News Scrapbook 1988
Vista, CA (San Diego Co.) The Vista Press (Cir. D. 7 676) (Cir. S. 7,967) JUN 1 1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
San Marcos, CA Courier (Cir. D. 3,205)
:JUN 1 1988
Sacramento, CA (Sacramento Co .) Bee ) (Cir. D. 245,400 (Cir. S. 289,200)
MAY 2 "l 1988
..Allt11 ·• "· C. 8
F.st. 1888
other Teresa: aborti threat to world peace SAN ode (AP) - Millions be destroyed by its own 0 f ab Ort i On s performed mother."
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I 88H other Teresa to carry message, aide says: Look for God in everyone
MAY 301988
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CAM_.PJUGN '88 - ~,...._ ~wyers line up on judge race By Dale Vargas 7.-0 hC Hee Slaff Wrilcr -, ·-1':) Across 11 Street from the Sacra- me nto oun ty Courthouse, offi ce windows hol d up Hake-for-J udge signs. Inside the ball-bond and small law-school offices are people sup- porting Municipa l Court Judge Ken- neth L. Hake, who hopes to be elected lo the Superior Court next Tuesday. On the same block a1 e the law of- .fices of Michael Sands, a prominent , trial attorney who hopes Iv beat Hake in his bid for the higher bench . The only conlesled local judicial race this year boils down to a baltle \)etween a low-key former prosecu- tor a nd a pol illcally snvvy, veteran defense atlorney. Like most Judicial races, the Sands-llake contest is not a question of controversial issues or a matter for mud slinging. But there is a lot of strong talk about who's backing the candidates. Each candidate insists that his backers are a better gauge or how good a judge he would be. Each also suggests that h1s opponent's b.:ickers could create conflicts 10r a judge. Sands has noticed the Hake cam- paign signs and the judge's backers. "They surround me here," he said during an 111lerview in his th1rd-tloor office that overlooks the courthouse. But he welcomes the opposll1on, he said. "The strongest thing I have going for me is my supporters." he said. ·'The second strongest thing is Hake's supporters." Sands, whose tist of campaign con- tributors reads like a Who's Who of Sacramento lawyers, claims en- dorsements from 40 judges in Sacra- mento and surrounding counties. He hqs endorsements from the Sacra- mento County Bar Association and other la v • rs groups am is support- ed by sevcrnl elected local and stm~ officials. Sands said he prefers those en- dorsements to those Hake has gotten from law enforcement associations, district altorneys and the bail-bond industry. Hake, a former supervising depu- ty district attorney, disagrees. ·'Look at my supporters," he said during an interview in his th1rd,floor cham- bers inside the courthouse. °I've got th e big organizations. He's got law- yers and a few politicians." Besides, said H.:ike, ·Tve not actu- ally sought support. . . . I have not actively solicited any single attorney
Mother Teresa quoted severa l scriptures about God's love for man and th~ nee~ to p~ay fre- quently while d1scu~smg ~he importan~e of the family ?Urmg her 20-mm~te convo~at1on at the University oiSan Diego. that prays together stays together, and if you stay together you will love one another like God loves you By loving each other, we love "The family
worldwide each year pose the largest threat to global peace, ~1other Teresa said Tuesday receiving an honorary doctorate degree for her servic the greatest destroyer of peace because it destroys two lives, the hfe of that child and the conscience of the mother," she said. ' It is a terrible thing for that little unborn child, which was zled to love and be loved, lo after tothepoor 'Abortion has become Conti nued from page Bl or judge for support. I think judges should have total independence." Ile said a judge who receives mon- ey from lawyers during a campaign could end up in an awkward position when tho5e attorneys show up be- fore his bench. A Judge, he said, must avoid even the appearance of impropriety. Sands counters that the same could be said for endorsements by district attorneys or law-enforce- ment officials. Both agree that a judge should al- ways be impartial, regardless of campaign backers. Sands, a former president of the local bar association, claims that lawyers and judges are the best ba- rometers in the race, because the public will turn to the legal commu- nity for guidance on election day. At a recent debate sponsored by lhe Lea<>'!e of Women Voters, Hake disp.. ,
Mother Teresa, who m 1950
formed
the
.\ilissionanes of
Charity, an order. with nearly 3,000 merpbers wnrldwide, also the audience of 6,000 people O "share the J·oy of lov- ing with each other" by giving necessities and excess posses- asked "By just giving of your a bun- dance you don't feel the joy of sharing, so give until it hurts," the 78-year-old Roman Catholic nun said. ''This is the joy of lov- sions to the needy.
Him,"
the 1979 Nobel Peace
Prize wmner said.
"Teach
your children to pray also, aJ?d pray with them ... and you w!JI see the joy, lov(' and peace m
ing,"
all your lives.''
Kenneth L. Hake
Michael Sands The veteran from 40 area judges, many attorneys and seve ral state legislators. defense lawyer claims support
The Municipal Court iudge is backed by many probation otticers, prosecutors and bail bond smen.
Tribune photo by John McCutchen Dr. Anita Figueredo holds portrait of her friend, Mother Tere a, who will speak here Tuesday n . The Congregation of the Missionaries of Charity was recognized by the Vatican in 1965. Since the~ 1t _has ~x- panded its mrn1Stry to more ~ban 30 countries rn Asia, u traha, Africa, Latin America, Central America, Eu- rope and North America. Mother Teresa whose motto is "Let everything I do be omething beautiful for God," founded the Missionary Brothers of Charity, a men's order,. in 1~3. The Co-~or~- er, were affiliated with the Miss1onar1es of Charity m 1969, . . . Figueredo said Mother Teresa's operation has mm1mal erhead no bureaucracy and no organized fund raising. "She ~ys she depends on God totally because God's re ponse to her needs is the only way she knows she's doing his will," Figueredo said. She said Mother Teresa takes her work seriously, though not grimly. "One thing that's apparent if you're with her any length of time 1s that she laughs a lot," Figueredo said. "She's smiling most of the time. She's a genuinely joyous person, and she says that it's very important for people dealing with the poor and forlorn and the destitute do so with a smile. "She says 'They have troubles enough. They don't "CC:/ , us to go around with long faces.' " /--'
Sands, a former two-term cit y councilman, has hired Townsend & Co., a well known po litical manage- ment firm. His disclosure statement reported $97,600 in contribu tions. The hon's share of his fina ncial sup- port was from lawyers in Sacramen- to and other areas. Among his con- tributors were a ha ndfu l of Sacramento judges, a state appella te justice and Judges from nearby co un- ties. He also received contrib utio ns from lobbyists and the campaign funds of other po liticians. includ ing Boll. Matsui for Congress, Friends of Phil!.!.P Isenberg and Friends and Neighbors of L!Qyd Connelly. Sands has a lready spent $78,950, including $28,000 on television ad- vertising. Hake, whose politica l machine consists of volunteers, has sp"nt a to- tal of $6,812. He is familiar with Sands' cam- paign literature, he said, because he is on the campaign's mailing list - something he laughingly referred to as a waste of postage. His campaign is not as slick or full-force, he said, because "that's not my style.". Instead, he said, he is banking on his record on the bench. ··u th e peo- ple like what I've done, they can ele- vate me, as opposed to going with a wing and a prayer." Sands said that Hake has chosen a low-key approach because "the low- er profile he keeps, the belier. He simply doesn't belong in the race." Sands, who boasted that he has the
vote of a nyone who knows both can- dida tes, sa id he is worri ed tha t some voters may see only that Hake is al- ready a judge. "(Wit11) anybody who knows th e two of us, I have no problem," said Sands. "But the re a re hundreds of thousands (of voters 111 the county) who th ink he is an incumbent." Hake, who was elected to the low- er bench in 1984, is listed as a Muni c- ipa l Court judge on the ballot. Said Hake: "Thal's what I do." Before his election to the Muni ci- pa l Court, !lake, 47, was with th e Sacramento district a ttorn ey's office for 16 years. Prior to that, he se rved one year in the Butte County prose- cutor's office. After graduating from Loma Lin- da University and the Un iversity of San Diego School of Law, the Janes- ville, Wis., native worked wi th the U.S. Treasury Department in Los Angeles. Sands, 51, started his own law firm in 1970. He has been a resident of Sacramento since 1962, whe n he came here to work as an inte rn wi th the Legislature. He then clerked for th e Court of Appeal and spent fi ve years as a public defender. A native of New York City, Sands has an accounting degree from the University of Arizona and is a gradu- ate of Stanford Law School. J :J J The salary of a Superior Court judge is $84,765, compared to $77,409 for a Municipal Court judge. Sands said the judgeship wo ul d mean 250 percent pay cut for him.
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Th pn ts' order will estabh h headquarters in the S n Diego area with the Rev. Jo eph Langford, who wa reared In San Diego and later became an Oblate order pri l, ,1 uperior. Flgu redo 1d Langford persuaded Moth r Teresa to found th pri ts' ord r which be him el£ later joined. Th Span h peaking minarians will contmu their tud1 at the mmary In Tijuana, the others at USD, F1gu redo said She said he is trying lo find the group a r 1d nee to rent "in a poor area, mostly Hispanic and close to the border " Mother Teresa was born Gonxha (A nes In English) BoJaxhiu on Aug. 27, 1910, in a region of lacedonia that wa later absorbed by Yugoslavia. She became a nun with the S1 ter of Loreto order at 18, taught for 20 year at a girl's high school in Darjeeling, India, and gamed mternahonal attention after 1948 for her work among the poor m Calcutta as leader of the Mis 1onarles of Char
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san Diego, CA ,san Diego co,.) , 0 un on ~~~-~~~17,08~) (Cir. S . 341,84 )
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Oceanside, CA (San D iego Co .) North County Blade Tribune (Cir . D . 29 ,089) (Ci r. S. 30,498) JUN
AY 31 8
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F.sr. 18&8
Basketball / SAN D'i.r:f{!i;t?e men·s basketball teams of San Diego State and the University of San Diego have played each other for the last nine years tiut failure to !mo a mutually acceptable date that is available at the Sports Arena has put the sories on hold The game had been scheduled for Dec. 9, but the Moscow Circus is slated for the Sports Arena Dec. 7-12. The contract between the schools stipulates that the game must be played at the Sports Arena. SDSU athletic director Fre? MIiier blamed the scheduling snafu on a lack of communication. Repre- sentatives of both schools said they expect the sanes to
_..._..,r'!:esume for the 1989-90 season.
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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415) JUN 15 1988
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far 1888
/4n D,~·ego
Oce ns Foundation , 8 gala June 24
holds it· ( at the San
iego Marriott. Dr. Roger Revelle iA honorary chair- man, Frank Powell i·s d' . inner chairm~n, and KCS1'-TV's Marty Levin 18 emcee/auctioneer. Pro- ceeds will benefit the USD M . St d' -- anne F u ies _Program and the Oceans oundatwn Cocktails b . · egin at 5_:30 p.m on the docks of the Mar- riott _Marina, non-profit marine organizations wilJ . how exhibits f~om 6 to_ 7:45 seafood hors d_o'.'.uvre~ will be erved from 6 to 7.4::,, a silent auction will be held then, too and dinner's at 8. The live _auctwn begins at 8:45 with da_ncmg. follow1ng a drawing for pr~1cket" are $125 _,.._...._~--e:::::::...--J
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