News Scrapbook 1989

Santa Ana, CA (OrangeCCo, 0) ty Reporter Orang_e ou (Cir. D.) MAY 9 - 1989 Jlllot '• P, C. B Eu 1888

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064)

MAY 1 0 1989

MAY 111989

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!Profile '\//S 0 I G1/aichael H. Dessent . I t car during a stu- S/\N JllE( ,O - d,s Y School . l California Western dl'nt revue' a f 1 • • ·t~ was a spoof on thr of I.aw, fill(' o tu• .11 ,l, ·.111. up thC'rC' passing out "'I hrrc was a ~uy huae susJJcndcrs,'' I wc·inng ,, · · money am ' 1 former h11s1- s:iid ~t,rhacl II. !Jessen' tat ast 39 pairs C'Y wh1J owns a C' · lll'~s ;rtlorn d ut bonuses to of Sll'

is and biographies from the school's Jg. Sherman Marching o~ At_lanta ' l'k Sherman marchmg mto At- . was I e ''H took the " recalled Stiglitz. . storm When he left, ,t was clear ,~Ywas going to be the faculty's first !;;s looking at the bottom line, ~is deo project was actually a fund-rats- nlurc. date cc the school could acc?mmo ore students and still ma1!1tarn a re- tble student-to-faculty ratio of 20-\ students represented a mtlhon-do . reasc in revenue. f ;sent dist ributed thousands o of the video across the country. In ;t year• applications more than dou- 1 200 in 1985 to 2,850 111 1986· om , · · d· tly at ·rease, Dessent said, rs tree . Jlc to the video because l?w school lions nationwide dtd not nsc sharp- 1987. . 'd purpo e of the 14-mmute v1 eo, opens with sp~ctacular scenes of i Diego shorelme, is to show pro- ~) II •·1n1u• Ollf t · ;ind h } , Int y,•~r~ lwfnrc Sl'<'IIIP, t IC'lll f) 's coll"·,pue~ al I oto- lcnty o 111 I fight 'with I

Otego UruontJoe'hynn retire In July 1990 and to be r_eplaced by Coadjutor Bishop Robert Brom, ight.

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He said yest(\rday he would onl_y pemut the use of the old Mass If there were a clear pastoral need for II. About 300 to 400 people attend such as Mass at Holy Cross Chapel here each week. "I prefer that if there JS an attach- ment to the Latin, priests use the Novus Ordo [ ew Order Mass) with a generous portion of Latin," he said. The new Mass was instituted after the Second Vatican Council m 1_964. Brom plans to study Spanish m Cu- ernavaca Mexico to improve his fluency. He speaks fluent Italian and Latin. "I really can't make any pr~ic- tlons of hat I will do here, until I know the situation better" Brom said yesterday He said that San Diego has a much more diverse pop- ulation than Duluth Brom was ordained to the prie t- hood on Dec. 18, 1963, for the Diocese of Winona, Minn. He served the Wmona Diocese tn panshes, as facul- ty member and rector _of Imma~u- late Heart of Mary Seminary, chair- man of the ComllllSSion on Sacred Liturgy, president of the_ Sena~e of Prt ts, director of vocations,_ direc- tor of Continuing Education of Priests and Vicar General. He was rector of the Cathedral of the ~er~ Heart ID Winona from 1979 until his appo1Dttnent as Bishop of Duluth ID 1983.

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" I d1cln'I take it too _senou/.Y· said. Ile even arldcd that ,t ·1 alky and uphcat, ~ess h sc busrness approac dcal-m_akcr w O . rcvital,zcd the nation, d ·n the process, . I

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ally accredited law earned himself t on a unanrmous f trustees and t e . h

schoo an a new vc- ', Ii • year contrac vote from the boar o faculty, "We have to trea d

t the student as a cus-

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.. sa1tl Dcsscnt' summanz, tithelical to acadcm- ~rpr~a1~~- "~l~~:\~"ey're here paying a 1c thm,.,ng lot of dough." Dessent's first pro- ·1hrr·l' yrars ago, 'deo to t produce a vt jccl as dean was orter students to the bring n1orc aml sma h I The cost of I fl' yca1 -old sc oo · slrug~ mg "• . "You're trying to the video w.is $ 32 ,OOO h •s going to to someone w o tell your ~tory O'; in tuition, he explained. pay you $30,_0~, "It's worth tL tarched while shirt and Al his desk mas nl looks too pol- dark business s~1t, Des;:he pipe-smoking ishcd to fit the image o d coat l.lut he · I py twee · professor tn a f um the classic business also d~part~ rom resent suspenders, look with ~rs cvcr-p een and lavender. which on this dayhare r and cufflinks that He wears a mate mg te ttacks problems /\" personahty ~h:t ~e's exhausting to with such energy d f trustees watch• said one boar o member. •ewed the deanship "My predecessor VJ • d the dean- le have vrewe as. most peop I h nt burial ground for a shtp - as an C ep a r PleMe him 11 Page 12 tomcr, - . . look like bright green peas. S elf-Oescribed 'Type A' 'b d "Type 6 · self-desert e !Jcsscnt, 4. • rs \

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...Alim·. ,. c • Temple to sign with Toreros t; By teve Brand, ,arr Wr11er t1)..,<;{ tj Lrncoln Prep's Joe Temple one of only five San Diego County high school basketball players to ama:55 1,000 pomts and 1,000 rebounds, said yesterday he will ign a national letter of intent to att~d USD. ., An honorable-mention all-state and hrst-team All- CIF San Diego Section choice, Temple tea~ed with Fullerton State-bound Aaron Wil~te ~o lead Lincoln to two consecutive Division m section tit!~. Temple scored 757 of his 1,313 pomts th1S past ~eason to rank fifth on the section:s all-_time _season hst. In addition to averaging 26.1 points hlS senior _year, th~ 6- foot-3"2 Temple had 409 rebounds despite play!ng guard That gave him 1,265 rebounds. fourth m section h1Story He d he picked USD over UC Irvine and USIU. "(USO) has a goodacalfemic program and plays a tough schedule in a good conference (~es_t Coast Ath- letic)," said Temple, who plans to maJor m sociology. • USD was Interested the whole time, ~u_t th.~Y backed off and gave me space to make my dec1s1on . Lincoln coach Ron Loneski w s pleased with Tern- I s choice , It's 8 good dec1Sion." be said. ''The No. 1 re~n to 51 gn IS not to play basketball but to get an education. A d gr from USD ts worth its weight in gold, and Joe will graduate. "He bas a good chance to make a name for bunsell. He'll improve with the personalized coacb~g he'll get at USD. Don't forget, Joe has only been playing basket- See Temple on Page E-9

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Western is ore eager to ex- lieves a young s~r JS ~f the 31 full-time (llore new areas o aw· · • · .

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San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) MAY 111989

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vUSD begins advocacy center for children's riglits By Maureen Nue ca Southern Crou ordinances in the 1990 legislative session, he said. grant from the Weingan Foundation, CalCAI will focus on three areas of children's health and safety.

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ALCALA PARK - University of San Diego Law School Professor Roben Fellmeth announced the establi hment of California Children's Advocacy Institute (CalCAI) at the USD Center for Public Interest Law at a May 1 press conference. The organization, which will be headquanered at the center for at least two years, will advocate the health and safety rights and needs of children under the age of 14 throughout the state, said Fellmeth, who will act as executive director of CalCAl. "One group underrepresented in political and legal forums is children. Out of some 800 lobbyists (in• Sacramento) only one or two represent children on a full-time basis," he noted. Most of the reforms sought_ by the organization will be directed to the state legislature, he said. With a $409,000

Diego attorney, said a newsletter will be sent the various groups promoting "awareness to maximize impact among the clients." Fellmeth said he can promise children "a very hard-working advocate behind the scenes and that there will be one more entity in Sacramento who will be carrying their spears. " Assisting Fellmeth in the management of CalCAI will be Center Supervising Attorney Julianne D'AngeJo.

"The state legislature and the state's regulatory agencies are a natural place to stan, because that is where the Center for Public Interest Law's strength lies," explained Fcllmeth. CalCAI will also encourage and provide an information network system among various children's ogranizations throughout California. Paul Peterson, a CalCAI board of director and San

The first area is adequate child care facilities of which ''there is a very serious under-supply," said Fellmeth. This is due in pan to the lack of affordable liability insurance. CalCAI will seek insurance reforms and regulations and try to offer creative solutions, such as state subsidizing and pooling, a form of self-insurance, he stated. Another area of concern is child abuse detection. San Diego will be used as a case study, Fellmeth said, adding that the organization would be "looking at the front end of the system - detecting patterns which indicate child abuse, such as criminal arrest, drug arrest and/or prior offense, and early intervention when it is warranted.

HIGH SCHOOLS

Temple: Academics played big part in decision to attend USD

Findings in any of these areas will be utilized to propose legislation or model ·----------------------.

Continued from E-1 ball for three years."

during the summer, working on my ball-handling and outside-shooting skills. They say I'll play off-guard, which is fine with me." Temple will be the second first- team all-section player to sign with the Toreros this school year. Brooks Barnhard of Escondido did so during the early signing period In Novem- ber.

Temple, who was offered a foot- ball scholarship to San Diego State and is 6-5 high jumper, said he ex- pects to Improve a lot. ''The problem 1 • I played inside until last year, but now the players ms1dc will be 8-I0 or taller," Temple said. "I'm going to play every day

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