News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego_ co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. o. 123,092)

::s ~6.-========~ . Mother Teresa a ore Her Visit to T11uan Mass at 3 p.m. Th f ' l'hratc • ut thousands o " 1diL3 ,.c. toCite ..

JUN 1 1988

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d1oc s has give~ 0 , 1 re ,dents so !rec tick ts t~ ~~ne day's Mass th y can tt n rl\ow crowd o{ I o today, an ov\ed to attend a about r,,500 t1sth~~~,v~rs y ofhSarne monY a w e cer , 'f ero Sta ,um, . 11 D1 gos or f Calcutta, 78, wt other Teres o degree for her r ceivc n honora? hroughout the work with th poo v1s1T l'ace 2 p\ose · '

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V. RICHARD HARO / Los Ansel.. Times -..-----.-ot er Teresa w ill stay during her 36-hour visit to Tijuana sit s in one of the cit y's poorest neighborhoods. 1

tne SICK ana nome1ess rn \..u1u1110 Murua, but Sister Selma sai,! 5h~ doesn't know when it Wil! be complete!!• . t11mw1u!e, lh11i!t1I It!~ sp[flt\Hll needs of ttl~ peii!]!!l ,;;nc live ill Tijuana's !;Jll>Jr a~eas and to distribute food and clothmg that the order collects from Americans.

Tribune photo by Howard L1pin Mother Teresa receives a hug and childhood rosary from Mayor O'Connor Mother Teresa urges family rosary prayers

Tribune photo by James Skovmand

st San Diego ers

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcrirt (Cir. D. 7,415 JU ..A.llnw • " c e Lu

1 message was mainly one of love illy reiterated her longstanding iring her presentation at USD.

By Robert Di Veroli Tribune Religion Writer

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or dr to, pe It was the rosary beads to which she clung during her bus ride from Tijuana audience that ye terday was the and th~ough two San Die~o appearances yesterday that told much of Mother hich recalls the New Testament Teresa s message to the city. . . ,rn John the Baptist "leaped for Speaking without a prepared text and rn meas~red, conversational style, ib at the news that her cousin the nun's message was to pray the rosary. th~ litany of prayers to Mary, 0 Jesus, the savior ' mother of Jesus. She spoke of love, home, family and haring with the less- was "strange" that God d of ini pi! fortunate, all beginning in the home by families praymg to~ether. te coming of Christ whe~~od:n ''The family that prays together stays together, and you if you stay togeth- her own child" in the "terribl~ er, you will love one another as God loves each one of you," she told about 5,500 people at the University of San Diego stadium. Mother Teresa, who won a 1979 Nobel Peace Prize for her work amon~ the the greatest destroyer of peace poor of Calcutta, began and ended the day in Tijuana and in between received ves, the life of the child and the an honorary degree, a rosary from Mayor O'Connor and a kiss on the hand r - that little child that was from a devoted San Diego c;atholic man. e loved for greater things, de- But in two public appearances, she made it cl_ear t~at as far as sh~ is ·," ~he said. T pas1 ide, wor concerned, the journey to true personal peace begms with prayer that gives n silence thank our parents for birth to a deepened faith, love and service to others. for giving us the joy of living, Please see NUN: A-9, Col. 4 )rted us. we would nnt hi> h<>r<> the "I I pra alw

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WEDNESDAY,JUNE 1, 1988

SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT

What Attorneys Learned FromBeing Jurors Mo t 11ttorg don' view a trial very easy for jurors to get lost m he would have made the same On the Move: Susan Finlay from the eyes of nJuror, the barrage of te timony," he said. decision . (Uaj_versit of San Diego Law Crail( H igg ., nd Gregg "The threshold for boredom is ex- ot Jimenez. &hool) has been elected presiding Relyea, both of Higgs, Fletcher & tr mely low." ObJections "went "I thought that somebody like judge of the South Bay Municipal ~11ck, did 11nd cam" nwuy with fos right over the jurors' heads. Higgs would be 11ble to sift through Court for 1988-89. She was ap- cinatin~ l)'!r 1wct1ve , ones which "Jurors are vi ually oriented the technical difference," said pointed to the bench in March 1980 th y prohnhly n(•ver would hnn· nd want to ee pictures of the Jimenez, who's been with the Of- and was the presiding judge in gamPd ns trrnl lawy(•rs. fl was c11se. A v11riety of things keeps £ice of Defender Services for three 1982. She is the current associate their fir t time as Juror their attention." years after being in private prac- dean of the C11lifornia Judicial Col- "! didn't exp,•ct to he named to Exhibits are very helpful and t1ce for nine. "He w11s caught up in lege. the jury," md H1gg, who's been "relieve boredom," aid Higgs - theemotionalaspects." John Monks, associ11te dean of pnct1cing for 17 yenr . "Evl'ry like the picture of the dead woman. "I kind of made a mistake." ortheastern University &hool of I 1wy r l talk d to wa~ mazed " The best questioning - whether What about a juror's priv11cy? Law in Boston, assumes his new Thi was th · cond trinl for a it's voir dire or exammation of "The jury selection process is re- post today as president of Western murd r c, . th" first having been witnesse - i brief and to the 111ly an intrusive process," said State University, with campuses in overturn don ,1ppe11l, and ,tended point, he was r minded. Relyea. There is 11 "real fear of San Diego and Fullerton. Monks in um, triul. According to d fense ==:::::======================= received his J.D. from Nor - attorney ,John ,Jimenez, 11 third IS cta, ® Lawn..:e~s the11stern aft.er spending 15 years t for latN thrn month. .._ .._ .l l in m11rketing in NewYork City. Relyea's en. wa!I 8 trip und foll '-'1 b M • K • Patricia Meyer has become a involving 8afewny. Y arbn ruming pilrtner in Mike Aguirre's firm, ",Juror. 11re pl11ced in parndox: -------------------------- which is now named Aguirre & 1c11l po 1tion," 11id Relyea, who oc Don't wander. "If you can tele- talking in a courtroom full of Meyer. She has worked for Aguirre cas,onally h11ndles the. e types of grnph to the Jury without giving strangers." for five years. "Can you imagine c11. s. "Th y hnve the most power away your case it would be very Both Cordileone and Porter "ac- someone who has lasted five ye11rs md thl' lea t power." helpful," said" Higg., who h11s done knowledged the intrusion" and with me?" asked Aguirre. They decid the verdict hut it's a d fense work much of his career emphasized they were not trying to Brant Nozis ka (USD) 11nd judg • who d cid h n to 11rrive but two ye11rs ago switched to the pry - which was good - but you Kevin Quinn (Cal Western) have in the morning, wh n to take II plaintiffssid . couldn't escape the questions. For made partner at Thorsnes, B11r- br •ak and when to go home , t And sarcasm, "when used was instance, where did Relyea shop, tolotta, McGuire & Padilla. night. generally ineffective." what magazine,;; did he read, what Lind11 Beliveau (UC Davis) has Mo!lt will h,t you know that jury Higgs considered Deputy Dis- were his bumper stickers, hobbies, Joined Jennings, Engstrand & duty 1s "a pretty big int rruption of trict Attorney Denise McGuire's "what do you do in your spare Henrikson. their life," but once picked "this opening statement the "best thing time?" was truly olemn re ponsibihty." io the trial." It was "brief and to Jurors were "part of a very big "A complete change . •ems to the point. It was organized and she system that has control over you," tuke pla1·1·," aid Relyea . knew where she was going," said Relyea. ,Joe Cord ileone of Hinchy, While an attorney mlly think "You bond immediately. You W,tte, Wood, Anderson & Hodges, th11t jurors occas1onlllly doze off, know you're in the same boat and who representpd Safeway, and sole Relyell maintained that "they can't talk to anybody else." Aside prurt1t1om•r Loui'la Porte r, who Wlltch everything 8nd notice ev- from the familiarity being the rea- represPntl'd thl' plaintiff, both dtd a erythmg about altorneys," even son for this closeness, it also good ioh of acknowll'dging the talking "about them in the "might be boredom." disruption in thl' Jurors' lives, hallway." The Jury returned a verdict Relyea felt, which "wpnt a long While they m y burst out against S11fewlly for about $50,000, way with the Jurors." laughing about omcthmg lln at- less than wh11t the arbitrator had While th,• c.tR•' wa. not a. com torney did in the courtroom - did awarded, noted Cordileone. plicllt(•d n. many, ,t was ''vpry, you ·ee those exhibits fall off the Neither Relyea nor Higgs was ch lkbonrd? - they "do their best the jury forem11n. to k p an absolute poker face in • * * the courtroom." In April Alan Douglas gave Why didn't Cordileone excuse notice that come October he was R lyea? bowing out as a pro tern referee at His juror profile included some- Juvenile Court. He didn't know one who beliPved in pPrsonal re- exactly what he wanted to do with spon. ibtlity and was physically uc- his life but the present job wasn't t1ve. ,t, not with the staggeri ng Although Cord,lconc ran u risk caseloads and accompanying that Relyea might take over the stress. jury, he concluded that hP would be Shortly thereafter he walked in- un impartial Juror. to an interview at the downtown He also felt that Relyea - be- courthouse and something told him CUU!lt' he w11. a runner and that "this Job is yours if you want Huh. rilwd to an outdoors mnga it." z1nr - might b ahlt• to understand He 1),0W supervises 20 Supe rior hi argument that the plaintiff Court research attorneys - ll job could h ve done more to hasten her which "pulls in all of my experi- ence and expertise." • • • * * * The Judicial Fellows Program - patterned after the White House llnd Congressional Fellows - is looking for persons who have an interest in Judicial administration. Two fellows will spend a year beginning in September 1989 at the Supreme Court and the Federal J udicilll Center. For inform11tion write Vanessa Yarnall, Associate Director, Judicial Fellows Pro- gram, Supreme Court of the United States, Room 5, Washington, D.C., 20543, or call (202) 479-3374. The deadline for 15, 1988.

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir . D . 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) JUN 1 1988 .Jll l '• WI I'. C. B

o er eresa, who is , of Loreto teaching nuns < 1948 when she founded th, to work among the poor. Her ministrv has since € brothers and priests and a predominantly lay Co-Wor

'esa finished autographmg time parishioner Fernando ' did it," said Ypil'la, a tear ;vas a sign of respect. She is

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

JUN 1 19 ._Afhlt '1 l'. C.8 Est. 1888

Esr. 1888

k wz::sday, June 1, 1988 LOCAL BRIEFS Rev. Cahill will leave USD to be parish priest . The ~ k. Cah!ll, athletic State linebacker Kevin Maultsby and d1_rector at the U~rs1ty of San a friend pleaded guilty to charges of Di.ego for the past mne yea1 s, yestt!r- misdemeanor assault on a former day sali1 be will become a parish roommate. priest at the Guardian Angel Cathe- The 20.year-old Maultsby and co- dral m Las Vegas. defendant Manuel Hernandez-Shute ''I'~,e ne_ver ha~ a pari~~ exper_i- Jr. entered their change of pleas be- ence, said Ca~11l, ~5, an~ this fore Municipal Court Judge Frederic should be somethmg different. L. Link in connection with an inci- . The church Cahill will _serve !s dent involving Maultsby's former ~1ght off th~ Las Vegas Stnp and m roommate, Marc Sievers. its_ collections. accepts gambling Under terms of the plea bargain, ch,~s fr. cas~os. In La~ Vegas, the defendants face no more than one C?hill said he will _be m residence at year in county jail and a fine, accord- Bishop Gorman High School, where ing to Deputy District Attorney Rob- he _expects to do some college coun- ert Eichler. In return for the guilty selmg. pleas, kidnapping, robbery and false Cahill said he expects to begin his imprisonment charges were dis- duties in Las Vegas between Aug. 15 missed. and Sept. 1. He said his successor, to Authorities said the incident oc- be selected by a faculty committee curred last Dec. 11 after a ring disap- headed by Thomas Burke, USD's vice peared during a party at Maultsby president of student affairs, likely and Sievers' apartment complex. will be chosen by Aug. 1. Authorities said although the thief

T he Mission: After a private luncheon and public speech to 6,000 yesterday ,aUJSD's Torero Stadium, Mother Teresa took her profo~ndly simple message to her favorite audience: the children The 78-year-old wonder _ who · seems designed to bend to children fou nd them at Our Ladies' School m the Sherman Barrio. At her request, the stop was a late addition to an already-crowded itinerary. The school principal, John Doyle, is the son of her San Diego friends and ho_sts, Dr. Anita Figueredo and Dr. Wilham Doyle. And the frail messenger seemed to take strength from the youngsters. Her lesson was d1rect: Love. Love begins in our homes. We find it by praying together. Mother Teresa was suffering fro'!l a cold yesterday. And she was runmng a fever. But she gave her entourage the energy to keep a grueling schedule. And betwee~ stops, she sat on the bus conducting the business of expan_~ing her mission in San Diego and T1Juana. "Does she take naps to renew her energy? ' someone asked Dr. Doyle as the bus was about to leave the school. "As far as any of us can tell," said Doyle, ''she doesn't sleep and she doesn't eat."

applications is7: * * -" --~·

was not identified, Sievers allegedly paid Maultsby $40 toward the value of the missing ring. Authorities said restitution was slow in coming and Maultsby al- legedly got Shute to beat up Sievers, who then was taken to an automated teller machine where he allegedly was forced to withdraw $400. After Sievers was dropped off at a friend's home, Maultsby and Shute were arrested in connection with the incident. Link scheduled a July 6 sentencing date for Maultsby and Shute.

Cahill is one of the few priests servmg as athletic director at a Catholic university. He came to USD in 1978 from St. Viator High School in Arlington Heights, Ill., where be was the school's athletic director for 14 years and president for two years. After a year at USD, Cahill went on a sabbatical leave for a year, then re- turned as athletic d1rector.

San Diego

Maultsby update -

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