News Scrapbook 1985

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27 ,500) AUG 2 Z 1985

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

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The mission, which was entered on the National Register of Historic Landmarks in 1964, was mspected by Barker and Huston earlier this month as part of the National Park Service's responsibility to monitor activities that may endanger a na- tional landmark. Barker said the purpose of the in- spection was to look into the building controversy and offer advice to city and church officials on the most ef- fective means of preserving the 214- year-old mission while allowing its continued use as a working parish. In their three-page letter, deliv- ered Tuesday to Buckley, Barker and Huston said neither city nor church officials have enough information about the ~ignificance of archaeolog- ical remains at the mission to deter- mine whether construction plans will endanger their preservation. "Planning for the project has pro- ceeded without this crucial informa- t10n," Barker and Huston said. They recommended that the church hire an archaeologist to pre- par~ a preliminary summary of the fm trtgS of nearly two decades of ex- cavation work by archaeologists and students at the University of San Diego. - --Bttring the years digging, thou- sands of artifacts w removed from the site, but a full scientific re- port on the findings has never been p~odueed by university archaeolo- glllts, Buckley and critics of the building project say. . A c?alition of local archaeologists, historians and mission parishioners have pushed for such a study for the past six months. They have also ar- gued that another environmental re- port on the building project should be conducted because the church's plans for the tructure had changed since 1980, when the city originally ap- proved the building. In two advisory votes in April and June, the city Historical Site Board oppos_ed the issuance of a building penrut because the planned size of the proposed structure had more than doubled, to nearly 10,000 square feet.

~Women can make society more ethical, group told iJ0 By Joyce Carr ~he conunued to cont~~st differ,ent decis1on-makmg processes of men a~d w?men "makes it possible to tal scyies of men and women, Women s self-image 1s one of about truth and beht:ve ll 1s knowable,'' she said . 1(:EGO -

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SA Women ' s different approach to deci ton-making can create a more ethical climate in society, Sister Magdalen Coughlin, CSJ, said during a panel discussion at USD's Manchester Conference She and two ocher panelists spoke on "Ethics in the 1g ties: How Women Can Make a Difference," one of the topics addressed at the two-day International Conference on Women and Organizations. that women are naturally more concerned with people , and men ...with object·," he said The panelist based some of her concepts on Carol Gilligan 's book, In a Di.fferent Voice. Women 's tendency to " act more out of caring than of j ustice that goes by a rule or code. .. has led to the stereotypical allegation " that their densions are based on emotion and sentiment. Gilligan , a PS}'Chologist at Harvard University . maintains that caring can be "hardheaded and tough," th<: president of Mount Sc Maqr C01lege, Los Angeles, said. E. h "PSYCHOLOGISTS AND theorists agree Center Aug. 8.

connectedness; men see themselves as separate." Viewing themselves, other and all of reality "in relationships and in context ," women are "willing to work a long time" toward reaching consensus. Men, on the other hand, "see themselves as autonomous" and are more "willing to deal

"An act is moral if it leads to growth of persons in rdationships.. .with themselves, with others, with God and the world." Women's looking at life through relationships "can also lead to bad or immoral decisions,'' she warned, stressing their need for a thorough education.

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mission site Planners may require archaeologi ts' probe By Maria Puente TrlbulH' Staff Writt'r Recommendations from federal of- ficial have prompted renewed ef- forts to resolve a 6-month-old contro- versy over plans to construct a build- mg on archaeological ruins at Mll!Slon San Di go de Alcala. City planning officials and attor- n v Donald Worley, representing the m1 ion, ar t to meet today to dis- 1bl agreement that would call for n dditi nal environmental nd rcha ologkal tudy before work could begin on a planned $800,000 multipurpose building for the grow, g m1SS1on parish. Up to now, mission officials have t d r ommendations for anoth- tudy, arguing th t it i not neces- ry. But Worley acknowledged yes- t rday that similar recommenda- t on from federal officials are likely to persuade city planners to require tudy. He d it may be in the mi. ion' be t interests to agree to further tudy because the alternatives - ap- pe ling to the city council or fihng a lawsuit - could delay construction of the building even longer. "It would be harder to convince the council (to take the mission's 1de) m light of these recommenda- tions," Wort y said ting between Worley ahd Ron Buckley, of the city's Historical 1te Board, was prompted by a re- port on the mission from historic-ar- chaeologist Leo Barker and historian Ann Hu ton of the National Park Ser- vice's National Register Program The m

HOWEVER, THE "commonality" in the thinking

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vhulv by Joye\; Carr ETHICS ~ISCUSSED -:-- A~n Luke (right) introduced panelists speaking on "Ethics In the Eighties," a presentation at the University of San Diego. Also pictured (from left) are Theodora Wells, Yolande Ch mbers Adelson and Sister Maqdalen Couqhfin. CSJ.

Women's conference at USO- '!~EY SHOULD l:;e encou~agcd to seek high-level pos1twns, Sr. Magdalen said. If enough attain this goal, " perhaps peace could be a possibility What difference would it makejf we had a woman Secretary of State?" Theodora Wells, president of a communication and management consulting firm in Beverly Hills, stated that "women have much to offer" in the " changing climate of ethics." . Th_e past. I~ years ~ave seen executives facing increased nsks m decision-making, she said, citing lawsuits against corporations such as General Dynamics, ~neral Electric and E. F. Hutton. Many businesses ha~ifficulti;-s stemming from "ethical issues regarding life and death affirmative action , product safety, toxic waste" and nuclear weapons, she said . WELLS CLAIMED that more women do not attain "higher positions in organizations because when moral issues are involved, men are afraid women will 'rat' on them:" Anyone_ using a "whistle-blowing" approach to questwn the ethics of higher-level personnel will be fired she said. ' M?st ethical issues today revolve around " who is going to wm and who is right, rather than what results are ~esired to yield some kind of gain for everybody involved,'' she said. These gains should enhance people's "self-esteem, particularly in their being able to live in continued from page 1 .,ZC/..!55

Ron May, spokesman for the Com- mittee for the Preservation of the Mission San Diego de Alcala said that if ~~ion officials agree t~ con- duct additional studies of the site, the move would probably dampen most of the opposition to the building

accordance with their beliefs. ' ' The executive explained a model of a decision process she designed for use when problem-solving involves different viewpoints . Dealing with objective and subjective data, the model includes recognizing different att11udes toward a problem, identifying known and unknown facts, determining desired results, exploring options and risks involved, predicting consequences of choices and deciding on a plan of action. YOLANDE CHAMBE~S Adelson, a Los Angeles attorney workmg as an arburator and mediator in labor also explained a decision model for ethical questions. Th~ chart she used contained these four choice points: • Are there ethical dimensions to the matter? • Is the ethical course of action clear? • Will I choose to act in a manner consistent with my ethical judgments? • Do I have the courage to follow through? lt is "mo_rally irresponsible" not to "follow through" after accepting a chairmanship if the program fails or if someone else has to do the job, she said. Probable consequences of executing "morall responsible actions" include a "sense of self-worth an~ charac~er strength," she said. Unethical conduct can result m feelings of guilt, "loss of self-esteem and a damaged reputation."

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El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co) Da ily Californian (Cir. D 100,271)

AUG 2 2 1985 Jllf~n P. c. e

En 1888

W~wan files lawsuit over Swanke reward money woman who cfa?ms she supplied information leadmg tually led them to Lucas, who was arrested Dec. 16, 1984. The suit said O'Grady contacted the known donors of Nunes said. He said O'Grady had contacted the school o he arrest of accused murderer David Lucas filed suit Young said the Crime Commission had eve_n offered the funds set aside for a reward, asking that ,t be placed earlier and "had let it be known she wanted some ednesday for $445.000 in damages for not receiving any O'Grady a portion of the reward money after one of the in her name in a scholarship fund at USD. money. " of the reward offered before his arrest. donors urged it be aiven to her. Without specifying how , 1 f Nunes said the $5,000 reward the university offered .,. · never heard o her before until today,'' said Deputy Diana O'Grady of San Diego sued the San Diego Cnme much was offered , the executive director said O'Grady District Attorney George Clarke, who is prosecuting was combined with the Crime Commissions' reward of Comm1sston. !Is executive director Roger Young , and turned it down. · Lucas. "'She may be the confidential informant.., $20,000, and the matter of issuing the reward was left up the l'RivPr

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