News Scrapbook 1988
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Dy BR I) GR VE ' J P rotect unpopular view·...are How many justices would be Uaht Sts,ff Wr ter The debate over upremc going to be at risk," he said. sitting ir there was a stigma at- ourt nominees Robert Bork and Krantz aid that if he had been tached to getting drunk, asked on the Senate Judiciary Commit- Alex Landon, a supervising at- Douglas in burg was resur- rected la t week as attorner, tee, he would have " wallowed torney with the Community judge nd legal scholar. hard" and voted for Bork. Defenders of San Diego. & th rd at u D for the arl While former alifornia "Simply from a role model w rren Memoiial ympo ium . Suprt·me ourt Justice Joseph standpoint you can't have a per- lro ,,,·n a1·d h was ideologically son on the court who has admit- llo k was the 'upreme ourt u nomin c whose con ervativc opposed 10 Bork, he added that ted involuntarily that he has h b he ObJ·ccted to the way the cam- violated the· law," Bc;nke aid. views on ubJect uc as a or- tion ano civil rights drew the ire paign against Bork wa carried Krantz added he didn't think of liberal and th prnise of Prcsi- out. Ginsburg's credentials would dent Reagan's right - wing Grodin complained of a 30- have been good enough for the . econd television commercial that Senate anyway. upporters. S · I · mounted a "simpli tic attack" . The Warren ympos1um usua - M ,t of the symposium par- lll"I I nt pr is d Jor • i 1 111.,.,,~-==fUtain t Bork'· views, " n attack ly includes a moot court session, tual bility nd cholar hip, but to which nu rational respon e is but this year' program featured lamb ted his personal u.lc.i . r adily avail ab c." a mock upreme ourt confirma- Abrah m Blumberg, · Vhiting (,rodm said that Bork's op- tion hearing. professor of political ci nee at ponents viewed his record in UCSD history professor u o, called Bork " rigid, terms of stati tic , not in terms of Michael Parrish played the • AJtJQ!1 SJ.JV pmt JISUJ\I WU3t!U3QIV aqJ Jt! At!pUOJ\I SJJ3JUOJ·!U!W OMJ 3A!~ ll!M opttno:::, ans pm~ 'alPP!W '!JDaA a,uuo:::, 'a'fu11a uqor "l6P8-sa JO >OZ1>-669 lfCO 'UOllBWJOJU! 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IIJJS3q:>JQ J3QW11q:) o~a!O u11s aqJ QJ!M U!IO!A aqJ &111d ll!M wi::,1 'fJfl 8unoA dogmatic, msen itive, nominee. He brought with him a fabricated life history that was packed with controver y (among other things, he was a charter member of Students for Democratic Society, was arrested during civil rights marches in the South and represented Hustler magazine in a lawsuit recently brought by Jerry Falwell). members of the Senate Judiciary Committee started asking pointed questions of Parrish. Soon each was bobbing and weaving around the other's line After initial pleasantries, individual ca e . The reasoning that accompanied Bork's ruling was al o not brought up, he aid. Grodin prais d the confirma- angry *===== human being," who was "so clinical" in hi appro ch that he tr ated people like " xperimental Local appellate Judge Patricia Benke wa more charitable when she said Bork was "totally out of step with current jurisprudenc ." v n while most particip, nts w re personally opposed to B rk, aid they w re uncomfor- they laboratory anim Is." puea ,q pa1anpuoa 'sn,04::i . ·1 01 OE'ZI WOJJ Ute8e pue ·w ·d 0E:z1 01 uoou WOJJ a,e saauew,oJJad ••1J •4.t ·1s 1t•M 8001 'A1e,qn suv pue a1sn.,., wnaeua41y a41 1e sa!JJS 11•auoa ·tutw •41 JO 11ed sn Al!puo.,., w1011ad lf!M •~uea u4or lSIUB!d pue OpClfO:) ans lSIPUUBfJ 'IIU•A 3JUUO:) OUBJdO§ the U. • for process tion the calling ourt, Supreme Senate a place "where ome ra- tional di course can take place." can confront " he candidat questions and explain his view ," "Z89r09Z flBJ 'UO!)UWJOJU! JO,! '08atQ UBS JO Al!S -,,,,un a41 JO sndwua •41 uo 4a1n4::i 4S!JCd e1e1naeww1 a41 U! zz f!Jdy he said , ·l9U·86Z nea 'UO!)BWJOJU! JO,! "PZ f!Jdy '·w·d > i-'-__._1e su18ag lJOJUO:) 8uosua.3 •4.1 ·rned PanehS t S al O debated th e case in. burg, who wa of Douglas nominated the political earn- t ble about ·w·d O lP th e upreme for ' "IIC'n.-., ··---~ p ign waged again t him. Univcrsit about the ' nate process and the marijuana during the 1960s and potential implications of those '71>.,. I few month for the future ," A number of sympo ium par- In the future, he said, there tic1pants said that smoking mari- may be too mu h emphasi on juana during the '60 and '70s single issue , and nominees may wa nor enough to prevent so have to pa a "majoritarian lit- meone from sitting on the U.S. mus te t." s a result, he id, upreme Court. there may be a "chilling effect" "l equate marijuana with use among p pie who aspire to b a of any other intoxicant which is judge: hey will have to w tch used widely by some very what they say and write. respected people," Blumberg "Peopl who are willing to 5aid. of , n Diego I w Court po IIIOn after Robert chool Dean 'heldon ranli' said Bork, then wi th drew hi after he admitted name he wa "very di turbed last fall to moking get lucky the girl wants to make love and then you have to out wait all of those drugs J can't tell you the times I have been at some girl's house trying to make con- versation until everything is ready Today, women are his favorite thing, Dreyfuss said in response to a question. "Sobriety is a bet- experience. Unfortunately, sobriety is such a boring word. I'd like to come up with a phrase that has more 'ummph' because everything is better when you're sober. Sex is better, women arc better, talking is better, listening is better. Listening, by the way, is impossible when you're on drugs ter Jt was a lesson Dreyfuss took years to learn after several near ''My most prominent behavioral characteristic of drug taking was that I was always blacking out, waking up in situa- tions not knowing where I was or what I had said. I cannot tell you the amount of times I woke up in the wrong side of Laurel Canyon in Los Angeles and l mean on a blind curve going 45 to 55 miles an hour. It was God's gift or whatever that prevented me from getting killed or killing someone else," said Dreyfuss, who is an "Not one of the times that I almost died meant one damn "The only difference between John and I is that he's dead and I'm not." he said. "When John died, I got a lot of phone calls from mutual friends of ours_ And in these phone calls, these friends commiserating with me about how terrible it was that John died. It occurred to me a year and a half after J had sobered up that those friends had not called to commiserate with were to work." and so is sex.'• brushes with death. agnostic. thing to me," he said. Dreyfuss also touched on the death of his close friend, John Belushi. me but said clearly in the English language, 'Richard, you're next.' But what I had heard was 'isn't it terrible about John.' "This is what l call the magic of drugs. There is a magic that says that even though I sniff or I take or I do or l drink, drugs are not a central part of my ex- istence There's a filter that we put over ourselves that denies what drugs do and they change the English language. h's magic." Even his subsequent arrest following a car crash .and a week's stay in the hospital did not separate Dreyfuss from his drugs. What did finally make him stop was the haunting vision of a little girl. "What I'm about to tell you really happened and I'm not a spiritual person," said Dreyfuss. "A week after the accident, I woke up one morning and saw this little girl in my mind's eye. I couldn't shake the image of her. Each day, even after I was releas- ed from the hospital, I saw her. And each day, she got clearer and clearer until l could see she was a dark-haired girl of about 8 wear- ing a pink and white dress with ruffles. And I finally realized that this was the little girl I did not kill that night" "What I had done was black out, cross the center divider and slam into a big palm tree going 40 miles an hour and the car had re- bounded and flipped over and I hadn't seen or heard a damn thing and the only thing that prevented me from killing so- meone was that no one was on the road. "I knew I had been given a hint and that's when I stopped." When asked what he would recommend students tell their friends to get them to stop using drugs, Dreyfuss had no answer. "My speaking here ends at the shorelme of wisdom. I can't recommend a thing to others. I was lucky. I was given a huge cataclysmic event in my life and it worked for me," Dreyfuss said. "There are all kinds of things we could do lo stop people from taking drugs, but are we going to do them? In reality we're really talking about making it in peo- ple's best interest not to take drugs, not to buy or sell drugs. There is an entire culture in this world that has no alternative but to take drugs. We've created an underclass that is permanently reliant on drugs because we offer them no jobs, no housing and so they think, 'Why not?' "Why do people like us, privileged white people, take drugs? Because we have lost the spiritual center. When J say I have no solution it doesn't mean I don't have all these opinions about what's happening here. I think we should pay taices so that teachers would be paid more and better people would become teachers and smarter people would teach our young better character traits so that they wouldn't take drugs. But we don't pay teachers because we don't believe they're important because they're too expensive because we don't want to pay taxes because we believe we're be- ing ripped off," said Dreyfuss amid applause. of reasoning. ·As a matter of fact, most of the time I didn't even remember what happened. And J don't believe that I'm going to per- saude any one here or any one that knows someone on drugs to possibility, however, that I am wrong and that is why I am said Dreyfuss, who, despite his long drug addiction, was never blacklisted from mak- ing movies. Instead, his movies just began to make less and less here," What Dreyfuss described as his "love affair" with drugs began in 1963 with an amphetamine known as mini-whites. ''Amphetamines gave me an image or myself and the world • around me that was very impor- tant. There is a philosophy that goes, 'The world sees me in one manner. I think the world sees me in another manner. I see me in another manner and I, in fact, feel about me in another man- ner.' Well, I walked around with all of these realities. I felt that I was 16 people. I wasn't one com- plete person until one night so- meone gave me an upper and I became one person_ It wasn't cute, it was important like a real love affair. It was like coming "I started taking one a day and I ended up taking 32 at a time. They killed my appetite, they . "I mad_e my entrance night and m front of 1,200 peo- I lost my mind. I felt my sanity drain out of my brain and .,..,..,- out my arms. I heard myself speakmg the role and I could see someone talking but what I heard was in slow motion and I did not know 1f I was saying the lines or just my name over and over again," said Dreyfuss, who now has a chemically impaired memory he describes as the auto equivalent of an old discarded Model T. It was the one and only time he ever used drugs during a performance. But taking drugs, Dreyfuss told his listeners, was "never about acting." that pie, stop. There is always the money. home. made me feel powerful, they made me feel se.,mally secure and I thought that I understood the In 1972, during a national tour of "The Time of Your Life," Dreyfuss, loaded on mini-whites, world better." had the first of many drug- related scares. Siiiio1ego, CA (San Diego Co.) S.in Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) APR 24 1988 ~Jlll«.. •• p C II Fu • I UI • LOCAL RIEFS / .~!! !e:~~~. of San Bar~~~'"' a'i:aro~ 1 Uni~ rsit the fifth hi first of the season. B1ola an Diego City scored two rrst, econd and sixth innings to be t host Southwestern,_ 7-4. Rick Twyman homered and Eric Pender . lost for the Apaches ·•· Pomt Loma azarene lost a Golden State Athlet- ic Conference double-header to WeS t · moot, 3-0 ~nd 8-2. PLNC ( 11 • 29 , 4 -l~) got four hits off Chad ,Bethel (6-l) m the opener Westmont~ Dan Angulo had a two-run h~mer m the secood game. Westmont IS 23-14 and l4-a. Softball _ Pattie Hurtt hit a bases-empty homer in the opener and pitched a four-hit shutout in the econd game, leading host UCSD to a non-conference, double-header sweep of Whittier, 12-2 and 9-0. Hurtt (14-2) also had a triple and three RBI in the opener. Stacie Sasaki (14·3) won the opener for sixth-ranked UCSD (28-5- 1). Dana Chaioken hit a bases-empty homer in the second game. UCSD plays at Chapman Tuesday afternoon at 1. Whittier is 15-16. Volleyball - The UC Irvine men defeated UCSD 15-11, 15-8, 15-5 in the championship match of the inaugural Southern California Volleyball Con- in th is 19-2:l . Pett~er led the Anteaters (7-17) with 19 kills, and Paul Miller had 15 for the Tritons (12-19). La Verne defea!ed Chapman 15-4, 15-5 in the consolation F . the terday 1 18-10 r~n~sc;me of~~ t Coast Athlet- IC Con,erence double he der at gh C St d Um . am at unmn fmal. Jenni • - Patty Alcarez and Jill USF won the opener, 5-1, aided by • 811 e~~; 0 Lewis will play Diane Gonzales and Luis Buckley in this morning's final of the La Jolla Women's Doubles B- plus championships at Tennis La Jolla Country Club. Alcarez-Lewis defeated Jene Pitrossky and De De Basket 6-3, 6-1 in one semifinal yes- terday; Gonzales-Buckley defeated Nancy Sterling and Roxy Giuliani 6- 4, 4-6, 6-2 in the other. The B final is meter freestyle events, and team- mate Brent Blackman finished sec- ond in both events at the one-day Mission Viejo Invitational competi- tion. Tim Murphy finished third in the 50 free, and the Sundevils fin- ished second in the 400 free-relay. In girls' competition, Heather Merten won the 50- and 100-meter free events, and Erin Mathews took fifth in the 100 breaststroke. at 9. Swimming - Mt. Carmel's Lars Jorgensen won the 200- and 500- homer fmished a four-run second nning for USO (22-28, 5-14). Dave Monastero (3-4) won, pitching n, ro1 WU!, 2-for-2, catcher Dave \ s 3-for-3 with three RBI and three n ns scored and Parris Sori- anello 4 !or-5 with five RBI. USD play USF (14-26, 3-12) this af ernoon at 1 at Cunningham Stadi- UCSD, ranked eighth m Div1 ion Ill, swept a dou- ble-header from v1s1ting Biola, 3-1 and 7-1 A f1fth-mmng error and a wild pitch in t ixth m the opener h lped the Tntons (22-12). Gary Fes- sia had a run-sconn ingle, and Jim Martin z had the only oth r hit for UCSD Dave Adamson (5-2) won. Rick Nowak (7-4) pitched a two- hitter in ti,e second game, triking out seven and walking three. Eric th final five innmgs. Roll um. More baNball - ------ ____ ---"-/ J->-------=====~-----~--------~----J Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,195) (Cir. S. 34,568) National City, CA (San Diego Co.) Star News (Cir. 2 x W. 3,336) (Cir. S. 3,301) ----~--L Chula Vista, CA (San Diego Co .) Sta r News (Cir.2xW. 24,418) San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092) San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,5001 Est. I 888 Musical drama 2 q t::;-s- North County performersjbinf'he Uni- versity of San Diego Opera Workshop to present "The Pilgrim," a liturgical drama set to music. The handbell choir ofSt. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church in Poway is heard in "The Pilgrim," a litur- gical drama set to music. The University of California at San Diego orchestra also collaborates with SD students in the production. or s director William Eichorn calls the play, "a beautifully written dra- ma for all to witness." Richard Proulx, director of music for the diocese of Chicago, com pt sed the 0 Jlllc,.', "I didn't have to take drugs to be a good actor. I had to take drugs for the rest of my life," Dreyfuss said. "The one security I had was acting. It wa~ women. I was afraid of women. I was total- ly unable to relate to women in a normal manner. I could never just talk to a girl. If I wasn't on the ceiling from drugs, I was criminally shy, unable to speak at all. "So I discovered these drugs to help me through the experience. And in fact they did. I mean, let's face it, there is a good side to drugs and one of the good sides is that you can with the certain right connection become a little loose and flirt. And a girl can respond to flirtation and maybe you'll ge lucky. "The problem is that once yo P. C. B Est. t 888 /USD seininar ThFhelrit;;:-ni problems of "Entrepreneuring" wi_ll be discussed at 8 a.m. on ~pnl 29 at the University of San Diego Man- chester Conference Center. Dr. William Soukup, USO associate professor of manage- ment, will explore the characteristics and ap~r~aches of entrepeneurs and their m flucnce on an organization . . . The hour-long seminar _viii be preceded by a 7:30 conuncntal breakfast. The rec is $15.00.. For registration information, call 260-4585. APR 25 1988 APR 2 / . lJII«,. '• P. c. B E,r. 1888 USD seminar The b~ifs~roblems of ''.Entrepreneuring" will be d1scuss_ed a( 8 a.m. on April 29 at the U111vers1ty of San Diego Man- chester Conference Cemu.- Dr: WiJJiam Soukup, USO associate professor of manage- ment, will explore the characteristics and approaches of entrepeneurs and their influence on an organization. The hour-Jong seminar will be preceded by a 7:30 continental breakfast. The fee is $15.00. For registration information call 260-4585. ' Jlll I en J i., rs/!,,aay, pm ,. I R8o I p C B • Jl llf'ri'• · • P c. e • "i!Y "" J '5.5 F" ncial Planning, San Drego For San Diego will have f The lnternatip~;I ~SD choir to present early American music The University of San Diego Community Concert Choir will present "A Sacred Concert of Early American Music," April 2~,_8p.. m ., in the Immaculata. .;:;!f.S!::> The concert will feature anthems and spirituals of American composers and arranger . Donations will be accepted to benefit thr lmmaculata Music Fund. For further information call 260-4682 ALCALA PARK - chapter, and K I I adviser speak from noon to 2 p.m. at Venita V nCasp 11, al f1dnaEncsat Hotel 1380 Harbor Island Drive. Fee is Sh raton H rbor an a ' $35 Re rva!1ons r qu1re~I 27~- !:~.~ntrepreneuring" will be di1- The benefrt1 and proUSQm nchester Conference Center. Fee is . cus d at a am at the $15. A g1stra11on. 260-4585 wor~ in 1980. The U8D proluc_tion is its first weal perforrnance:-'- l1 ;.. t y ')- ''The Pilgrim" plays at Founders Cha- pel on the USO campus at 8 p.m. Friday a nd S~turday. Instead of ticket prices, dor~ations are suggested: $7 general, $5 ben!ors and $4 for students. Call 260-4682 for 111/orma[ion.J,',J., OlBJtpap II'"' Iuo4d111<5 o3•!a uas •4.t "POP,-PE,
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