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.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

FEB 9 1987

1987

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't process applications

. I. Lucas tr a Judge asked to withdraw Hy Mitch Him laff Writer

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Chicano Federation to function as a processing center, many of the organization's clien~ have been requesting application forms and assistance in filing them. In a related matter during the panel discussion, Jorge Vargas of USD's U.S.-Mexican Law Institu_te contradicted San Diego INS Deputy Director Chff Rogers, who had said the cost of ~pplying for legalization would not exceed the widely quoted figure of $250 and probably would more likely be neare1 $150, the current fee for foreigners seeking naturalization. Vargas said research indicates the actual cost could more than triple that amount, with the INS filing fee added onto charges levied by processing centers and expenses for fingerprinting, certifica- tion and other required document verification pro- cedures. "We are thinking the cost per individual - with- out considering attorneys' fees - will be $500,'/I

By Chet Barfield Tribune S/.JU Writer

Hare's announcement that his organization will shun the program was made during a sparsely attended public forum at the University of San vario~ aspects of the immigration reform legisla- tion and answered questions from the audience of 35, about hall of whom were members of the spon- soring Syracuse University Alumni Association. In an interview after the forum, Haro said the governing board of his organization - which he said serves 1,000 Spanish-speaking clients a month in San Diego County - voted last week not to take "This does not mean we will not be involved in the issue of immigration," he said. "We will obvi- ously counsel these people and give them informa- "Also, if necessary, we will refer them to a reputable lawyer who will treat them fairly." Haro said although the INS had not asked the ~·e._,.g::::o.___ Haro was one of five panel who discussed part in the INS processing. lion.

the new judge be asked to hear the consolidation motion before hearing the other motions. Original plans were to have the Jacobs-Garcia case tried before the Swanke-Strang-Fisher-Santiago case,

Steven Feldman, would review alter- natives before deciding what action to take. He said it was possible they would appeal the appellate court'~ ruling to the state Supreme Court. McArdle said he will request that

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The Chicano Federation of San Diego County won't take part in a network of l!ummunity cen- _Di ters to screen and process amnesty applications for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Ser- The Hispanic rights organization has "decided we will not be a processing center," board chair- man Jess Haro said last night. "Our concern is that we might have a conflict and be perceived as Under the new immigration law, undocumented aliens who have been in the country since Jan. 1, 1982, will be eligible in May to apply for legal Because many aliens would be wary of applying directly to the INS, the .agency is enlisting advoca- cy groups to act as Intermediaries. The Catholic dioceses of San Diego and Lo Angeles, for exam- pie, have indicated they will process the INS ap- vice. an arm of the INS." resident status.

An appellate court yesterday or- d r d Superior Court Judge William II K nn dy to disqualify himself from h anng further proceedings n th David Allen Lucas murder cases. While prai mg K nnedy as a "ca- pable, factually obJective judge ... well quahfled to fairly try both ca ," ju lice of the 4th D;strict Court of Appeal said Kennedy's rela- l10 hip with a witn mandatei; th t h be disquahhed. Th ch net attorney's office re- que t d Kennedy be dLqualified from trying the ca e involving the murd rs of Rhonda Strang. 24, and Amber FJSh r, a 3-year-old girl she wa baby- lltlng In her Lakeside home, the murder of student Ann C th rm Swanke, 22;aiiil1iie att mpt d murd r of Jodie Santiago, 34, of ttle. Kennedy earlier had granted a de- f n: e request to disqualify himself from th trial in which Lucas is accu cd of the murder of Suzanne Camille Jacob , 31, and her son, Cohn Michael Jacob·, 3; and the murder of Gav! Roberta Garcia, 29. in the latter ca. e, the defen. e had contended tliat Kennedy faced a con- flict of mtere t because hb nephew, d f nse inve llgator William Austin, w to be a w1tn The pro ecutton requested Kenne- dy disquahfy himself 111 the other ca as well, on the . ame grounds that Au tin would be called as a wlt- n Kennedy reJected the prosecution motion as untimely Kennedy said there wa a danger that Lucas' right to a speedy trial would be violated if he disqualified himself at this late stage, leading to th ible dL mi sal of the charges. Both Deputy District Attorney Thoma McArdle and defense attor- ney Alex Landon aid rulings by Ken- nedy on motions he had heard before he wa challenged would tand. They said remaining motions, in- cluding a prosecution motion to con- solidate both cases, will be heard by a new judge. Landon said he and co-counsel,

San Diego, CA {San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune {Cir. D. 127,454) FEB 6

1987

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Vargas said.

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Robinson, meanwhile, believes the sooner you realize you're in the wrong profession, the better. "The longer you stay in a career, the more you get locked into it. The job often bring:; trappings that are hard to shed," she said. There is a tendency for modern Americans to become impatient with career c-J10ices. The experiences of immediate gratificatio often push them mto becoming dis. usioned be- fore they should. Ever: areer has stalls and dull periods , .,ea nothing seems to be progressinb, Every busi- ness also is subject to naturally slow cycles, a phenomenon that individu- als should recognize as the pattern of the business and not their career. Clearly, however, if you think you need to change careers you should take :;lock of your life. Looi at the reason" you wer.t into your (, rrent line of work ..n what has chan~ed to make you unhappy It you fin4 your motivations ·are ba~:~ally the same, maybe you don· 1eed to switch ca- reers, but simply a move to another job in the same new profession. U your interests have changed since you made your first career de- cisions - and, that is common - you should probably consider redirecting your career. Along with a change in interests, motivations also can change, and you probably shouldn't fight that but rather set about to cap- italize on their energies. One prominent San Diego develop- er spent his collegiate years studying science before embarking on a ca- reer in biotechnology. He later switched to selling commercial real estate and subsequently became most .successful as a developer of commercial properties. Aperiod of self-assessment can be heightened by career counselors, who recognize the difference be- tween job dissatisfaction and bur- nout. Counselors can help sort through your frustrations and help you adjust into a life that f:ts your current desires. Monetary sacrifice, at 1£ ;t tem- porarily, comes along witli .t career switch, and SDSU's Rob111Son says that if your family is not supportive, you may wind up with a bigger head- ache than when you began. Still, many workers have revital- ized their lives by switching careers. "Hopefully, if someone is going to change careers, it tecause they think the change will e more condu- cive to their happin s," said USD's ...... .,,,..., ...",t .....,,,_.. J

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) S.D. Jewish Press Heritage (Cir. 6,150) FEB

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ORKPLACE BY MICHA~. KNSMAN

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Sanz4ego Jewish Press Heritage Friday, February 6, 1987 vuso professor named to U~~~Circu· Court

0 L<\\\' EJT 3 that ays ou have to liv the rules you make up a age of 12. l fmd them- selves locked ir.to ca "r patterns they d ·gned hen ti y were in jun- ior high hoo. o ,unately, not ev- eryone has chosen this path, or the American work force wou d be over- loaded with firemen, llE:rinas and baseball players. Stlll, chool kids across the coun- try each year are encouraged to se• lect the profession of their choice es early in life as possible. But the choices you make in ado- lescence often are considerably dif- ferent from those you would make after a couple of decades of life expe- nences. That is the precise reason why you shouldn't be afraid to change careers. Changing careers can be frighten- mg, refreshing or it can be a disaster. The trick is to make sure you know where your priorities are before you leap into a new career "U you're not willing to make sac- rifices, you're not ready to change careers," according to Cynthia Rob- inson, a career counselor at San Diego State University. Burnout is the 'Surest sign that maybe you'd be better off in another line cf work. Job burnout can affect your personal life as well as profes- sional life. Problems may begin to surface in other parts of your life that are directly attributable to ca- reer woes, or you may develop physi- cal problems. If you find yourself hating your job, maybe its time to leave. "Drudgery is a sure sign that the time has come," said Barbara Burke, a counselor at the UJli~n Diego. 'flurke warns that switching ca- reers is not something to rush into. Give yourself two or three years be- fore you Chau,.,;.._~--------, Vet many workers w

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trongly held beliefs that economic free- doms should rert'ive the same protection as freedo of speech, religiori and the press. He told a reporter that he believes that a trc.-nJ toward a loosening interpretation of the Constitution is taking away prop- erty rights and economic freedoms from U.S. citizens. This is coming about, at least partially, Siegan indicated, by ex- cessive zoning and regulation. He describes himself at a strict con- structionist on constitutional matters. He was a land use lawyer in Chicago, and has taught at U SD since 1973. Some: students of the legal scene have expected for some time that Siegan Y. ould be nominated to the court, and C0!'troversy is anticipated over the nomi- 1 nation. If approved by the Senate, Siegan woultl succeed Warren Ferguson, who has become a senior judge.

By Bob Lupo

Bernard Siegan, who spoke only Yid- dish _the first five years of his life, was nommated this week by President Rea- gan to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. Siegan, 62, who hves in La Jolla, is a professor of law at the UqiversitYJ>f San Diego. He is regarded as a constitutional sl!holar, and as an economic conser- vative. Siegan 's parents were Russian and Po- lish immigrants. He grew up in the Lawn- dale area on the West Side of Chicago, then largely populated by Jews. He served in the U.S. Army and studied law at the University of Chicago. He came under the influence of the free market economists who then held court at the university. He developed his still

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. M. 7,500)

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.---<,. :'ttl nd Coa:,tal Ero 10n tn San Diego \\ii he the topic of the first of a series of ~san Diego and th~ Sea.. seminars co-:,pon ored by the San Drego Ocean, Foundation, the Mar,ne Studies l~rogramand Ocean Club of the ~ ers 1tyof San Diego The si;minar will be held at 6 p.m m room ?•o of Serra Hall on the U D campus. There 1s no fee. For more information, call Dr,.- R1chard Casey, 260-4600, ext. 441 8. ./

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

1987

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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Times (Ci r. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S. 1,346,343) FEB7

~ERICA'~ NEW IM~GRATION LAW will be the subject of a_pubhc f~toJfilirro\_V at the Uni~ of San Diego. The ~ational _Isstteii /Forum will focus on issues such as whether illegal aliens take away American jobs, burden the welfare s~stem or deplete national resources. Sponsored by the San ~1ego ~hap_ter of Syracuse University's Alumni Association, the discussion IS open to the public at 7 p.m. in USD's Manchester Hall. - Chet Barfield, staff writer

1987

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an Diego Turns Back Pepperdine, 78-73, Behind the Play of Thompson i(A1J?1 ON,TimesStaffWTiter • Th Unlver it of San Diego, h at h me, ma e I rr ighl -at J>'rld y night at Pepperdlne's tone F'ieldhous in Malibu. He made 11 of 17 shots from the field and 4of 5 free throws. 37-33, while F..d Allen's 17-foot jumper cut San Diego's lead to 43-40 with 15,34 remaining in the game. Pepperdine. Means finished with 14 points, making all 10 of his free throws.

"Every time we needed a basket Waves, and he answered: "A little in the second half, he got us a bit. In my four years, we haven't basket," U. San Diego Coach Hank won here (at Firestone), and we Egan said. "Pepperdine played us wanted to do it tonight and stay on much more honest all around, top of the league. I thought we did a which opened it up for Scott more." good job of controlling the tempo Thompson was asked if he was tonight. They didn't fast break o_!l...- out to prove something against the us much at all." --~--'-- l

The Toreros jumped to an 8-0 lead and increased it to 26-10 on a hook shot by 'Phompson with 8:41 left in the half. Pepperdme, 2-6 and 7-14 overall, managed to cut the deficit to eight points (35-27) at halftime, and made a run at U. San Diego early m the second half. The Waves' Craig Davis scored on two three-pointers to make it

B h nd the strong play of center tt Thompson, San Diego beat pcrdme, 78-73, In a West Coast 1 tic Confer nee game before a wdof 1,427. omp on cored 26 polnta and d 13 r bounds for the WCAC- ding Toreros, who Improved to in conference and 17-4 overall.

Pepperdine could get no closer, though another three-pointer by Davis brought the Waves within six points of the Toreros at 74-68 with 1:28 left. But San Diego's Danny Mean made six straight free throws-all in one-and-one situations in the last two minutes-to hold off

Davis and Mike Cumberland each scored 16 points to lead the Waves. Davis made 4 of 5 three point shots, and Cumberland was 6 of 9 from the field. Pepperdine's Dexter Howard had 14 points, also on 6-of-9 shooting. But the 7-0, 260-pound Thomp- son was the main force in the game.

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