if It ho!ds Santa Clara scoreless. Last years team had 13 shutouts. This year's team has 12. Junior Bryan Finnerty has an 0.49 goals-against averag~. The school record for a s~ason is 0.63, held by Mark Stepo- vich 0981). Sophomore striker Eric Wynalda leads the Aztecs in coring With 12 goals and five assists. Striker Je{[ Betts, a freshman from Seattle is second with eight goals and th;ee assists. Senior striker Kyle Whit- temore, SDSU's all-time scoring leader, has six and four.

San Diego, Calif Union C re D 217 324) (Cir~ S 339, 788)

OCT 29 1988

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~iest ordered silenced coming here ,y ox will speak, ''"' """' ~"""""'• ,,.. l!ire of mast,,- '"""' Rev. n,m;,. A. ,... othm '"""' di>htity, Dec. 5. Byrne, ''This work is just too press- Fox's schedule in San Diego will hold workshop Fo, • ., '"''""'be'""' foe. '"• "' be""''"" ,mtil • """"'' be " fullowe '"" p.m. Nm,, "· be before ban starts year by his Dominican order after papal regime dies out." will discuss "Healing the Global Vil- the Vatican called Fox's creation !age" at the Universit of San Diego; By Rita Gillmon Slaff Writer

Fox has said he views <;reation spirituality as an attempt to reclaim medieval mysticism for the church. "It's not me. We're talking about a tradition. It's not something I made up," he told the Reporter. "People return to Christianity and Catholi- cism because of creation spirituali- ty. These are American spirituali- ties, but the Tiber can't understand the Mississippi and the Amazon." He advocates an emphasis on original blessing, instead of original sin; death as a natural event and part of the life cycle instead of the wages of sin; God as father, mother and child as well as father; and an emphasis on Jesus as prophet, artist, parable-teller and Son of God who

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spirituality beliefs a "dangerous and

The San Francisco Bay area priest who was recently ordered si- lenced by his superiors will be in San Diego for a series of talks and a workshop. His appearance will beat by a few weeks the speaking ban deadline. Matthew Fox, a Dominican priest and the director of the Institute in Culture and Creation Spirituality at Holy Names College in Oakland, will be presenting talks Nov. 15 to 17, as well as leading an all-day workshop Nov. 16. Local Catholic officials said this week that Fox's talks continued to be scheduled because the schedule

Christ," at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul; at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 17, "Peacemaking in the Midst of Cri- sis," at First Unitarian Church; and at 8 a.m. Nov.17, "A Paradigm Shift for Western Religion," at a break- fast at the University of San Diego. A workshop titled "Creation Spir- ituality: A Movement of Hope in a Time of Despair," will be held frorp 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 16 at First United Methodist Church. Call Friends of Creation Spiritual- ity at 283-5216 for information about registration for the workshop anti breakfast and about donations for the talks.

deviant teaching."

Creation spirituality, as related by Fox, is an esoteric mix of Chris- tian mysticism, feminism and envi- Fox founded his institute in 1977 in Chicago and moved it to Oakland in 1983 to be nearer to the center of the scientific community. Fox views dialogue between religion and sci- ence to be urgent. He will be taking a six-month sab- batical from his post at the institute. Also, according to the National Catholic Reporter newspaper, he agreed to only part of the silencing order. Fox allegedly told Dominican ronmentalism.

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Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times ) (San Diego Ed. (Cir. D. 50.010) (Cir. S. 55,573)

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) OCT 30 1988

OCT 3 0 1988

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times ) (San Diego Ed. (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) OCT 3 O 1988

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P. C. I far. 1111 /Uso'sOffenseComes Alive in Jl-21 Win Over LaVerne gave USO a 17-0haUtimclead. B "1}.11/1

Los Angeles,CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Die.90 Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) OCT 30 1988

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La Verne scored on its first ~la7 of the s cond half. cutting USD s lead to 10 Chnstopher Perez took a short toss from quarterback Mark Brown and raced 65 yards for the rorc Jack on and Todd Whitley had touchdown runs of 23 and 16 yards to clo c the conng for USO. 'Th 5 1 , by f, r, the be t Jame we've ever played up here, Fo- garty satd ' I wa very happy we were up 3!-7 J may have replaced th st<1rt rs a httl oon. but we ot a chance to get a lot of kids m the g ~:o h d 4 interc pllons and 6 sack Including 2 by Dave Dunn to giv h ma team-leading IO for the season. La Verne wa held to JU. t 4 y.ird ru hmg tn 24 earn . but lhe Lr.op rd threw for 284 yards. De 111t pr sure from th USO p 5 ru sh, backup quarterback Larry lloke· completed 13 bf 21 P• e for 153 yard and 2 touch- down

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b~ve?si~ of San Diego mens eariiTook third place at the West Coast Athletic Conference char!lpionsh1ps m Belmont, finish- ing behmd the University of Port- land and runner-up Gonzaga. lfh fir t 5 finishers were all from Portland. Greg Muller win- ning the 10,000-meterrace in 32,57. USD's top finishers were Dan McNamee, who placed 14th in 34:54 and Max Lawson, who was 15th in 35,03. USD's women finished fourth behind Portland. Pepperdme and Gonzaga. Kari Baerg of Peppcrdme won the 2.98-mtle race m 18:31. USD's Sue Chen was second m 18.50. Karen Crowe, who finished 16th in 20,25, and Melinda Smith, who fm1shed 19th m 20,38. were USD' other top finishers.

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.! San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) CT 31 1988 ,.Jlflen '• P c. B I ,,

Jlf~'• P. C. B --- A~ ~Cied the USD's women's team with 14 kills'7:oa- 15-8, 15-11, 15-9 victory over visiting Hofstra University m a non-conference match. USD is 8-12. Hofstra, from Long Island. N.Y.,is28-4. -~--~~-r, ---- ...... f.11 1868 ~-

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500)

OCT 311988

, xxx .,..he San Diego Oceans Foundati.on recenhtly ,,. 1 . •t of San Diego wit a Y~ I ~~;:~1~n a.,cr\o~~~~~:S su porting the school s Marne e e- grfm. The first such scholarships J:t}f~ s~ forthe fall , 1989 semester

.Jlffen '• pc. s 1xx1> / The Police Practices of the Amerlelin Civil Liberties Union and the U_njyersl~v of 1 S 1~ 1 ~ Die o are sponsoring a seminar on _ow o ~lice abuse at g a.m. at the University of S Diego. For more information call Michael an I t 238 5700 or Belly Wheeler at 232- Crow ey a · ~9.SS .-,, 2121 _ . . .• .J 1 ,,

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