News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) JUN 7 1988 ._1/lcn '1 p C. B

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Simple Woman's Commitment

Debate is feist ethics in politi

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M1s1oneras de la Ca11d d Si ters' habits w re flapping and dry.ng on clothes Imes. The conversation was light and of the day's succ s es and tomorrow·s dealing on a fresh p1 ce of property. Mother Teresa had left her san- dal m the house Her big feet are gnarled and the toe bunch upori them elvrs nd th y arc mo t worn o 1t But she 1s feeling cool yellow and against her bare feet and her qmet mile says that little reward is immense and the moment quit private

By Lorie Hearn

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about skepticism, about digging for facts, and about the media's ohliga- t10n to mform, not to mak moral decisions for the public The bottom line, she said, 1s "if it is substantiated, we'd write th heck oulof1t" Johnston aid uch stone are the game plan of today pohti . Carn 1gns ilViY~~'~Qrll~.a rre out nformatlon on opponents, he said, but he agreed with former City Councilwoman Celia Ballesteros that the opponent 1s smart to skirt such a media-hot issue becaus 1t could backfire As the evening progre ed, the election drama got juicier Three weeks before the election, Stucco got pulled mto the fray by a cast of de- velopers who offered to plow money mto Stucco' campaign by legal m<'a 1s of course to defeat the slow growth incumbent What advice would he give Stucco, John ton was asked. It's a dllemma, he id, to 1clc to prmc1pl but avoid irritating big money.

. laff Wriler ~? Developer William "Bill" Stucco 1s set on toppling incumbent San Diego Mayor Howard Kleengenes from off- ice. The "issues" are planned growth, affordable housing and a limit on campaign spending. But ix weeks before the voting, Stucco' camp dis- co\ ers that Mayor Kleengenes may not be so clean after all. An old girlfriend - tongue loos- ened by alcohol at a cocktail party - says Kleengenes enjoys a little mari- ju na. Add to that, she says, th mar- ried mayor's interest in her and his "insatiable appetite" for other women. Queries: Should Stucco's campaign run with these nefarious tidbits? nd if the news media get wind of them, are they legitimate morsels for pub- lic consumption? Answer: It depends on who is asked t~.e questions. Or. the eve of a real-hfe election, profC/j,Sors from the tJni versity of

San Diego carried this mythical bal- l~ forum at the Lyce- um Soace Theatre and put ethical~-==:::::=--- _-_-_-_-_-=-_..,,_'-_-~-_-, _ questions to local political observers and activists. Given the focus on ethics national- ly - from the attorney general to insider trading to the televangelists' scandals - the time was right, the professors said, to bring the debate to San Diego

Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,195) (Cir. S. 34,568) U l 1388

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Larry Hinman, chairman of USD's philosophy department, described the time as a "a en 1s of ethics and public leadership .. in which there f seem to be a growing di crepancy between the moral values we espouse .and the way in which we, espec1ally our leaders, in fact act." The result was a feisty debate that heaped much of the responsibility for eth1c:-s in politics on the news media. Political consultant Jim Johnston saw nothing wrong with dropping the Kleengenes nuggets on his media friends, despite protests from former Rep. Clair Burgener and campaign reform expert Robert Fellmeth. Left to defend such a story was Barbara Herrera, as istant manag- ing editor of The Tribune, who talked

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'Politics and ethics explored By Heidi H. Holmblad n~ T,roos-Advocate Slafl Wr,~~._, SAN DIEGO Clair Burgener shook his head when talk among experts on a political ethics panel turned to sex, drugs and question able campaign practice~. "If this is what politics has be- come, I'm happy I'm done with it, said the former assemblyman and congressman. Rumors and ethical question have become the norm in political campaigns, according to a panel of reporters, politicians, political con sultants and professors who par- ticipated Monday in t~rs1- ty of San Diego's second forum The forum, held before a capac1 ty crowd at the Lyceum Theater, attempted to "define moral leader ship in the process of campaigning for and holding public office," ac- cording to the program notes. It also left many in the audience with the feeling that campaign mo- rality is in the eyes of the beholder. Following a scenario set up by membets of the USD philosophy and political science departmenb, the panel discussed the problems of the fictional San Diego Mayor Howard Kleengenes, a composite of regional politicians both in and out of office. His challenger was the fictional Bill Stucco, who didn't have money to defeat the popular incumbent, but had access to other, question able means. The realities of covering, run- ning and surviving cam1:iaigns came to light as the six panelists discussed campaign dilemmas from their perspectives. Political consultant ,Jim John- son said he would pass on to the media unflattering stories about his candidate's opponents. But h also would do some investigating on his own. That practice has evolved to the point in which can didates regularly hire private in vestigators to check out the coll' petition, he said. Johnson, like the other panel- ists, said the political scene has be- come a financial arms race, 'me that only the rich can play. "Local San Diego poht i s i more and more a rich per. on'1, game; a rich, attractive mi lion aire's game," he said, noting that six of the nine City Council nem hers are millionaires. Barbara Herrera, assista•1t man aging editor of The Tribt nc, aid reporters try to cover the financial aspects of campaigns and the juici er, gossipy points - like the sex scandals, if they can be substanti• ated. To ignore them would be n form of censorship, she said. Glo- ria Penner, a reporter and produc- er for PBS television, agreed. That raised the ire oflaw profes sor Robert Fellmuth, who argued that it is the press that decide what is important and reports univ that information.

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San Diego CA (San Dieg~ Co,) S n Diego Union (Cir, D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) JU 18 1

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Saturday, June 18, 1988 Car inal Sin to pay visit to Filipino Catholics in S.D. ,,- By Rita lllmon 1 I fC't\rll

Religion News ... in brief a.m June 26. Rabbi Jeff Wohlgel- ernter, spiritual 1 ader of the Ortho- dox congregation. said the Jewish community is being offered an op- portunity to dedicate a portion of the Torah in memory of a loved one. • The Universit of San Die o is sponsoring a summer lecture enes on pirituahty and theology and the fir t lectures is set Tuesday through Thur day with Cistercian priest M. Basil Pennington He will discuss Thomas Merton and centering pray- er from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Manchester Conference Center. "Viewpoints from Bishop ," four lecture in July, will feature Bishops Kenneth E. Untener of Saginaw, Mich , on ecclesiology and ministry; Thoma J. Gumbleton of Detroit on opposing nuclear deterrence; Thom- a · J . Murphy of Seattle on pir1tuali- ty and mini try; and Carl A. Fisher of Lo Angele on racial justice. • The Crusader Choir of Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church in Pa- cific Beach will present a mu ical, "Oh Jonah," at the 815 and 10:45 a.m. ervices tomorrow. • Chr1Stiane W t, a bilingual Christian Science lecturer, will dis- cu the u e of prayer to heal eco- nomic difficulties from 2 to 3 p.m. next Saturday in English at San Diego City College Auditorium. She will peak in Spam h from 3:30 to 4 30 pm. The talk IS being ponsored by the Second Church of Christ, Sc1- ent1 t, in Gold n Hill. • The Choir of Christ Episcopal Church In Coronado will pre ent a mu ical program including Faure's "Requiem" and Purvis' "Judas Iscar- iot" I 10 am. tomorrow following Morning Prayer The Annual Straw- berry Festival Luncheon will follow m the church hall

from the Lutheran ministry at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Henry George Center on Morley Street. Call 232- 4801 for information. • The Continental Singers and Or- chestra will give a concert at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the First Assembly of God on Phyllis Place. • First Southern Baptist Church of Clairemont will stage day and night programs for Vacation Bible School this year: 8 30 to 11 a.m. to- morrow to June 26 for children, and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday to Friday for children and their families. Call 273-4642 for details. • Rev. William Mooney, pastor of Blessed Sacrament Church, will lead a tour through southern Europe in September that will feature Marian shrines and an audience with the Pope. • Sacred Heart Academy will hold its annual festival today and to- morrow on school grounds in Ocean Beach. Today's program will con- clude with a barbecue and dance from 8 p.m. to midnight. • Faith Chapel Church of God in Christ will celebrate black leader- ship at 6 to 9 p.m. today at the Martin Luther King Recreat10n Center on Skyline Drive. There will be music, its and a southern-style buffet. • The ice Guys Inc. will receive the 1988 Spirit of Charity Award from Catholic Community services at a dinner next Saturday. This is the first time the award has been given to a group, said Raymonda DuVall, acting executive director. The black- tie event will begin at 7 p.m. in the Omni Hotel. • Arthur Oilman will show slides of "A Vanished World," Roman Vish- mac's photographic portrayal of pre- Holocaust eastern Europe, following the 8 p.m. service Friday at Congre- gation Dor Hadash. The Reconstruc- tionist congregation meets at Torrey Pmes Christian Church. • All Soul's Episcopal Church will spon or a Beginning String Institute for children July 5to 28 led by Albert Chaffoo, former London Symphony

Orchestra conductor and college pro- fessor. The class deadline for regis- tration is Friday for children third grade and up_ South The world premiere of a stage ad- aptation of "The Book of the Dun Cow," a novel by Walter Wangerin Jr., will open Friday at Lamb's Play- ers' Theatre in ational City. East St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in La Mesa will present a Ukrainian lit- urgy in honor of the Millenium of Christianity in the Ukraine at 9 a.m. June 26. The Rev. Nestor Hodowany Stone will celebrate the Byzantine rite and music will be provided by an ensemble directed by Andrew Kytas- ty • The Lemon Grove Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will hold an open house at its newly remodeled Stake Center in Spring Valley from 3 to 5:30 p.m. today. There will be tours, displays and explanations of church pro- grams. • Aworkshop on the abundant life led by David Gherlone will be held from 7 to 10:30 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m to 6 p.m. next Saturday at the Teaching of the Inner Christ. • St. Andrew's Episcopal Church m La Mesa will present the Missa Brevis of Haydn at the 10 a.m. ser- vice tomorrow with choir, soloists, organ and strings. North Rabbi Mordecai Waxman of Tem- ple Israel in Great ·eek, New York, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Temple Sole! m Encinitas. He will discuss his two meetings with Pope John Paul II - one at Castel Gandol- pho south of Rome and one in Miami at the beginning of the Pope's trip through the United State . Topics will include change in Ca tholie teaching about Jews and Judaism and various a s of ·n r-religious

Armenian church leader visits L.A. His Holiness Karekin II, the highest ranking spiritual leader of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Great House of Cilicia, based in Lebanon, began a monthlong pon- tifical visit to America in Los An- geles this week. California is home to more than 500,000 Armenians and has the fastest-growing population of Ar- menian people outside of the Sovi- et Armenian Republic. Last night His Holiness attend- ed a fund-raising banquet for the Armenian General Athletic Union at the Beverly Hills Hotel, where he was welcomed by Gov. George Deukmejian. At 7 p.m. today_h~ will dedicate an Orange County church in Santa Ana. A banquet in his honor will follow at Gugasian Hall. At 10:30 a.m. tomorrow, a Holy Mass and Consecration of the Forty Martyrs Church will be held. relations. Rabbi Waxman and his wife, Ruth, will speak at 10:30 a.m. services next Saturday on "Living in an Age of Jewish Revolution." • St. Petka Serbian Orthodox Church in San Marcos will celebrate Vidovdan Weekend next Saturday and June 26. Following a 10:30 a.m. Mass and commemoration of the He- roes of Kosovo June 26, there will be a banquet in the church hall. • St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Del Mar will hold a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. tomorrow for its new rec- tor, the Rev. C. Corydon Randall, for• merly the rector of Trinity Parish in Fort Wayne, Ind. A formal installa- tion will be he) Sept. 11. Randall

Cardinal Jaime m, archb1 hop of anila nd an mfluential voice in the Phllhpin , will conrelebrate a ass with B1 hop Leo T. Maher at 4 p.rn. today at th Umver it of San Diego football d1um. - m making a pa toral visit to th F1hp1no Catholics of the Roman Catholic D10c of Sao Diego to pro- mote unity Followmg th Communion, Maher and Author E. Hught:lir-4,1,;w._presi- d nt, ·111 present an honorary docto- ral degr from the university to Sin. Maher I chairman of the USO Board ofTru .-_ A dmner and entertainment will begin t 7-30 pm. at the San Diego 1 mott Hotel Th dinner will fea- tur talks by aher and Sin, a VIdeo- m from Ph1lhpm pr 1- dent Corazon Aqumo and a slide pr entation of charitable projects n th Ph1lhp1n • Ion 1gnor Tullio Andreatta will c l brat the 5oth anmver ary of hi ord1nat1on to the Roman Cath• ol1c pr1 thooo with a Tridenune Latin Ma t 2:30 pm next Satur- day at th hurch of the lmmaculata on th Umv rs1ty of San Die o cam- pu Mon ignor Andreatta began h prt thood traimng in Italy at age 13 through th Soci ty of St. Charle Borromeo H cam to the United tat In 1939 wh re he erved Hai- n parishes in the Ea t and M1dwe t. H cam to South rn California In 1949 nd rv d t everal pari h before going to Our Lady of Mount Carmel 1n n Y idro where h built church nd r tory nd expanded chool In r ogmt1on of h1 work for th community, Padre Tulho Drtv w n m d for him Her tired ID 1980, but In 1985 ha rv d a h ch pl in for thos ho w1 h to vo hip at Trld ntin a m tead ! th mod rn Engh h rit u ed 1nce ond Vatican Council. fer Torah will be dedicated t Congregation Adat Y hurun at 11 • A

His Holiness Karekin II Welcomed by governor a visit to Fresno July 5 and 6. He will leave for San Francisco July 12. Karekin II, 56, is one of three presidents of the Middle East Council of Churches, has served as director of the Cilician Seminary in Beirut, and as editor of the church's monthly periodical, HASK Also, he will visit churches and schools throughout the Los Ange- les area through July 10, including earned a degree from the Berkeley : Divinity School at Yale University , and was ordained a priest in 1961. l I • A community healing service , will be held at 7 p.m. Monday at St. I Andrew-the-Apostle Episcopal j Church in Encinitas. The film "Heal- ing" will be shown. • Our Lady of Mount Carmel will show the James Dobson film series "Turn Your Heart Toward Home" beginning at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. • Congregation Beth Am will hold 1 a dessert reception at 8:30 p.m. today to celebrate the publication of "The 1 Best ls Yet to Be: Renewing Ameri- can Judaism," a new book by Rabbi Wayne Dosick.

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