News Scrapbook 1984

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

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

198

APR 2

APR 3 1 84

/Qint,nul:ld r m r a uSJ • tio; th11m Ul/l'lllJiL inlorpr11ling the law for th" other Jurou. Thul'~ 11l1 II tlu, JuJ1111'1 function ," Blliluy uiie it n,pros.inlo u croed lion ol th., popul1&tion. "Of courec. whtm you put b - llfOUP or ,oplu 1oo11etht:r III u JUty, tho with th Kll·uni,:u1;t w1l111 Pf v ll.'' hu commontud, li ilvy OIO thu U, . WI "t1,r r1bly ov r-h~1g tcd" ,md mo11l II w l w 11Chuol 11ru1.b11te11 "tr111ger huppy" nd 1thlUl1orud with wriL111g CoWltic lt,ttura in whuif of chont>1 "Op1m1ti on of the low m unoonce 1H hku u pyr rn1d with IUI apex 1111 l1t11i1&tio11," hu »aid. "Good lawy1ir1 ttle moijt of their c . Some mutter& h11ve to i:o to tnal - but thoau cuae11 hould be predict ble " Dail y 811id the foct COOJUrcd up for thi11 y r'11 F. Lee Ba1li,~ a• tion11l foo~ Court ornpeltt1oru1 w re d trign d to 1Jt1mulute thou ht und w t how wotll 11och tud nt could b ndle each side of the c "Sohlll thingo e11't v11ry cluur 111 law, with more ahad~d of gray thun solid colors," ho 11a1d. "Thllr1: i no r11ul cooclws1011 111 law to th1o1 l •• hy_p<>thut&cu c

The cuile &rifUed Ly the finah1.1tH coat•• \ling computer th t w • prepared for manufacturing firm with national franchised Hilles outlets and thut had bei,n demon11lruted on its computt:r aystorn. The company later decl11 cT11m v.,ry similar to to ono tl bud been o!T"'rt:d and teJl!Ctcd E,cpert wilnCboCll disagreed on whether s1m1hmty of the two pro1,'l"a1rui m1:ant one h11d wen copii:d from thi, other. "I wouldn't Wdlll ,t.o decidt: it if I I were on Urn bench,' Bruley qutp ped. "I'd try to get it moved to another court." Students in the finals were from Nova Law Center of Ft. Lauderdti.lt:, Fla. (l~t year's win- ner11), Howard University School of Law in Watih.inglon, D.C.l Peei>e_r- dme Umvemjty School oti:iiw in Malibu, San Joaquin College of Law in Fre no, S ntn Barbara Col- 11:ge of Luw, South Texas College of Luw m HoU11ton, and the National Umvenity, Univill.11:L- of Sun Dici;o 11nd Western St11te Univera1- ty law 11ehooh m San Diego. involved 1.1 aoftwan program

J udlCi,nt the. comJ>(ltition were Rolieri W. Meaerve of B011to~, a former pre11iriclUl College of Tnal Lawyer&; Michael S. Kepl- llll:lOr, policy pu.nning ad~oor for th~ Office of lht: Register of CoJ)yr111hts in Wu..hington, D.C.; and 1"ry Cv0n Walt.era, a m11mber of tie Nllw Mexico Supreme Court and foru1t1r chi f judgil or the New Mbxico Court of Appeals. Bu1luy Haya hi• "1:'.ie Detect.or" proiiraru. which ran wo,ck.u.. ys on n twurk tuluv Ion for 3 wo ks, •'tuk.o,n some Qf fhe myslicism <,ut of the Jiu det,ection process" and m c.li, n any peoplt: lf:ml approhen- Mi Vil about t1lk1ng polygraph eXblJlb. "All 111 all the rn6ults were positive,'' he said. "We stopped a Ii

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Construction has been co~n the $2.6 million Helen K. and Jail6-i£. Copley Library at the ~rsity of San Diego. The two-story, 400,00-square-@ot building is part of a $15 million expansion plan that includes the Douglas F. Manchester Ex- ecutive Conference Center and Olin Hall. The new library is connected to the original li~y by corridor and features precast

concrete ornamentation to match th~ sur- rounding university buildings. It will _be dedicated April 8. Dunphy Construction was the general contractor of the structure designed by Mosher Drew Wa~son Ferguson. George R. Sa~nder~ Associates provided structural engmeenng services and Mitchell-Webb Associates did the mechanical/electrical design.

Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) San 0ieguto Citizen (Cir. W. 16,667)

SCOTT BARNETT 1-,;f 7'r= AGE: 21 DEL MAR RESIDENT: 11 years. BACKGROUND: Poltical science major, University of San Diego; attended UCSD; graduate orrey ines High School; sales representative Zee Toys International. AFFILIATIONS: Del Mar Traffic Commis- sioner, Del Mar Water Study Group; Del Mar Chamber of Commerce, Friends of the Del Mar Library, Utility Consumers Action Net- work, Transit Productivity Advisory Commit- tee/ NCTD; American Academy of Political Science, World Affairs Council of San Diego. PRIORITIES: Pursue funding for continued improvement of basic city services . Im- plementation of a long-term traffic manage- ment and parking program. Removal of all non-protective beach encroachments. Private fundraising for Powerhouse Park develop- ment. Restoration of spirit of cooperation on council. ANALYSIS: Technically speaking, Scott Barnett the candidate has been around for about two months . In fact, Barnett has been running for election for 18 months. In that time he has attended more City Council meetings. that any of the counilmembers, become an active member of the Traffic Commission and newly formed Water Study Group. He also regularly attends Planning Com- mission, Finance Committee and Del Mar Fair Board meetings. In short, Barnett has paid his dues very quickly. He says he did it because he wants to, and because he has to. At 21 the youngest council candidate in the city's 25-year history, Barnett knows he has to offer something more than youthful en- thusiasm. His work seems to be paying off. Barnett has shown himself to be a well informed council candidate and displayed an im• pressive knowledge of the issues at a recent candidates forum. i I off er a fresh perspective. I truly come from a different generation., "I knew from the beginning I would have to work harder and will continue to work harder,'' Barnett says. Barnett has been pursuing the traditional door-to-door walking campaign Del Mar is famous for . He is also counting on cable television, which broadcast the debate live, to spread the word that Barnett is for real. He certainly believes it. "One thing, when I'm elected, I won't need to learn the job," Barnett says. "I'm ready to work now because I've been there." As for his age, Barnett says it's an advan- tage. "I offer a fresh perspective," he says. "I truly come from a different generation." He says he has no doubt residents take him seriously as a candidate. "They really have no choice but to take me seriously because of my knowledge of the

4 SM

If o have a dispute with so- meone that cou d develop into a full-blown court litigation, don't rush to a lawyer. Go to he Mediation Center at its of- fice at Suite 256, 10717 Camino Ruiz (if you live in Mira Mesa/Scripps Ranch and en- virons), and use its free ser- vices to bring about an amicable settlement. This Mediation Center, whose office may be contacted at 578-2460, was established in January 1984 with the supI>

FIL-AM News and Views

Eduardo Hap.anal

munity, can immeasurably help ease the clogged dockets of the courts. As it is no:V, court litigations are on the m- crease, and the only way the administration of justice may be expedited would be to en- courage people to submit their disputes to mediation before they reach the courts. Only last Thursday, March 29 this Mediation Center held ru{ Open House at its office, with Mayor Roger Hedgeca<;k as its guest speaker. Those m charge of the Center are Mesdames Barbara Filner and Sharon Schultze.

· er It

of San Die10 Pr

ident Author E. Hughes and

::. ome achlnery Company President J. T. "Tom" Hawtho!'"e ign contracts to provide for the design, construction and lnst_allah~~ of • l"O eneratlon plant on the USO campus. ~ogeneration w1 provide: virtually all electrical energy, heat an~ aar-.condlt~n 1 ~& !or the main campu of the university. Comple11on sche u or December, 1984. ';_% Business:_______________ Innovative undertaking Cogeneration at USD

issues," he asserts. "The key thing is, do I take myself seriously? Yes. I do have con- fidence in my abilities." Describing himself as a "truly independent, non-aligned candidate," Barnett believes res- idents are tired of the factionalism he says led to the council's split. Barnett says his priorities include development of budget policies for regular and systematic improvements to the city's water, sewer and street systems . He advocates accelerated study of alter- natives to the present contract system of water and sewer service with San Diego, which leaves the city without adequate con- trol over price increases. Barnett says the water problem may be out of the council's reach, and alternative sewage disposal will be expensive. But he adds that failure to have an impact on escalating ser- vice fees will soon be a more expensive burden. Barnett says long-term planning is essential in the city's downtown area, and says with proper council direction, Del Mar 2000 could be a way to accomplish it. "It's only what the council makes it," Barnett says. "I don't see it as a plan for redevelopment." ' Barnett he favors a study of public use of the 15-foot beach walkway, but added the council must develop a consistent approach to the beachfront with the Coastal Commission. Barnett feels the city's new stop signs pro- vide vital east-west access along Camino de) Mar, although he likes the idea of timed signals, which he says would improve traffic flow . He favors participation in regional issues but with a focus on their impact on Del Mar.• Barnett says he plans to focus on the issues if elected, which he believes is the only way the council can again act as a team. One of those issues will be the role of council. versus city staff. "Our role is to set direction," Barnett says. "W,e have _to be up there steering the ship while staff 1s down there shoveling coal." He insists his age will not be an issue with the informed voter. "I don't think people are afraid of that" he says. "I think people respect people who know what they want to do."

will and should be fully operational by December, 1984. University officials esumate the project will result in significant economic advantages over conventional energy purchase procedures with anticipated avmg between $800,000 to SI million over the next ten years. . According to USO Physical Plant Director John Zeterberg, "Cogenerauon been under con 1derat1on for USO since (Continued on Pag 4) begin immediately

Ever-escalating energy rates, coupled with continued growth of the Univer ity of ~an Diego, have made cogenerauon n practical olution to the problem of controlling utility co t . Toward that end, the University of San Diego. :!!'!nnunr. d Pr 1dent Author E. Hughe , has igned an agreement with Hawthorne Machinery Co. to con truct a cogeneration y tem to erve all academic building on campu . Construction on the y tem

SENTINEL

APR 4

1984

Three one-acts scheduled "The Apple Tree," a mu ical comedy bout forb1d- d en knowledge. will be presented at the University of an Diego tomorrow through unday at 8 p.m. in the Camino Theater.

The show comprises three musical one-acts - "The Diary of Adam and Eve", "The Lady or the Tiger" and "Passionella."

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