News Scrapbook 1986-1988

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

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcrirt (Cir. D. 7,415

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

OCT 5 1987

OCT 8

1987

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Draws On BANDAGReport

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[ill Thursday, October 8, 1987 V Wynalda paces Aztecs' 2-0 ~c .san '.Dkl)o l.lnlon E-9 s ccer victory over Toreros By Ric Bucher :J- 1 Cj'~ fluid attack until then, thanks in Welsh, whose shot sailed over the 1arr Writer large part to the play of their stand• upper left corner. 1t•~ impossible to determine outjreshman, Trong Ngyuen. But the .. 1 was a little upset our defenders whether San Diego State freshmen, US1' forwards could capitalize nei- in general, are more mature than ther on Ngyuen's through passes nor

USD Professor Faults Limits On New Homes

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USD achiev s hird straig t shutout, 28-0 By ~~cy, ;1air Wrot~r Many football coaches pr ach about the 1mportan~ of con I tency, but Univer ity of San Diego coach ~r1an Fogarty had no idea his player were such good h ten- rs ''l'v never , n anything like it," . aid_ Fogarty, _whose Torero (3-0-1) got their third con ecutlve 28-0_ 11ctory, ov Whittier (2-2) b fore 2,710 at Torero tadum las night It'. a lucky number," said USO s_tr?ng safety John Gu rmedl pointing to th o 28 on his ,ersey. Th co~ might have been a coincidence. but there wa nothing lucky about the outcom . lJ D out m d Whittier m rushing (208-70) and pa. mg (170-67), and an aggr 1ve Toreros d f nse forced seven turnover and et a chool record with 1t third straight hutout. , d Wh1tt1er' olfen e n v r got clo ·er than USD 31-yar hn ''Th defen played a gr at game ag in, and the of- f m did what 1t h d to do Fogarty 1d u. D c p1lahzed on t o fumbles to take a 14-0 half- time I d. On Whittier . ccond 10n, quarterback Ramon rec 1v r Ken Zampese m the en~ for a 39-yard touchdown, and fre hman Jim Mom- xtra pomt mad 1t 7-0 with 9·01 left m the first . Wl11tt1er gave U D another opportunity early m the cond quarter, when Wm ton Aspinall fumbled Joh~ Gilh punt USD's Mark Cri ci recovered at the Toreros Aft •r eight con ccutive running plays, the Torero~ faced fourth-and-8 at Whittier's 28, but Jeff Ma~sukham made an outstanding shdmg catch of a low Castillo pass at the 4-yard line to keep the drive alive. Two pl~ys later, freshman tailback Ty Barksdale, a Fallbroo~ H!gh alumnu , dived for a 1-yard touchdown. Mornson · kick . Castillo, who had completed just five passes coming into the game, completed six of seven passe · for 100 yard m the first half. . After squandering two third quarter: coring oppo~tu- nities, USO capitalized on an interception by Gutsm1e?l and strong running by Barksdale to take a 28-0 lead in the fourth quarter. USO drove 56 yards to Whittier's 16 with the second- half kickoff, but the Poets' Roger Brak~ intercepted Cas- tillo (8-of-13 fur 144 yards) at the goal hne. . . , Later in the quarter, _Castillo fumb!e~ a~ Wh1_ttier s 1~ after a hard hit by Aldm Talley. Whithers Reid Mukai recovered, but three plays later Gutsmiedl made a_ leap- ing interception at the 10-yard lme in front of tailback Gaylan Sweet and returned the ball to the 2. After losing a yard, John Arens took Castil)o's pitch i_n for a 3-yard touchdown Morrison's extra point made it 21-0 with 25 seconds left in the third quarter. USD drove 59 yard in 10 plays in the fourth quarter. Barksdale rushed for 32 yards on the drive, including,/ yard TD run. ,..._~-------- zon . on' qu,1rh r 47 mad the score 14-0. .Juar z dropped the b II hac Gaylan Sweet ft r m1 mg a handoff to ta1l• .in backer Chuck Royer fell on the b II t Wh1tt1er' · 39 On play later, US D's Braulio Cas- tillo pa. s d to w1d

_,..?t'.;55 ByTHO KAMBANBIBERMAN SaaDiegoDailyTnm.,,riptSwrWri~r An associate professor of eco- nomics at the University of Sa11 Diego said Friday t taX~ntial bt11Tding caps will only lead to more expensive homes and higher un- Dr. Dirk Yandell, who quoted extensively from a September San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) Report to support his contentions, said permit restr1c- tions will do nothing to- prevent people from coming to San Diego that children will stay at home longer, people will double up in their units, and people will pay more to get into a house,'' Yandell The SANDAG report concluded that of the e timated 344,000 new persons added into the San Diego region between 1980 and 1986, 208,000 can be traced to job-related migration, 125,000 due to natural increases, (births minus deaths) and 11,000 due to incoming retirees. The SANDAG summary aid employment in the "basic" sectors which include manufacturing, the military, the tourism industry, re- search and development and a1,'l'i- culture, can induce population in- creases of up to 400 pen,ons for every 100Jobs created. "Every 100 of these Jobs al o generate between 100 and 160 positions in sectors that serve the basic industries and the local popu- la ·on," re-port- tt i " ese 'local serving' industries include retailing, construction, medical care, education, banking, public services and others." The report states that the San Diego region has gained an estimated 175.000 basic and local- serving jobs since 1980. This in- crease includes 17,600 l}ew posi- tions in manufacturing, 14,300 new jobs in the visitor industry and 3,600 new positions in research a11d development. "Combined, high technology and research industries account for 20 percent of the total employment gain, 25 percent of the job-related migration and 15 percent of the net population increase,'' the report continues. "Tourism accounts for about 11 percent of the new em- ployment, 22 percent of the im- migration and 13 percent of the population increase." employment. County. "Building caps wil just mean

Yandell suggested that limiting the amount of industrial growth in the county might be one way of immigration, but em- phasized that there would be a "A politician might think twice about limiting industrial growth," Yandell said. "People don't want to think aboutlosing theirJobs." SANDAG concluded that if in- dustrial acreage allotments which are at 280 acres per year were diminished to 190 acres a they would be if the "State Fair Share" scenario were interpreted literally, between 25,000 and 38,000 jobs in limiting heavy price to pay.

didn't play a little more simply since we had a new goalkeeper in there," Clegg said. 'Our defenders got caught No matter San Diego State domi- nated the second half, outshooting the Toreros, 7-3. Wynalda provided Kyle Whittemore the opportunity for his sixth goal of the season in the 76th minute. Wynalda pushed the ball between USD defenders Sterling Peloso and Ngyuen on the right wing and, when Ngyuen and Peloso collid- ed, Wynalda ran past them, collected the ball and crossed it into the mid- die for Whittemore, who stuck it in the upper netting from 6 yards. "The difference between our two teams are our two forwards, Whit- temore and Wynalda," said Clegg. "What can you say about Wynalda? He showed tremendous composure on that second goal, looking up as soon as he had the ball agam, and then waiting for Kyle to get into po- sition. You won't see that kind of play out of a lot of seniors." / looking at each other there."

their University of San Diego coun-

on early mistakes by the Aztecs' de-

terparts.

fense.

However, the SDSU men's soccer team had one freshman in particular who was far more composed than any first-year students the Toreros had last night in Aztec Bowl. His name iE Eric Wynalda, and 1t was h~ goal and assist that led the Aztecs to a 2-0 win over their cross- rivals before an estimated town Wynalda, recrui ed from West Lake Village, :cored San Diego State's first goal in the 24th minute by outjumping a USD defender to bloop the ball over goalkeeper Scott "I fell their goalkeeper got caught in no-man's land," said San Diego State coach Chuck Clegg. "But how did Wynalda know he had come off his (goal) line? Because he looked. That's the kind of thing you try to crowd of 200. Huckleberry.

"We've got a young team," said USO coach Seamus McFadden . "We've only got two seniors. I thought we had our chances, and I thmk we outplayed them in the fir. t half. But once we got behind, we stopped trying to build our attack. We panicked a little bit. That will happen with a young team." USD is 7-4-1. The win was San Diego State's third in a row, improv- San Diego State goalkeeper Bryan Finnerty, in only his second start of the season, finished with five aves - four in the first half - on 10 shots. Finnerty, a sophomore, played m place of senior Felipe Hernandez, who suffered a broken leg in practice Tuesday and is out for the season. Aztecs defenders left Finnerty ex- ing its record to 9-3.

the county would be lost.

The "National Fair Share"

scenario would be

ignificantly

worse

SANDAG that ~~~M~~---- reported

About 30 persons attended .:-----~-----} Yandell's talk on "Growth Contro: Consequences for San Diego" at UD

Sa n Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily T ranscr irt (Cir. D. 7,415 OCT 7

posed less than eight minutes into the teach at this level, but you never match, however, when they let a know if they'll do it under pressure." cross from Ngyuen on the left wing The Toreros actually had the more go untouched to USO forward Bob

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IfYouWere An Alaskan Paralegal, Naturally YouWouldCome Paraleg£r(o~ as far away as door. Friday's lunch is $25 for -~---· ·

Anchorage, Alaska, will be in San Diego Friday through Sunday for a around the country this weekend for members of the National Fed- eration of Paralegal Associations A full calendar of educational, business and social events starts with registration at 8:30 a.m. Fri- day at the Executive Conference Center of the Kona Kai Club on Shelter Island. Bob Fellmeth, director of the Center for Public Intetest Law at the University of San Diego, will be the luncheon spea er Friday. He'll discuss "Licensing for the Profession." Fellmeth, a graduate of Harvard Law School and a former deputy district attorney here, currently is monitoring the discipline activities of the State Bar. On Saturday after lunch, Her- man Gadon, director of executive programs at the University of Cali- fornia, San Diego, will speak about turning members of a voluntary amz ion into l ders. Gadon will be followed at 2 p.m. by Linda Dougherty, who owns a legisla- tive monitoring service in Sacramento and who will discuss legislation of interest to paralegals. The bulk of the educational pro- grams will be on Friday: They are: •9 a.m.-noon, Computerized Litigation Support by Debbie Carnegie, a former paralegal at Luce, Forward, Hamilton & Scripps who owns Litigation Sup- port Services here. •1-2:30 p.m., Insurance Bad Faith Litigation by Gregg Relyea, an attorney with Higgs, Fletcher & Mack. •2:30-4 p.m., Your Role as a Paraprofess10nal by Julie Denton, legal administrator with Gray, Cary, Ames & Frye. •Client Interviewing Skills by Lawry Ross, a family law paralegal with Lightner & Castro. • 1-4 p.m., Documents in Con- struction Defect Cases by attorneys J. Michael Reed of Duke, Gerstel, Shearer & Bregante and J oyia Greenfield of Lorber, Grady, Farley & Volk. Business meetings are scheduled Saturday, as well as a two-hour cruise on Saturday night. Marta azar, president -0f the San Diego Association of Legal Assistants which is hosting the conference, said that Region 1 (the western region) is made up of 9 as- sociations. In addition to Alaska, paralegals will be comi from Oregon, Wash- ington and throughout California. The San Diego organization has about 275 members, but there "must be four or five times that amount (of paralegals) in San Diego County," said Lazar, a litigation paralegal with Higgs, Fletcher for the past 2½ years. It was one of the first groups to join NFPA, which was founde d about 12 years ago and now has some 10,000 members. Cost for the San Diego education sessions is $70 for members; $80 fi r non-members, with a $10 late fee for those who register at the regional conference - one of four (NFPAJ.

members; $30 for non-members. Some 20 vendors will be on hand copying and reporting services, docum nt retrieval, software and Regional conferences have also been scheduled this weekend in Minneapolis, Atlanta and Buffalo. Lazar said that the local con- ference has been in the works for Friday with information about office equipment.

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) OCT 9 1987

Law Briefs by Martin Kruming

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P. C. B far . 1888 !-~A,A,i Yl'lvroniversit?'a of S· n tb 104, Sacre Itearr Hmr. part of USO Music Depart- ment'i: new facilities): GUitarist performs works by Narvaez, Bach, Cordero, Lauro, Hein and Celedon. 10 Romero at 12,15 on Wednesday. _

months with special assistance from Marie Dye of Ivac; Michelle La Montagne of Shenas, Shaw & Spievak; Kathy Nelson of Higgs, Fletcher, and Ruth Halton. "If they (paralegals) can come from Anchorage they can come from San Diego," said Lazar. * * *

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co ) T imes (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010 ) (Ci r. S 55,573) OCT 9 1987

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

OCT 9 1987

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S. 1,346,343)

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F lVlllEBSITY QF SAN DIEGO FOJJ~~ALLERY (Desales HaGf~,h "Centuries of Archi- tecture m Spain,'' photographs de- p1c_t1-11g the history of Spanish ar- chitecture from 7th-Centur V1s1~oth to 18th-Century Rococ~ contmues through Nov 17 H ar 5 • . ours e noon- p.m. Monday-Friday.

SD Foundars Gallery

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histury of Span; !lecture from 7th cen- tury through 181n century, on display through Oct. 17. Hours: noon-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Information: 260-4b00, ext. 4261. Ar

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U~ Intercepts 8 Passes in 35-14 Win U~ afta B~bara lnter_cepted 1~The Cougars, with the help of and he scored San Diego's last eight Redlands pas es, five of seven turnovers, rallied to defeat touchdown on a two-yard run in which led to touchdowns, as the the Leopards in a nonconference the fourth quarter. Ken Zampese Gauchos routed the Bulldogs, game a: La Verne. scored San Diego's first touchdown 35-14, m a nonconference game Tra1lmg 9-0 m the second quar- on a 39-yard pass from Braulio Saturday at Santa Barbara. ter, Azusa Pacific 0-3) drove 10 Castillo. Whittier (2-2) managed Redlands, which ended Its 11- yards for a touchdown after an only 131 total yards. game losmg streak last Saturday, mterception and added two field struggled ag mst Santa Barbara. goals to take a 13-9 halftime Jead. Redlands quarterback Chris Hagle !11 the third quarter, Jay Johnson completed only 1 of 11 passes for 17 scored his second touchdown on a yards, and h backup, Steve Kille- 21-yard run after another inter- brew, comp e ed 3 of 12 passes for ception. Johnson finished with 96 44 yards Each threw 4 intercep- yards m 13 carries. ions. . La Verne (3-0) quarterback Paul Wnght led the Santa Bar- Mark Brown completed 14 of 36 bara (3-1) offense, completmg 19 passes for 152 yards, with 1 touch- -Of 39 passes for. 242 yards and 2 down and 4 mterceptions, before touchdown . Wnght threw a 54- leaving with an mjury. Azusa Pa- ard touchdown pass to Sean Rus- c1f1c quarterback Richard Jimenez sell and an 8-yard touchdown pass didn't fare much better completing to Wade Wallace in the second 3 of 16 passes for 7 vard; quarter to give the Gauchos a 28-0 • · halftime lead. U. San Dieco 28 Whittier O-Ty Rus ell, who caught 5 passes for Bar""Jcsdale ran for 7 yards in and 2 80 yards, also recovered a team- touchdowns in 14 carries to lead mate' fumbl in the end zone for a the Toreros over the Poets in a touchdown to give him 6 touch- nonleague game at San Diego. downs th on. R d ands 1-2. CS Northridge 38, CS Hayward 27-Albert Fann ran for two touchdowns and Rob Huffman threw for two more to lead the Matadors over the Pioneers in a nonconference game at Hayward. Fann, who ran for 115 yards in 15 carries, had touchdown runs of 20 and 7 yards, and Huffman threw touchdown passes of 29 and 30 yards to Keith Wright. Lamar Kirkland led Hayward (0-4) with 185 yards in 20 carries, including an 80-yard touchdown run. Southern Utah State 23, Cal Lutheran 18-Chad Richard threw a 63-yard touchdown pass to Scott Mosher with 45 seconds remaining as the Thunderbirds beat the Kmgsmen in a Western Football Conference game at Thousand Oaks. Barksdale's one-yard touchdown run m the second quarter gave San Diego (3-0-1) a 14-0 halftime lead, Azusa Padflr 20, La Verne

Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) The Citizen (Cir. W. 20,000)

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50 010) (Cir. S 55,573)

OCT 9 1987

OCT 9 1987

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