News Scrapbook 1986-1988

Oceanside , CA {San Diego Co .) Blade Tribune (Cir. D 29,089) (Cir . S. 30,498) EP 161 7

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

SEP 2 O1987

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Redlapds . By Chris c,e--J 5 Staff Writer REDLANDS The. Unjyersity of San. Diego. team-got strong~ for- mances from its defense and from freshman quarte_rback Brendan Mur- phy in a convincing 28-0 victory over Redlands last night. The defense, led by freshman cornerback Darryl Jackson's fumble recovery and three mterceptions, held Redlands to 123 yards of total offense. Murphy, who spht time once again with junior Braulio Castillo, com- pleted 6-of-9 passes for 86 yards and two touchdowns. "We sputtered a bit m the middle two quarters, Just like last week," said USO coach Brian Fogarty. "But we haven't scored 28 points and shut somebody out m a long time. It feels good. ' We are still not throwing as well as I'd like us to, but we are control- ling the line of scrimmage on both offense and defense, and that's a big help to any football team. ' Last night's game ·as Redlands' season opener, and it showed. The Bulldogs' offense wasn't able to penetrate l:SD's 20-yard line until 13:37 remained in third quarter, quarterback Chris Hagle hittmg wide receiver Fernando Guana from 31 yards to USD's 18. But on the next play, USD's Jackson stole a Hagle pass from Bill Brosnan in the end zone to end the threat. USO (1-0-1) took the opening kickoff and drovP 70 yards in five plays for a touchdown. Castillo hit tight Fad Lionel DeMorst on a slant pattern for 55 yards, then ran it in him. elf from 4 yards to make the score 6-0. Soccer player-turned kicker Mark Fenick missed the extra point. USO added to its lead mthe second quarter, needing two plays after Jeff Mansukhani's 12-yard punt return. Murph), replacing Castillo at quarterback, threw 34 yards to wide receiver Ker.Zampese. Then Murphy pitched to tailback Todd Jackson, who scored untouched from 15 yards. Mansukhani threw to Scott Slykas for a conversion to make it 14-0. USO put the game out of Redlands' reach in the fourth quarter, scoring two touchdowns in just more than a minute. The first came on a 5-yard pass from Murphy to DeMorst that capped a 16-play, 80-yard drlve. Fen• ick's kick made the score 21-0. On Redlands' next possession, USD's Jackson intercepted H gle on the Bruins' 31-yard line and ret med the ball to the 19. Two plays later, after a 5-yard illegal-procedure pen- alty against USO, Murphy passed to Joe Yamane for a 24-yard touch- down. Jim Morrison's extra point made 1t 28-0. _L

society of emotional zombies, people trying to run away from their problems, unwilling to solve them. A sluggish economy with high unemployment, coupled with many people not nurtured by traditional two-parent families will be to blame. he said. ' Most of the low-skilled people if they're working at all, wlil b~ "making ju t enough to get by " he said. On top of that, "they wlll have grown up without (tradi- tional) families, without roots." Without traditional systems to teach people how to deal with fi- nancial stress, they will go into what is known as "psychic numb- ing,'' Rohatyn said. "a way of blocking out the pain. "People will use technical sur- rogates" such as entertainment systems, video games and other diversions "to get away from their problems,'' he said. ~hildren at risk of falling into this "general malaise" need to be identified early and given special attention, Rchatyn recommended. Teachers will be important in making these iden- tifications. he said, and they need training and support. A different kind of stress stemming from an economic slowdown may be facing adults of the new millennium, a local educator said. That stress will be one of leisure "There·s no question that the w~y technology is going, we are gomg to look at less than a 40- hour week." said Robert Morton assistant superintendent of th~ San Dieguito Union High School District

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111struct1011 and pupil services for the t·ount) llepartrnent of I::dt1c·,11to11 "We've got to rccogmzc 1t s a different populat1011 ,incl change 1· mo\ ing lri ·t,' 1h11 aid · We re havmg to nwet '('lient' needs.

What we'\'e got to do 1s get awa, from tlu: wmner -and loser~ ·it- uation " he added A San Diego futurist said he doesn't hold out much hope that the U.S. l·ducat10n sy. tern will be al.Jle lo le sen the gap between

rich and poor. And those on the lower end of the socioeconomic sc~le will. be "very unhappy,'' said Denms Rohatyn, a philoso- phy professor at University of ~ego · Rohatyn said he foresees a

'I h11 t rnc n pu l>llc ell(lo! will hn\ • to [111d 11 "ny to diver 1fy lht dl'ltvcry of cdut·at1011 so the O('IOl'l OllOlll ltll II} dt•(>rl' t•(l have u chUll(C to succc•c I, atd Ja(k Hill, dir •ctorof t•urnl'ulurn,

an Diego, l.:A (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)

«;>ok at major religions

'Common Threads' to·take a The W~rld Affair c?unfiof San [?iego will present a panel discus•

s1on, titled "Common Threads of the MaJor World Religion ," at 7:30 p.m. Tuesd,ay t the University of San Die o s Manchester Conf rence Cen- ter Speakers will be wam1 Atmaru- pananda, Hindu; John Ro enblatt Je~1sh; the Rev, k10 M1yaji, Bud~ dh1~t. th Rev. Lawrence D. Bausch Christian, and Anwar Oil I lamic' Leon Smder will serve as m'octerator · The program IS co-sponsored by the World Religions Study Center Panel of U.S. International Universi- ty; the Graduate Program in Interna- tional Relahons at .ll. and the De- partment of Theological and Relig- ious Studies at USO. Call the Wori air. Coun<;1J at 231-0111 for reservation . /

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)

SEf> 21 \987

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P. C. 8

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Court priority: to reduce delay in trials

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was beyond the scope of the conference's con- sideration. Resolutions adopted by the conference are ranked in order of importance and sent to the Legislature to be submitted as bills. A last-minute attempt to draft a resolution opposing the nomination of Robert Bork to the U.S. Supreme Court failed. The executive com- mittee said the sponsor, the San Francisco Bar Association, did not meet the filing deadline of noon Friday. A resolution favoring legislation to curtail mandatory employee drug testing sharply - also sponsored by the San Francisco Bar Asso- ciation - was adopted.

to submit to outside review. While bar leaders have hammered on the urgency of refurbishing the tarnished image of the profession, the delegates from local bar associations across the state have tackled a number of important issues during the annual meeting. Many have said, however, that the resolutions before the conference lack the ex- citement of other years. Emotions surged yesterday morning during debate on whether a terminally ill patient has the right to request a physician's aid in dying by asking the doctor to administer a fatal dose of medication. The conference narrowly approved the reso- lution, which also eliminates criminal penal- ties for physicians who provide such aid. A similar measure was defeated last year. A resolution supporting impeachment pro- ceedings against U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese III failed to reach the floor for debate after the executive committee deemed that it

July 22 for colon cancer, Lucas declared that be is "feeling well and happy to be back." His remarks to bar delegates wrapped up the swearing-in of new bar officers, including incoming President Terry Anderlioi, a San Mateo lawyer Anderlini pledged to solve the dual crises besetting the State Bar - lawyer discipline and poor public image. In contrast to his immediate predecessor, Orville "Jack'' Annstrong, Anderlini is not op- posed to hiring mdependent judges to handle disciplinary proceedings against lawyers accused of violating professional ethics, On Saturday, Attorney General John Van De Kamp urged the 1,000 delegates meeting at the Century Plaza to support an $8 increase in annual dues to pay the salaries of six full-time administrative law judges. Otherwise, Van De Kamp said, the Legisla- ture, fed up with complaints against lawyers, will force the 106,000-member bar association

Tribune St,;Jff II r1ter LO~ ANGELES - Reducmg trial delay will be the top prionty of the California Supreme Court m the next two years. Chief Justice Mal- colm M Lucas say . In I: s first ta e of the Judiciary address y terday, Lucas said that under his leader- ship the court's rule-making Judicial Council h t the followmg priorities. reduced trial d lay more money for the courts, simplifica- tion of procedures and Improved public access. The goal Luca said in the address to the California Stat Bar' annual meeting, is that by 1991, 90 percent of civil cases and all crimi- nal case will be disposed of withm a year of filmg La t month, the court and its entire staff met at a retreat for the first of what Lucas said he hopes will be regular sessions to learn to exped te the workload. In a reference to the surgery he underwent aturday, September 19, 1987

san Diego, CA (San Diego co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

~f:~, ~VJ 'i Anderlini said he has not ruled ut Van De Kamp's recommendation that the bar pay for independent judges to hear attorney discipline cases, but would like to "explore all the alternatives." He disputed Van De Kamp's $800,000 price tag, however, suggest- ing that it might cost the bar as much as $1.5 million to set up the special courts. That money would most likely come out of bar dues, Anderlini said, which at $275 a year "are getting to the upper limits" of what the profes- sion can bear. On Saturday, ·van De Kamp came down hard on the bar's recent at- tempts to beef up its self-policing. "Disciplme cannot continue in its presc~t form," said Van De Kamp, referring to the 448 part-time volun- teers who hear attorney discipline cases. "But it ~tili bt>longs where it has always belonged: here in this organi- zation," Van De Kamp added. He urged he adoption of the rec- ommendations of Robert Fellmeth, a law professor at the University of San Diego's Center for Pu6Iicniter- est1:aw.

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Anderlini defended the steps the bar has taken in the last few years to crack down on lawyer discipline and, in a press conference following the speech, said he is "sick" of hear- ing the repe:,ld complaints. · Please see ..,\ URT, A-4 USO hopes to eliminate mistakes against Redlands / By Chri Clarey ;; U c;-s USD did indeed have much to be to play the Umversity of Redlands in ''They both have things they do without standout tailback Eric Carl- need to do if we're to have any kind Iliff Wrlltr I happy about· the Bulldogs' season opener at 7:30. well," Fogarty said. "Braulio does a son (1,253 yards), who has a severely of success," Miller said. • Fullback Tod.d Jackson (104 "We'll try to be a little more diver- good job of keeping other guys play- pulled hamstring. Th d f · d'ff t tt d 23 I d · T d ff th' k" •d F · h d H , d (58 e e ense 1s a I eren ma er. yar on carries) e a runmng s1 1e on o ense 1s wee .. sa1 o- mg ar • es a goo runner . "We watched USO play at Occi- Three 1985 starters return after a attack that netted 237 yards on 51 garty, whose team_ threw Just seven yards on _ 14 atte_mpts, dIScountmg dental, and we were very im- year away from the school: 6-foot-4 rush passes agamst Occidental. "We went sacks, against Occidental) and an ad- 257 d d f · 1· B t' F h · "d 1· b k · t 1 k' r · 'd t pressed," said Redlands coach Ken -poun e ens1ve meman ar • res man m I e me ac er m o ast wee s game 1gurmg we equa e passer d , , Gro · ger: · sid r b k R be t Frank Love had 12 tackles and two run the option until they stopped it. '·Brendan is more of a finesse play- Miller. "I on t th ink th eres any Sh. mnha •_m : te ac ~rt O p rt acks to lead an aggressive defense They never did. We stopped our- er. He passes well but doesn't hurt doubt that they're a much improved M 1 ~a d ra, an ree sa e Y a that stopped Occidental on all 13 of selves with fumbles, but Occidental people the way Braulio does when he team over laS t year (when th e 4 · 6 c O • Its third-down situation . never stopped us." runs the ball." Toreros beat Redla nds ' 21 · 3 )," "They will improve our defense," • Fre hman punter John Gillis Despite Castillo's turnover prob- Virgil Enriquez's •knee injury Miller said an inexperienced line said Miller, who also has four 1:186 turned Jn a gutsy performance at !ems, Fogarty said he probably will means Jackson will switch to tail- and the loss of Carlson have defensive starters returning, includ- hort top, averagmg 36.4 yards on start ahead of freshman Brendan back. Don Macinnes will start at full- hampered his offense's progress. ing senior lineman Paul Sanfillippo, even punts de pile having to field Murphy, who completed three of five back despite a badly bruised shoul- a second-team All-Southern Califor- four bad naps. passes for 31 yards and one touch- der. "We haven't moved the ball con- nia Intercollegiate Athletic Confer- Tontght, the Torcro · travel north down in the fourth quarter. Redlands finished 1-9 in 1986 and is sistently, and that's something we ence selection last year. ....____________________-=:;=---------------~ ---____.---~----..L.._-----../

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