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

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

Hoffm At USD- (Contmued from Page JAJ J,

Non-Violent Coordinating Com· mittee "charity" over administra- "The students won, and it was like a shot heard across the coun- try. My God, students! They"re do- something! They're alive! They"re making changes!" They challenged dress codes and demanded the right to vote at age 18. Now, Hoffman observed stu dents are fighting for the right to control school publications "and the right to demonstrate, at some ing "It's not yet a student move- it's a pre-student move- ment," he said. "We won't have the ment: that free, the dope never that cheap and the rock 'n' roll never that good. I don't know how you'll get ideas across without a counter-culture. I don't know what ill look like, but T know you can't do it with designer brains." political 1t tion objections schools. '60s back - the sex will never be

MAR 11 1987

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MAR 11 1987

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MAR 11 1987

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to liberals

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P C. 8 IX,~ After A.lllh YearsRof'fman Still Berates I I

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about mrn 1 ng

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Wednesday, March 11, 1987 'i!IJe•DlqJolhtlon D-7 .lJaron, Roberts homer as Tor_eros beat UCSD 00

the

to

in Am!'rica sold

made

Ayatollah himselfl"

He jabbed at President Ronald Reagan - "The Teflon president no one could touch and in two weeks ht• turned mto c llophane." H vowed to tackle the military _ "N xt I'm going to sue the U.S. Army for false advertising - you

Sean Baro?f~~ndy Roberts hit horn~ runs yester~ay to leadj_he Uni- ve~y of San Diego baseball team past visiting UCSD, 7-3, in a non-con- ference game. The. Toreros (11-6) used four pitch- ers, with. Jim Westlund (1-0) winning. Baron hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning, and Roberts a two- run homer in the eighth. UCSD is 9-7. USIU 10, LONG BEACH 4 - Steve Hendrie~· fourth home run, good for two runs m the seventh, put the Gulls (8-14) ahead to stay at home. First baseman Bob Esquerra had three hits and three RBI for USIU· Shane Larker hit a two-run homer 'ror the 49ers (5-16-1. Mike Poteet (2-5) won in relief. FULLERTON STATE 10, SDSU l - Mark Beck pitched a complete game to lead the Titans (13-9) past the ~ztecs at Smith Field. Freshman right fielder Bob Perry was 4-for-4 for SDSU (10-9). Steve Mills (0-1) lost PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE - San Diego City scored four runs in the ~ttom ~f the ninth to salvage an 8-8 tie agamst Southwestern in a game called after nine innings be- cause of darkness. The game will be replayed only ii it has a bearing on conference standings . . . David Schiesser had three hits and three ~BI .and pitched five innings to win m M1raCosta's 12-3 victory over vis-

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learned how to be a brain surgeon

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iting Imperial Valley College ... Catcher Mark Robert homered and singled to lead Mesa past visiting ~rossmont, 9-4. Eric Bridge (3-2) pitched seven innings to win for Mesa (6-4, 2-0). Tim Quinn had two hits and one RBI for the Olympians. Grossmont is 1-2 in conference. Zungul scores 2 goals as Stars beat Strikers From Ntws Services Steve Zungul scored two goals and had two assists to lead the Tacoma Stars to a come-from-behind 6-3 vic- tory over the host Minnesota Strikers last night in a Major Indoor Soccer League game. The Strikers held a 3-2 lead after thre~ quarters, but Tacoma got four straight goals in the final quarter. WINGS 3, SIDEKICKS 2 - Chico Borja scored the game-winning goal as Wichita defeated host Dallas. Mark Evans and Dave Hoggan each had one goal and three blocks for the Wings. Tatu, who leads the league with 50 goals and 78 points, had a goal and an assist for Dallas.

He derided the Strategic Defense

"What the hell, we

Initiatwe -

I T'S ALIVI G: In Yuma last weekend with her rarents, 3- year-old Karla DeVries had a chance to meet her idol, Steve Garvey. Bad· home in San Diego this week, she was asked by a family friend just what it is Steve Garvey does during spring training. "He writes on kids' baseballs," Karla explained. LIFE IN THE CITY: Bob Hope holds forth at Bmg Crosby Hall Saturday night in a tribute to Chargers owner Alex Spanos. Developer Ernie Hahn is honorary co-chairman of the fund-raiser (for a new T~rrey Pines High stadium) along with Hope, who promises a 30- minute routine and a bonus: his wife, Dolores, will sing. (Hope and Spanos may also be expected to reprise their soft-shoe number, with Les Brown and his Band of Renown.) ... Bob Arnhym, who resigned last week after 20 years .. t COMBO (14 as volunteer; 6 as s,.mor exec), says he's pondering 1 aunching his own fund-raising and events-planning firm. But first he says, "I'm going to spend wo or three weeks eating and listemng." Arnhym doesn't regret his abrupt resig11alinn. "The city is going to for •ts own public arts commissi,m. he ays. "My salary would have Leen reduced to a 1970s level. It was ;i rr "essional cul de sac." ... Against tne odds: SDSU's Alumni & Associates aren't superstitious. They've scheduled a "Casino Night" fund-raiser this Friday (the 13th) aboard the ferryboat Berkeley. BORDER VIEW: Tijuana architects offer their views on the future of San Ysidro later this month at an urban planning workshop sponsored by R/UDAT (Regional/Urban Design Assistance Team). One focus of the workshop involves solutions to San Ysidro's hil!h crime rate. But. T.1 architect Rene Pesqueira regards that as irrelevant to architecture. "A lower crime rate," he lectures, "is a matter of education - not urban design." SIGN LANGUAGE: Ken Grote and his twin brother, Keith, were in Yuma last weekend, visiting the Padres spring training camp. And Keith, a San Diego cop, was drawn to a boisterous crowd surrounding a car outside the Shiloh restaurant. The car, it turned out, was parked in a handicapped space; with no handicapped parking sticker. But then, says Ken, the personalized license plate probably explained the handicap: NL UMP ... On the ski slopes in Keystone, Colo., SD Atty. Ed Chapin found the seeds of a political comeback on a tourist's T- shirt: HE'S TAN, HE'S RELAXED, HE'S READY - NIXON FOR PRE.5IDENT IN '88.... Opponents of the Belmont Park development aren't likely to let up soon on Councilman Mike Gotch. Yesterday, at the foot of Ventura Place (adjacent to the demolition), one partisan had posted his potshot on a hand-lettered sign: TOO BAD MISSION BEACH - MIKE GOTCHA! SAN DIEGANS' INK: Judge William Todd, who held center stage for nearly a year during our ex- Mayor's felony trials, is going legit. He'll make his acting debut March 26 in the lead role of Neil Simon's "God's Favorite," at La Jolla United Methodist Church.... Gloria McColl's aide, Marla Marshall, hasn't moved into the 4th Dist. yet (she's house-hunting). But she has hired a political consultant, LA's Rick Taylor, to steer her unofficial campaign for Wm. Jones' City Council seat. ... The Feb. 28 San Diego premiere of Richard Dreyfuss' "Tin Men," a fund-raiser for UCSD Med Center's Dept. of Ophthalmology, is replayed on tonight's edition of "Entertainment Tonight" (7:30 on Channel 10).... U~'s loss.,to Pepperdine Friday in the first round of the WCAC basketball tournament left a bitter taste. But the USD scholars exacted some sweet revenge on Sunday. The USD Law School defeated Pepperdine in the final round of the Trial Lawyers' Western Regional · om tition.

don't know if it works; ,t'll bring

found encouragement

Hoffman

Jobs to San Diego!"

in the recent trend for American corporations to pull out of South Africa, and that universities were likewise giving in to pressure from in- volvement in that country as a statement against racial prejudice . "Now they have to explain to the Amencan public the difference be• tween Mozambique and Angola, when the audience is concerned with the difference between Ralph Lauren and Pierre Cardin," he said. Looking back at the former stu- dent activism, Hoffman noted it was the civil rights movement that "got us off our blue jeans-stret- chers" and into the streets helping blacks to register to vote. "Then. there we were. suspicious of authority and stoned out of our gourds of course and we looked around and saw Vietnam. What's that? Vietnam had been going on for 10 years before there was any opposition to it. "For 10 years the CIA ran our war in a country Americans had no idea where it was. They bought an army, bought a government, in- vented a border, invented border incidents. We shipped a hundred million dollars there. Then Lyndon Johnson was telling Americans he would never send our boys to fight an Asian war - and we had 16,000 military advisers there." But the student movements tapered off in the 1970s, he said. "It's hard to protest the war when you don't have a war." And he pointed out it was hard to get a concensus among activists "when 1t meant you tried to unanimity from three FBI agents and six schizophrenics." So he began to challenge CIA college recruiting methods, and he is currently working with the Na- tional Student Action Center in Washington, D.C. "We don't need people to present problems, we already have enough problems. We need people to pres- ent solutions," he stated. "There's a science to organizing. And some students want to par- ticipate in the electoral process. I'm not knocking that. One foot in the street, one foot in the voting booth: that's the stance." students to withdraw from

And he prodded students - uppo d to speak tonight on stu• •dent activ 1 gm - which is a funny subject, ·ort of oxymoronic.'' Hoffman called today's univer- 1t1es "psycho-social moratoriums where people remove themselves from the problems of society; yup• p,e training camps." He complained that students here are "more apathetic than the rest of. ociety . We don't have the tr dition of the engaged students h way they hav in Latin meric or Europe." Students pro test in South Korea, in France, Spain and the Philippines, he noted "Youth makes a revolution. If you're not going to make the struggle for social change when you're young, you're certainly not i,:oing to do it in middle age," Hof• fman declared, then adding as one who knows: "I'll tell you what middle age is about: they promise you wisdom and stick you with hemorrhoids " Now 50, Hoffman has been a part of th po-liti I act i sc ne for some 25 years. He started with the civil rights movement in the South in the early 1960s, was seen regularly on the nightly news leading ant, war demonstrations in the late 1960s, went underground for years as a fugitive but took up the fight for environmental protec- tion in the 1970s. In 1969 he went on trial with the Chicago Seven, charged with noting at the Democratic national convent10n the previous year. The trial is now being made into a tele- vision movie, depicting the bizarre events during the case against Hoffman, Tom Hayden, Jerry Rubin, Rennie Davis, John Froines, Lee Weiner and David Dellinger. Hoffman is on the college lecture circuit now , earning recent publicity at the University of Mas- sachusetts when he and Amy Carter were arrested for protesting CIA recruiting. "They had riot police in full gear, and attack dogs," Hoffman related about the November protest. "At- tack dogs! I haven't seen them since Birmingham! April 6 we'll show you how to turn a trespassing charge mto a political trial. We'll say as responsible citizens we knew laws were being broken (by the CIA in Iran) so we broke a little one. "We'll parade witnesses for seven, eight, nine days before an American jury and we'll see whether it's an illegal organization or not." Though age has tinged his beard with gray and prompted him to more closely trim the once-tall "I'm

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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50.010) (Cir. S 55.573)

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

R1 0 1987

MAR 11 1987

u1ll~n'•

P. c. e

fo. 1888

• March 12: "lmprov\ng the Eco· • I tus of Women.," a pubhc nom1c a LS forum at the UmvPrs1ty 9 an Die o that will be led by assistant phlosophy Prof ssor Harriet Ba- b r and assistant economics Pro- fessor Denise Dimon. The program runs from 7:30-9 p.m at the Man- che ter conference Cent~ o~am- pus. Admissio,11s free.

¼

Part V/Wednesday, March 11, 1987 J

Course Deals With Ethics of Women's Work By STACY FINZ Times Staff Write~ 2, q S5 SAN DIEGO-Academically economics instructor Denise Dimo~ and Harriet Baber, assistant pro- fessor of philosophy, are worlds apart. However, they are teaching a new c.ourse this semester at the Umvers~ Diego, "Women mWork." 'Baber said that Dimon provides the. data and she talks about the eth1?al implications of that infor- mation. "It seems to be working very well " SAN she said. "Our students gg=33TY have all had to take -:...c::c:.=...:...:.. philosophy courses, so USD stu- dents are pretty philosophically soph1st1cated." The two educators will also hold a public forum in which they will ~ttempt to answer the qyestion What Can Be Done to Improv~ Women's Economic Status?" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Man- chester Conference Center at USD They will examine the economi~ and so~1al forces that have led to women s new economic role in society. Dimon said that, although many older women are stagnat' . tradT al I mg m I ion ' ow-paying jobs, youn- ger women are pursuing more male-dommated occupations In 1980, 13.9% of doctors were w~m-

en, a significant increase from 9 7 % in 1970. · 0 Dimon, as a labor economist, has researched the topic of women in the la~r market. She said that occupational segregation in the work force has declined since the 1960s, but she warns that one must be.~areful when analyzing the data. Although statistics might state that there are 50% women and 50% men in sales, these statistics do not break down how many women are sales representatives for large .business firms and how many are m retail," Dimon said. Flexibility Sought "Many women are choosing oc- cupat10:1s that have fewer hours, or are eas1~r to move in and out of to have children, raise children and for whatever other reasons. These Jobs pay lower wages." F~r t_his reason, many employers don t hire women, said Baber, who is interested in the ethical aspects of women working. . "A_Jthough it is against the law to d1scr1mmate on these bases, it is a rat~?nal reason not to hire a wom- an, Baber said. "However, 50% of the' differentials in the work force can t be explained and must be bl~med on d1scriminatwn. In general, I think that it would be appropriate for the government to intervene. And I thmk there should be some sort of affirmative act10n." "Things do appear to be getting better, people are marrying later a nd havmg children later" D' sa d "B ' imon 1 · ut the older women are stran.ded. Some of the short- run solutions are income transfers, job trammg or welfare. But somethin has to be done." Y, '

"natural" hairstyle, it has not sapped his zeal or his ability to stir emotions. "When you fight for someone else's freedbm, you start thinking about your own situation in life," Hoffman said, recalling the days when Berkeley students collected money on campus for the Student

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