News Scrapbook 1988

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

Encinitas. CA (San Diego Co) Coast Dispatch (Cir. 2 x W. 30,846) MAY 6 1988

1988

MAY 7

Slow-+------ Continued from F-1 ,.,29 5 5"' out the burden over a longer period. "It is this option which is the most fiscally sensible and politically feasi- ble," he said. contentious." Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., told the seminar that Congress was devel- oping new housing legislation aimed at solving homelessness and improv- ing affordability.

P. C. B 1 ,1 1888 Bork raps left-leaning law professors / Tells group here 'academic theorists' seek to revise Constitution ;J.~6'? By Joseph Thesken and untrue. Tribune stall Writer "If the American people believed 10 percent of Former federal appellate Judge Robert Bork, m the campaign, they had a right to be terrified," he San Diego to address a U.S. Bicentennial Commis- sa~~rk got a laugh from the audience when he sion luncheon, criticized some law professors for f their "left" leanings and their attempts to alter added, "In fact, if I had believed 10 percent o what had been said about me, I would have closed

Rancho Sunta Fe, CA (San Diego Co ) A.i nch Santa Fe J" 1mes (Cir. W. 500) MAY 6 1988

Solana Be11ch, CA (San Di go Co.) Solana Beach Surfcomber (C1r.2xW.)

Richard Peiser of the University of Southern California likened con- trols to rationing and predicted hous- ing prices would rise if voten.; ap- proved either proposal headed for the San Diego ballot this fall. One measure, sponsored by the cit- izens group, would limit housing pro- duction to as little as 4,000 units a year; the other measure, still being drafted by the City Council, would 2 !low about twice that much. "I do feel what we are seeing is a harbinger for what we are likely to see elsewhere," Peiser said. He noted that Boston, New Jersey and Washington, D.C., already are facing growth-control pressures. "But the situation here (in South- ern California) is a lot worse, be- cause the political situation is more

And he said that he and his Repub- lican counterpart, Sen. Alfonse D'Amato of New York, are lobbying Michael Dukakis and George Bush to speak out on housing issues during the presidential campaign. William C. Apgar Jr., associate di- rector for the Joint Center for Hous- ing Studies at Harvard, said he h detected an increase in interest housing issues in the past six months. But political analyst Charleti . Cook Jr. said that housing nd growth controls are unlikely to sur- face as major issues this fall. He said of housing needs, "It's probably third or fourth on the agen- da of domestic issues," Cook said. "A better job needs to be done to get the message out."

MAY 6

1988

the Senate hearing and would have committed hara-kiri before the television cameras." He received a standing ovation after his talk. At an impromptu news conference later, Bork said he no longer feels bitter about those who helped block his nomination. "I'm enjoying myself, traveling around the country and speaking before groups," he said. Bork referred to the plight of Bernard Siegan, a Unive~t of San Diego law professor wliose nom- ination to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has been stalled in the Senate Judiciary Committee for 14 months. "Professor Siegan is gomg through a similar attack to mine," he said, "but we have different views." Bork addressed the California Bicentennial Commission on the U.S. Constitution, at which three prominent San Diegans were given Spirit of America awards for their roles in upholding the spirit of the Constitution. Those honored were Bishop Leo Maher of the Catholic Diocese of San Diego, Maj. Gen. J.J. McMonagle, commanding general of the Marine Corps base at Camp Pendleton, and San Diego developer Ernest Hahn.

the meaning and intent of the Constitution. Bork, rejected by the Senate last fall after being nominated to the U.S. Supreme Court by President Reagan, appeared relaxed and good-humored as he addressed an audience of more than 400 yester- day at the Sheraton Harbor Island East Hotel. He said many law professors are theorists who "would substitute for the historic Constitution a body of constitutional law based upon their no- tions of morality." "These academic theorists, such as those at Harvard and Stanford - schools like that - have suggested the Constitution creates rights to receive welfare, to use cocaine and to engage m prostitution," Bork said. "That gives you some idea of the direction in which these non-originalist philosophers want to take us." Bork, who said he resigned in February from his appellate judgeship in the District of Columbia so he could speak out against those who opposed his Supreme Court nomination, attacked the liberal philosophy he said 1s rampant in many law schools. "A Harvard law professor, whose notions differ from others at the school, said the emerging atti- tude at that university is: Let a thousand flowers bloom, as long as they are leaning sharply to the left," Bork said. "That description would fit a lot of universities

Tribune photo by Jerry McCJard

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcrirt (Cir. D. 7,415 MAY 9 1988

FORMER JUDGE ROBERT BORK Says leftist judges are distorting the Constitution and a lot of law schools," he added. Bork spoke out against those who opposed his nomination. He said the advertising campaign by the coalition of organizations against him, includ- ing civil rights and feminist groups, was vicious

CHARLES KELLY Built computer firm TIM HUGHES Firm s general manager Computer veteran knew hen, ow to build his firm Few c n ma ch hurl· Kt•llv' exper 1encc 1n the computer indu. trv K lly t rt d m the 1111111 try 1n l 9(i7, a h ·orke

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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) MAY7 1988

~//.e,t~ P. C. 8 Rolls honored - • SD catcher Dave Rolls and Santa Clara Univer- sity catcher Troy Buckley shared baseball player-of-the-year honors in the West Coast Athletic Conference, officials announced yesterday. Rolls, a senior from Tucson, hit .462 with nine homers in WCAC play,-Y5 S- Est. 1888

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;.---"" Larking selected - Senior Jen- nifer Larking, the No. 1 singles play- er at USD, was one of 64 singles play- ers selected to compete in next eek's NCAA women's individual championships at UCLA. Julie Tullberg and Dorey Brandt of SDSU are alternates in the 64- tea':1 doubles draw. First-round play begms Monday. The singles and dou- bles finals are ~eduled for Thurs- day. :) CJ o/5

Los Angeles,CA (Los Angeles Co .) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) MAY 8 1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092) MAY 6 1988 Jlll,,n '• P. c. B

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MAY7 1988

Republic of Chma. H1 credent ml include Instructing rnur e on computer sciencl', i,perntions re earch, t11t1 tic , nccountmg, finuncc und information, yHtem . Kelly combmed his expertise and knowlPdge when lw formed Charle. Kelly & Co, which tarted ll~ 11 whol Hale di:tributor of comput1blc computpr,i und has d velopC'd into u firm sp(•cializmg in the development ofcui;tom sofi- wur • program 11nd computer- id •d dr 1fting and ,mufactur- mg. Till' company targ ·t client in the indu tn •s of urchitccture, con8truction, healthcare and manufoctunng MicrocomputcrR have revolu- tionized American 1ndu try Kelly claimH his company's ·erviccs arc on the cutting edge of that new technology "The co t ofco nputcr powPr has dccrcas d approximately 25 percent pi"r year," he id. "If the ame fact w.i true m auto manu- facturing, a Mercede -8 •nz would co:it about ·10 today. "We C'ln tak(• ao to 40 micro- computer und link the sy'

'I'he University of San Diego beat UC Irvwe-1'Sy seven seconds m the varsity eight e.vent at East M1ss1on ) Bay. USD finished the 1,750 meters in 5 ,14 USD also won the freshman eight event with a time of 5:19.

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500)

1982 as a ~mall organization capi- talizing on Kelly's knowledge of the Ch ina-Ta1pei compatible- computl'r market. '!'he company' philosophy 1s broken down into five steps: • Realize the need to store and process information on a computer. • Assess the needs and prob- lem to be olved . • Decide budget constraints. • Gath er c1 v a i I ab 1 e alternatives. I • Choo e the best alternative. To accomplish tho ·e goals. Kelly brought in 'l'im Hughes as the firm's general manager. He is responsible for establishing and maintaining administrative oper- ations and product management. Hughes was raised and educated III the San Diego area. He hold a bachelor's degree in bu. iness economics from the University of San Diego and a mastc?s degree in mternalional management from the American Graduate School of International Management m Phoenix, Ariz. After completing his undergraduate work, Hughes worked in the financial industry at Mernll Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and mith Inc.

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t888 Robert Bork warns audience: • here of threats to Constitutioii / By Lorie Hearn /) q Cj ) Staff Writer o'- t ...... in the area of the $12,000 to $1~,000 the former judge receives at similar functions.

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~imal-activist motir,f!.§Auestioned Acuiis~'.:3(ain are in the news ex- pressing their opposition to the use of animals in scientific work. It is diffi- cult for people to evaluate the points raised by Sally Mackler (Letters 4. 22-88) and her colleagues, beca~se members of the animal movement so often have presented a distorted view of animal research and of the whole issue of animal welfare. !f they are really concerned about amm~l welfare and with alleviating suffering and death of animals then sell:Cting researchers as the target of their attacks is misguided and illogi- cal. Consider the fact that in the Unit- ed States, 12 million chickens are consumed each day, so that in two days, we kill, dismember and eat more chickens than all of the ani- mals u_sed for laboratory purposes in an entire year. We also boil, scram- ble, fry_ and otherwise destroy an as- tronomical number of chicken em- bryos each day. Considering only chickens, pigs, steers and lambs, we eat more than 4 billion animals each year. Thus, picketing fast-food outlets grocery stores and restaurants by animal-rights groups would be a much more logical tactic in terms of the number of animals that could po- tentially be saved. The greatest threat faced by ani- mals today is the result of wholesale destructio~ . ~f hab~tat caused by human act1V1ties. ThJS is not simply a ~atter of _suffering and death of indi- vidual ammals, but is extinction of entire populations and species. Think what could be accomplished for ani- ma~. if this was where the animal act1v1Sts made their effort. . Clearly, if animal welfare is the ~ue, then the attack on research is a ~1splaced, unjustified and ineffec- tive strategy, especially since at least _some animal research _ e.g., vete~mary work, research on repro- duction of endangered species _ is of great benefit to animals. -DANIEL D. MORIARTY Jr. Ph.D.

USD ~C/55 Graduation banquet for the Schoo/ of Nursing is scheduled for May 19, 7·10 p.m. at the Bahia Hotel, Mission Bay Room. For further Information, calf 2604550 _

In the style of a fiery homegrown preacher, Robert H. Bork delivered a constitutional prophesy in San Diego yesterday that was designed to wake sleeping conservatives to the dan- gers of the liberal activist attitudes he blames for foiling his U.S. Su- preme Court confirmation. "Control of the law is only part of a larger war," he said. Expanding the power of judges to philosophically change the intent of the law will lead to the disintegration of "shared val- ues and morals-first principles," he warned. "Most people," he said, "don't know there is a struggle for constitu- tional dominance." Bork's message brought more than 400 applauding San Diegans to their feet yesterday at a pricey hotel luncheon to honor three •:patriotic Americans:" developer Ernest W. Hahn, Bishop Leo T. Maher and Camp Pendleton's Major James J. McMonagle. Amidst a powerful celebration of Americanism - punduated by music from the 1st Marine Division Band - Bork's speech was the sixth he had made this week as part of a cross-country roadshow that has be- come his mission and bis Ii ving. The former judge has been on the rigorous tour since February, de- lighting audiences by repeating the defense he believes was never made clear through three weeks of Senate confirmation hearings last fall. He warns about what he considers a thunderstorm of distortions that can work against others in the judici- ary as they did against him, and he talks quietly, but deliberately, after- ward about the help he never got from the White House. Bork called the Reagan adminis- tration "tired and not reacting quick- ly any more," when he was asked why the White House kept largely si- lent while he was subjected to the

Through the stern message, Bork maintained a sense of humor, relat- . ing the story about a college student who told him he watched every min- ute of the hearings and was "sem1- disappointed" when Bork was defeat'- ed. And there is the one that is "caus- ing me a slow identity crisis," Bork said - so many people he meets mis- take him for the nation's surgeon general. Bork smokes. The frenzy that surrounded J;i.f;, nomination was the "first all-out po- litical campaign against a judicial nominee in this country's history:• Bork said. "It is one battle in a lon~- running war for control of the judiei- ary." He commented later t~nard Siegan, the University of San D1eii:o law professor nommated to the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, is fac- ing the same furor he did, but with less national attention. He and Siegan have different views, Bork said, but Siegan still is "subject. to attack from the same quarters." . He told the audience about re- verse-discrimination rulings, opin- ions defending rights to aboriji;ins and a ruling that set aside the de~th penalty for a while. The point is not whether one agrees with the deci- sions, Bork said, the point is "these are matters for the legislatures, not for the courts." Bringing home the dangers of the movement to democracy, Bork once again blamed his defeat on Uie "blitzkrieg of advertising" and~ the tactics of such senators as Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. Bork called his own views "tr,11li· tional" and said he was not alo~ in his sentiments. "It is a fierce and strong debate, and strong things a e going to be said," he asserted, a that his are "beleaguered views now but it's a strong tradition."

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092) MAY 1 O1988

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P. c. e 1888 / ...!1.SD_!)ASKETBALL - Members of USD's basketball team were hon- or~at the Toreros' annual team ~anque~. ".)...'\ i::;< Jumor swmgman Mike Haupt, a business major with a 3.24 grade- point average, received an award as the team's Student/Athlete of the Year. In addition, Haupt's team- mates selected him for the Bugelli Leadership Award. Haupt averaged 5.8 points and was leading the team with 6.1 rebounds a game before suffering a year-ending knee injury in the season's 17th game. He was selected for his inspi- ration in overcoming the injury and other personal crises during the sea- son. Junior guard Danny Means was chosen by the coaches as the team's Most Valuable Player. His team- mates selected him for the Zable Athletic Excellence Award for his commitment to the team. Means was the only player on the team to start all 28 games, averaging a team-high 33.9 minutes. He aver- aged 12 points and three rebounds a game and led the team in three-point and free-throw shooting percentage. Means and senior swingman Marty Munn were honorable men- tion selections to the All-WCAC team. In addition, forward John Sayers was selected WCAC Fresh- man of the Year. The Toreros fin- ished the 1987-88 season with an 11-17 record. F.<1

The San Diego Union/Jerry McCJard Robert Bork in San Diego yesterday. political process. Diverting from his judicial demise for a moment, Bork defended Attor- ney General Edwin Meese's unwavering refusal to resign in the heat of ethical and possible criminal allegations. "I regard him as a friend," Bork said of Meese. "I cannot believe he ever had a criminal intention in his life. Although "I don't know what the reports are going to show about vari- ous activities," he said, he insisted that if Meese "resigned now I'm afraid it would be an admission of some sort." His advice to Meese? ''I would say if you are convinced of your inno- cence, fight it out." Bork said he has committed to writing a book expounding on his constitutional message, but the bulk of his time now spent on the lecture tour. Aspokesman for the California Bi- centennial Foundation, which spon- sored the luncheon, declined to say how much Bork was paid for his speech, but he acknowledged it was

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< lftt;;;---- -- aw professor elected to Ame · can La~ I sbtute ALCALA PARK ~ Pro ssor Herbcn Luerow, mcml r of the Universitr_ of S.111 Oic;i,:o Sc~ of Law faculty, has been el c·ted'TiiilieArm·ri<-an Law Institute. The 7'i-year old mstitute ha a major voic in d loping American law. Elected me111 t11hip i. limited to 2,000 lawyers from ov r 750,000 attorn ys in th nation. 1 ,crow, a USQ..(ao.hy member smc 1967, ha beenappointedtotheALI sTax Advisory Group. He te chcs taxauon and property nd dir cts the USD lnstitute on Intt-rnational and Comparative Law. p C B ,, 18 I,'

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

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The /aw firm of Hinch w· son & Hodges 1 s ce/e/\ itte, Wood. Ander- s~ry with a donation ,o'~ '"1 its silver anniver- D1ego s~ l e ~ofsa hon to the law schC:,~~The firm's $25,000 dona~ ;;~search racil1ties plan~:~m~:ked for computer rary expans, 011 program. ,SS::: law

Pr~fesso_r of Psychology Umvermty of San Diego

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