News Scrapbook 1989
San Diego, CA. (San (?iego Co.) Sa~ Otego Union (Cir. D. 217.089) (Cir. S. 341,840)
Sar Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) EP 5 - 1989
AUG 30 198
- proposals ;oul~ have an obvious conflict inves- igating the executive branch Sbe added that the state govern- ment needs one as well. "Conflicts also exist at the stat level because the elected attornee gene'.al u~ually shares close politicil ~~;at101nsh1ps_ with the other elected he:c1a. s! which could hinder his or h. ab1hty to investigate impartially is colleagues," she said. Killea's measure AB 410 . sored by the Uni.r!: ·t ' IS spon- Diego's Cecter. for ~r~;.Y of San Law. u 1c Interest
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San Diego, Calif.. ("an Diego Co) DAILY TRANSCRIPT AUG 30 1989
1888
San Diego CA ~n (?iego Co.°) (C . Diego Union !r. D. 217,089) {Cir. S. 341,840)
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COLLEGE$: USO Toreros seasoned in wing-T By Ric Bucher .,.£. Staff Wri'.er . ~qi)? Th~ Umve~1ty of San Diego's in- experience running a wing-T offense P!ayed a ~arge part in the Toreros' disappomtmg 1988 season. What does Coach Brian Fogarty now consider the offense's strength? Experience. · "We changed to the wing-T last year and, frankly, it hurt us," Fogar- tr said. "There were a couple of times that our inexperience running it pr~bably cost us the game. Being the first year, you have to expect that." This being the second year, Fogar- ty expects more than 261 total yards per game and a 4-5 record, which m~luded four losses by a total of nine pomts. (USD is calling it a 5-4 season because an 18-17 season-opening loss to Menlo College was reversed when se_veral Menlo players were ruled m- ehg1ble.) ~SD's offensive seasoning is heightened by the return of two quarterbacks with starting experi- ence: Brend~n Murphy, now a junior, aod Doug Piper, a senior, who played leapfrog on the depth chart last sea- son until a shoulder injury sidelined Murphy. Fogarty would prefer not to pla- toon them again, but that depends on on~ of ~he tw~ distinguishing himself. We re waiting for a quarterback to emerge," said Fogarty "Piper's a better thrower, a better pure thro~er ... but Murphy's better at runnmg the other parts of the of- fense. One of them has to show im- provement in their area of weak- ness." Murphy may need more time to do that after undergoing shoulder surgery last winter. Incumbents fill the backfield's othe~ starting spots. The Toreros' leadmg rusher last year returns in !odd Jackson. a 5-11, 205-pound sen- i~r. Jackson's 611 yards on 143 car- ries, C?mbmed with 102 yards on 10 receptions, also made him the team's all-purpose yardage leader. Ty Barksdale, a 5-8, 170-pound junior returns as the wingback in the wing'. T formation. Sa~ McDermott is expected to be the pn~ary wide receiver. Whether he can improve on his team-leading 14 catches (for 186 yards, no TDs) could rest on USD's ability to run for mor~ than 148 yards a game, last years average. "It' s a run-first type of offense" Fogarty said. "In order for the of. fense to work, the running game has to be at least a threat." Losing offen- sive tackle Leroy Hughes, a starter last season as a sophomore and freshman running back D . d Ne~eth hasn't helped. Financia~:~. stnct1ons - USD doesn't g· f ba 11 1ve oot- scholarshi ps _ prompted Hughes to work rather than play. ~emeth sh_o~ed promise before a right-knee mJury in a preseason in- trasquad scrimmage ended his '89 season.
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E quately prosecuted by district atto neys and the state attorne r- while others said the b"yll general, all th I S would ow e attorney general tom . ulate the special prosecuto f amp- 1cal purposes. r or poht- Both measures require action b t~e attorney general to call . y c1al prosecutor. m a spe- Onc of the bill's authors A blywoman Lucy Killea D-S~ ~em. noted that the federai n Diego, has a need for its s . government systern because tiiec~~prosecutor general a presidential . attorney appointee, AUG S l 198~ JU~.. " ----u :~e . . B p C F..<1 1888 so had a ~er - Andrew K to lead a and two assis .........-1" ationall ren's se . y renowned child- rv1ces expert M" h ummer rst ~i~:~;r~!f Crane also sco~ede:, Ronces and st!!fs1~~:~~~1 discusses • IC ael Petit future of t~sues affecting the Saturday See t country's children United Meth!t: /~hat th~ First sion Valley Gu1s t f urch in Mis- . es o ITl:ln•- rch· ren Advocacy I t· 1ld- agencies servi: itu~ and various county Pet·tg children in the • 1 will t multicultural ch II ocus on children's se . ah enges facing rv1ces ere H" 9:30 a.m. will be ti · 1s talk at panel di . allowed by a scuss1on b leaders. k com~nity *** tr?!J~ ----~ ,or~D?'r5) San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217 ,089) (Cir. S . 341 ,840) Jlll~n•• Jll{~,.•• San Diego CA (San [?ieg~ Co.') Sa~ Diego Union (Cir. D. 217 089) {Cir. S. 341,840) ..~?. f P. c a Jll~n ', P. c. e t<, 1888 P. C. B En 1888 r.r. 1 &88 / Cross-burning plea ,{ A not guilty plea was entJ/J 'yes- terday on behalf of a U~it): of San Diego student charged in a cross- burmng m the Torrey Pines State Reserve. The plea was entered for Jeffrey Schizas, 21, who faces a mis- demeanor charge of starting a fire in a park area. Municipal Court Judge Allan J. Preckel ordered Schizas, through his attorney, Mitchell Robin• son, to appear Oct. 5 for trial setting. Allegations of racism surfaced after the cross-burning incident was discovered. However, Schizas wrote a statement denying there was any racism involved in the matter. He claimed it was a ritual of the Sigma Chi fraternity. - From ateff re/I .,/ USU founders Galtery- P-•inting, and drnw• Trigsby Victoria Chick. figurative and animal !\tud1e~ m acrylic or oil pastel . Mon.-Fn. 9-5. UnivcrS1ty of an Diego. Linda Vista Rd 260-4600 ext 4261,;;t:/i:S:5"' · rioundera Gallery .-:U., s-;-r /011 view: Paintings aMi dfaw,nrfs. l1gurat1ve and animal stud es ,n pastels by v,ctona Ch ck When: through Sept 11 Hours are 9 a m to 5 p m weekdays Where: Un,vers,ty San p 1,.,, 0 Info: 260-4600 ~"' ri tei-~ty _-punished for burning cross /~ Lo, 1888 J- q c; Basically, I thmk that the guide- lines we have to follow in th with th · . taff Writer The Umv . and is scheduled to be arraigned Sept. 6 in Municipal Court. The maxi- mum penalty he could receive is 90 days in jail and a $1 ooo fine "~e ha~ good ad~1Ssible ~vidence agamst him only," said deputy city ~Horney Kim-Thoa Hoang, explain- mg why no one else has been charged. Apel said the cross-burning was part of a ritual harkenmg back to the Ro°1:an Emperor Constantine's con- version to Christianity and was to be "spiritually enlighten• mg. He stressed that it had no con- nection to cross-burnings practiced by white-supremacy groups like the Ku Klux Klan. "Obviously, you can't have a cross- bur~ing in the 20th century without havi_ng people thinking it's racial. We real!ze that now," he said. .L_ . eir nose to the grindstone ... we w!H be able to expose them to sen:,1t1V1ty workshops and other edu- cation?! ve~i~les that will combat such msens1t1ve behavior" Burke " Apel said fraternity members are very th ankful to the university in that they went out on a limb by !et- 1mg us stay on campus. ' T~elve active members of the fra- termty and 17 pledges or provisional mem~rs were arrested in the park the mgbt of May 20 as they burned the cross under a full moon. Park rangers said they had found eight to 10 other burned crosses in the park in the two years before the arrest. Only one student, Jeffrey Schizas, 21, has been charged with a crime in connection with the incident. He faces one misdemeanor count of set- ting an unlawful fire in a state park said. ' San Diego has few years are ver fair e. nex,~ placed a campu fratermty on proba- on and ord1>r~ its members to per- form community service work as ~~~~~m:;:~!or ::tninRga cros mthe ;h~tg1mscaiphc.nhe1·agahinstt the 80-mem- c ap er was an• t~:crday as students pre- tart of cla es Tues- f I ion to ~rformmg 25 hours o community ervice dur" members w·1f:• the fraternity s . Ch the chool . 10 ,g _required to attend on racial and cult~ral in- y. All other fraternity and ~rs ;~;t!! day. In addT o ksh r ·r n i I month a ' e e erve three go. chapter president ilck A;i°~oJUS\ yesterday. , 'sa1 ''I don't feel th t f h ures arc unfair/ s!{1J ~ont ; 0~:~- 28, co-adviser to the USD Sigma Chi chapter "I f t h ing at ho t~n:~h;t ~;:~f~i~;;:;;.~: nar." San ntego , Calif. ( an Diego Col ~AILY TRANSCRIPT EP 6 -1989 In a news release, Thomas F. Burke, a umversity vice president and dean of students. said the cross- burning "violated the educational the umversity and brought embarrassment, scorn and ridicule to all members of our community" The release suggested that the disci• phnary plan announced yesterday wa chosen over other alternatives such as suspending the fraternity y eepmg them here on campus, ' "B k . · · • miSSion ° f . Los Angeles.CA (Los Angel .s Co .} Times ! San D1c~o Ed ,) Cir. D. o0.010) (Cir. S. 55,573) SEP JLI~', _t ~::~~I e workshops Jllkn'• P. C B ( ca:rp•u~ beon the Lindda Vista require to at- n d th D Volunteer Lawyer Pro· ·11 {fer a free family law USD ·nar Saturday morning _a~ The meeting will custody cases. . . ~:elude a step·by-s~P de~: 1 ~tt~~; ring various oieapd~:~:, as well as information P ustodY bearings and ne~~~ r ~:r ~rits of Habeas Corpus;.J':f'T'l .. * ' . gram w 1 0 · senn • / I' S. . SEP 4 - \989 San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.l Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) SE .)lllin'• p c s , ~x 1 , y SEPTEMBER 5 f the society of Rea San Diego. Chapte~i1~•mg a la\\ course Intro- Estate Appraisers ,s Estate at ~ - duct,on to Appra1s1n~:e~~urse ~eets Tuesday soty o1 San o,e O e tember 5 to Novem· ancf urs ay evenings,~.~~ an.9-)o register '/ all ,. -., 4 .For further m1orm_~ 5 ~80 I TUESDA , • ..Alt...', F.,1 18&8 , . C. B Schi.zas sign a wntten state- ment on the mght of the mc1dent d cnbmg the ntual as based on a ion seen by th Roman emperor Constantme. Tl-e fraterrtty's em- blem incorporates a cross. Members told pohce t the time that the initiates make a list of their faults, then burn the hst lll the fll'e or the_ cro s as a symbohc way or cleansmg themselves for member- hip. The fraterruty later apolo g1zed for carelessness m starting 8 fire In the nature reserve, but said tt d1d not mean to link th C'ross burning to racial o- cult c 1v tie But Burke said he er trn · g "violated the educauo 1 m ion of the umversity and brou t m- barrassment, scorn and r1 cule to all members of our communi- ty" He ~d that, by pmg the fratcrruty members "h r Of' cam- pus. with their nose to the gnnd- stone for the next thr .} ears w will be able to expo the~ t~ sensttlv1ty workshop and other educational vehicles that will com- bat such msens1t1ve behavior .. USD ?fflcials said Thursday that the d1sc1pline will stand regardless of the legal outcome against Schi- They said the fraternity mcm ers have told them they will adhere to the sanctions. During probation. "any violation , of the student code or illegal activi- ty will result m immediate suspen- Slon of the chapter," Burke said. FOOTBALL- I 0 -- !~~;.~os :::{a.!~~,!~!~~~w~~e :ull b; Tribune Sportswriter (J L ) the defense can come back from the losses. The other good ne• Last year, coach Brian Fogarty and the It's always been our strength every yeai:, but noseguard Dave Dum VSD Toreros entered the season with visions we lost some very good players last season. season. The 6-foot, 24 of grandeiir: Followmg a 6-3-1 record and a ''Still, the style we play affords us to come bull, Conn., led the To Top 20 ranking in '87, the Toreros were plan- back more easily. We do a lot of blitzing, and season and also bad 4 ning an encore that would last right into the it's an attacking style of play that is easy for "I'm looking for hl Division III playoffs. the new kids to adjust to." and outstanding play, Three games into the season, however, the The biggest hole the Toreros will have to USD returns three curtain came crashing down as USD dropped fill is at free safety as two-time Academic linebacker Don Ma a 17-10 decision to Redlands. The Torcros All-American Brian Day has graduated. Day cornerback Darryl J rebounded to win their next two games but led USD in tackles each of the past two sea- Jes and safety Darb lost three of the final four to finish at 5-4. sons. High). One of the wins was a forfeit by Menlo Col- While Day's loss was unavoidable, Fogarty The defense was lege. unexpectedly lost two other starters. Defen- yielding 13.7 points "We were expected to be the team to sive back Chris King, the team's leader in however, struggled beat," Fogarty said. "But we just fumbled interceptions and its fourth-leading tackler, scant 14.4 points J away last year. It was real disappointing." transferred to Cal. Gone, too, is linebacker after the Toreros h, This season, Fogarty hopes to turn the ta- Frank Love. The team's second-leading tac- to the wing-T. bles. With seven defensive starters gone kier, Love was declared academically ineli• "It was a move · from a year ago, USD isn't being tabbed as a gible at the end of last semester. garty said. "We h, team to beat. Fogarty hopes that will work "We hated to lose them," Fogarty said. braska-1 but never in his team's favor. "But we think we've got people capable of had a lot of small "There's no pressure on us, and we're ex• replacing them. We've always been a team stantly. The wing-1 cited about the season," Fogarty said. "We that rotates a lot defensively, which means that bas a tendenc: return some outstanding players on both that a lot of kids got game experience last ting banged up as 1 TIIE 'S 1RlBUNE San Diego, Tuesday, September 5, 1989 --J'\ er a disappointing '88 rs returning, Fogarty is will be much improved to learn the new system. hard to learn," he said. ming involved, and it just e players to learn it. The d we're excited about the e on offense. The quarter- to be determined early, for 217 yards as a sophomore. The Torcros' offensive line will be an- chored around senior tackle Mark Garcia (St. Augustine High). He's joined by returning starters Gene Fontana (Grossmont High) and Ray Smith (University High). USD's receiving corps is headed by tight end Mike Hintze of Phoenix. He had 10 recep- tions for 146 yards last year. Sam McDer- mott (14 catches, 186 yards) of Glendale and Ken Jones from Mira Mesa (11, 146) are the top two wideouts. f?avid Dunn, a 6-foot, 233-pound semor no~e tackle and a Division III All-Amenca candidate, is the anchor of the _defense. Dunn's quickness re- sulted ma team-leading 12 sacks last season. Grounding a quarterback seemed to the Toreros' primary foil for a pas_smg attack, however, because of their lack of size. Passing yardage a_c~o~nted for two-thirds of the o . s1tion s total offense last year a:. centage that junior defensiv~ backs D~rby Barrett and Darryl Jackson will try. to adjust. They'll be assisted by semor _Danny Means. Better known for his exploits on the basket- ball cou~t, ~e~ns decided to try foot- ball while fm1shing his undergradu- ate work this fall. a good offensive team." pinpoint a starter before and stick with him for the year. Brendan Murphy of Doug Piper (Bonita Vista e quarterback duties last phy was hampered with ed for 242 yards and Piper here there won't be any jug- tck, where senior Todd Jack~ t returns. Jackson is a three- I was named USD's Offensive ear after he rambled for 611 touchdowns in '88. He will be ackfield by junior Ty Barks· t High). He carried 56 times The kicking game is solid with Jim Morri• son. The junior from Irvine connected on 8- of-12 field-goal attempts and 18-of-19 extra points. He led the team with 42 points. John Gillis of Glendale will once again handle the punting chores. "Overall, we feel pretty good," Fogarty said. "We're going to be able to score some points, and if the defense comes along we should be pretty tough." There are nine games against Division III schools on the USD schedule. The Toreros open the season at home Saturday at 7:30 p.m. against Azusa Pacific. ~All('n's P C. 8 / , 1xu ~~-v-~ -ms,, 009 P1~\Pff1ce Stork delivers ... a few months By Juin Foresman Lullababies late ThedPo_tOfficeStorkbenthisbeakagain This Around Town cause h1mtodropalttl b. h · · on th b. . 1 e trt announcement card ~~::::.=========------------------------ ovPr ~o ,:~k~t ~~~ice workroom floor. lie didn't bend Iii ,:-r--------------........ A lot ofpeople saw the lit tit> card on th fl s~!::0'~'; 1 ~i~~~ ~i;t,T1~e{a~J\~~{i~1;~j;~~L little card \\as s:,d. Tlwn the h!tle card disappeared, Whoosh! Down one of those mysterious black holes that arc known to lurk beneath all post offic·es. No one ever saw the little card again Doyou uppo ethatiswhnt P t, II I o I :ind cards that never s,irface :igarn on~e they arc deposited into a mat! hox·? Surely they're not. aved, for then the P.O.
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