News Scrapbook 1986-1988

San Diego, Calif. Union (Circ D 217,324) Ctr<;. S. 339, 788)

NOV 12 987

1987

NOV 6

, c. e 1" 1ua

Jltl~n••

P. c, e hr 1888

Dtcgollnlon A-23

Friday, November 6, 1987

I sena o s he'd try to think like high court )-'\'?{ debted to that judgment I just disa- gree with how it got there." H. Bork to the Supreme Court The Senate rejected Bork la t month after a long and bitter battle

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10 cases Siegan submitted to the committee as examples of his most important courtroom work. "Most of them - ID fact all of them - were in connection with real estate development,'' be said. Siegan responded that he has worked on federal and constitutional ues as a professor and as the or- ganizer of many academic symposi- ums on the law and the Supreme CourL A 63-year-old professor of consti- tutional law, former real estate at- torney and author of two books on the Supreme Court, Siegan was thought to be the most controversial nominee before the committee until President Reagan nominated Robert

Supreme Court would hold," he said. "Whether I like the Supreme Court's deCISI0OS or don't like them IS irrele- vanL" t:nder questioning by Sen. Dennis DeConc1m, D-Ariz., Siegan said be believed the fundamental rights pro- tected by the Constitution tnelude the ri!{ht of pnvacy He praised the Supreme Court's landma desegregation ruling m Brown vs. the Board of Education, but crittctzed the court's reasomng ID the case. ''It is inconce1vab!P. to me that any other Judgment could have been mad ," i gan said of the 1954 deci- sion outlawing segregation in public schools. ''Society IS enormously in-

Siegan said the court could have declared school segregation uncon- stitutional by finding that a black child's "constitutional right to trav- el" was violated by segregating chil• dren in eparate schools. Instead the court applied the 14th Amendment's equal-protection clause and decided, according to Siegan, that it had "a right to moni- tor the admimstration and manage- ment of the schools."' DeConc1Di. who said he has not de- cided whether to support Siegan, said he found it "troubling" that S1egan had so httle trial experience in the federal courts. He pointed to a list of

Siegan's critics say he would use the bench to promote his belief that property rights should receive more protection by the courts. In his books, Siegan bas argued that the Supreme Court should give more than mim• ma! scrutiny to laws that impmge on property rights and economic liber- ties. During yesterday's hearing, Siegan said the government has the right to regulate business and the relation- ship of an employer to his workers, but added that the Supreme Court

Ii HINGTON - u~ of Die o w prof r Bernard n y terdaJ told the Senate ry "" mm1tt be would not h rt rtan views guide lus de- a J dg on the 9th US. C1r- t bear- mg on S1 gan smce he was nomi- nated rune mont ago to the 9th ir• cuit by President Reagan, iegan mad d1 trnction between the often-controvcrs1al ideas he bas pro- pound d m ht books and what he would do on the appeal court. "l m gomg to look at th facts put befor me and try to decide how the t ourt of Appeal . Dunng the committee's fi

Bernard Siegan Controversial ideas

See Court on Page A-24

LockJ,ood:c,<' Aztec ,' rJaa jin., e --plained to Bell's c yr in, already have noticed chan "It's not like 1t u ed to be when Bobby wa here," 1d one. Too bad they didn't appr c1ate him then .. If I wcr San Diego State, I no long.-r would permit me to attend an Aztc road gamC' ot that I'm a JIDX or an}'lhmg, but I hav not seen th1 t arn WID an away gam ,,cc 1 wh n the ztecs be t Alr Force, 13-10 durmg the first Falcons e penment with the wi hbon . That, mcid ntally, is also the last time San Diego Stale beat Air Force Smee then, I am 0-10 as traveler The ztccs avC' been outscor by 308-111 1 base games. I have .,,, atcbed th I e under three coacbe in five t tc and one foreign country (the 19 1M1rag Bowl rn Tokyo) That 21-16 loss to Air Force ID the Far Ea t (the Aztecs led at the half, 16-0) wa one of only two that have come by I than a touchdown. The other was a 19-16 loss ID 1984 to a very good Oklahoma State team that featured Leslie O' cal, Rusty Hilger and Thurman Thomas as a freshman. Chris Hardy had a clear path to the flag for the winning touchdown mthe f1Dal minute of that game. cut upfield instead, was hit and fumbled at the goal line. Is it me, do you suppose? Or do the Aztecs JU t not play well rn important road game ? Continued from D-1 and it's not the oy, ner Soclters players, u

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) NOV 9 1 7 Jlfl~n '1 P c 8 I

1888

ECTURE: Darnel Sheehar ch1e1 counsel for the Christie Institute. Will speak about his organi• zalion·s S20 rrul!Jon lawsu,t against the Pres1• dent Ronald Reagan and his administration at 7 30 pm. "' Camino Theater at lhe Universia of San Diego The group 1s concerneo aboul en- lral Intelligence Association operations. A $21ee Will be charged For more 1nf~~all John Nunes at 260-4682 --~~ _ ,,,,,.,-

San Diego, Calif. Union (C1rc D 217,324) (Cir<;. S. 339, 788)

San Diego, Calif. Uno,, (C re D 217 324 (C1rc S 3.:s9, 78 8)

1987

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/Local ~eaction to use of marijuana by Ginsburg overs the spectrum By Staff W,iten 0 R,p. Jm> &le,, 0-&m Diego, said, C "The question is, is he still using While President Reagan's nomina-

Univ.ers1ty of S; n Die o defensive coord.:nator Ke\ 1 McGarr~ fitfully this s son, v· ions of blrwn coverage and 60 yard completto dancrng m his head. For now, though, there's no reason to h:1e unC:~r tt covers. Entering toda, s 1 p.m. game at St Mary's Co • lege of Atherton, starting cornerbacks Darr}' 1 Jackso and Christoph r King have far surpassed t1'e1r criach expectations and USD (6-1-1) is ranked fi t m 5Corng defense in Di vISion III. Both Jackson and King are freshmen Jackson, a start- er since preseason, bas three mtercept1ons nd lS f f.h o the team with 45 tackles. King, who moved mto the tart ing lineup in game four agamst Whittier has intercepted three passes and deflected eighL e1t er ad pla:;ec cornerback before this season "It's really nuts and don·t th1Dk my stomach l>~ n't been giving me problems," said McGarry " e went 1 to the season thinking we were gomg to be stron at a lot of areas defensively, especially linebacker and safety But tc, ha e two new starters Darryl and Chns have really kn a pleasant surprise." McGarry ts not the only one breathing a sigh of relief. "I have to be honest," said Jackson, who took tu 'lS playing quarterback, tight end, wide receiver and line- backer at Gardena-Serra High School in Gardena. The first time I played, more or less, I was seared. I didn't know what to expect. 111 remember that feel1Dg hr t rest of my life." King, a free safety at Jesuit High School in ~aC'ran ,. to can empathize. "Every game I've been nervou , he said. · lt tart d off because I just wasn t sure. I knew I d been taught how to do 1t. I just had never played before and it was scary. Scary? Maybe so. Disastrous? • ot even close lther Jackson nor King bas been beaten d e all season as USO l>as held oppcnents to two passmg touch- downs and a 104.6-yard passing average( 2th in D1v1 100 III). "The last time I tarted two freshman cc nerbac wa In 1984." said McGarry. "Its never good becau c they're always going to make the mistakes that f,-e~hm make. We've been real fortunate this year that th~e gu haven't made those ktnd of mistakes ' To 1be fair, they've had some help ·so-s strong pass rush (20 sac , 48 quart rba k h rt ), led by linebackers Frank Love (6½, sa s Md Jeff Merlmo (4 sacks), has made it difficult for 1vers to run long routes. overall, we thought the ~ondacy ,.; weakest spot, liecause we knew we re gom

la of semor strong e cepbons, 54 tackles) 0 tackles, five. :nter- tl1e pres5ure on their

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t1ve comments of people, I'd say tlere are a significant number of p«>ple in this community who are cmcerned about Ginsburg's ability to hold the law. "And the news about his wife doing a:iortions - there is tremendous u1ease about this nominee. And ~e•re talking about a fairly conserv- ative, pro-Reagan audience." A poll taken by the Union a year ago found that almost two-thirds of San Diegans believed drug users skould get mandatory jail time. It a:so found that nearly 80 percent were against legalizing marijua/

Katharine Rosenberry, a professor of law at Cal Western agreed. "I would be more interested in knowing more about his judicial opinions than about the marijuana," she said. One of her colleagues at Cal West- ern, William Lynch, said smoking marijuana wasn't particularly se- rious at the time Ginsburg did it. "On the other hand, I find a little inconsistency bttween putting him forward as a law-and-order judge," he said, and then finding out later that he broke the law.

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