News Scrapbook 1986

Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568)

NOV 2l 986

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/;, . Escbndido gets alien l.egalization center . By Paula Kriner , 0 1 5 · on the new immigration law. remained unanswered, however, United States illegally before 1982, ly between June 1987 and June Times Advocate Stall Writer This was the first such seminar becaµse the regulations have not the new law contains an amnesty 1988. E condido will be home to one of held in San Diego to discuss the yet been drawn up . San Diego provision that will enable them to To qualify, applicants must not two legalization centers the lmmi- landmark immigration bill signed County residents will have a become temporary legal resi • ' have had any felony convictions or gration and aturalizatiop Service into law Nov. 6 by President chance sometime within the next That can later be converted to per- more than two misdemeanors, plans to open in San Diego County Reagan. INS and Border Patrol of- two months to offer their ideas on manent residency status after 18 must register for the draft and by June 1, when illegal immigrants ficials have declined until now to the regulations, which are expected months for those who can demon- must not have persecuted anyone can tart applying for te~oracy talk about the new law. to be completed in February, Rog- strate an understanding of English because of race, religion, nationali- re idency permits. The new immigration law will ers said. and some knowle'dge ol'U.S. histo- ty, membership in a particular so- The~center will be in San put on hold deportation hearings "If you feel you qualify (for legal- ry and government. cial group or political opinion. Diego, said Clifton J . Rogers, INS of people charged with illegally en- ization ), don't go to the immigra- Illegal immigrants who have They will be able to apply to be- Deputy Dis trict Director for San tering the United States until next tion office," Rogers advised. "Wait, lived continuously in the United come permanent residents 18 Diego and Imperial counties. Rog- July when they can apply for legal- because t he regulations still have States since before Jan. 1, 1982, months after they receive their ers spoke Saturday at the~ ization, Rogers said. to be written." can apply for temporary residency · J sity of San Diego during a seminar Many questions and concerns For people who have entered the permits at a legalization center on- Please see Alien 1 , page A2

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Imperial Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) Imperial Star Beach News (Cir. 2xW. 2,730) (Cir. S. 2,568)

~O'J 30 ,9s6

Jllle" '• 1 « . r us :,-,-....~nlv risJy .at. San Diego - Concert pianists Nicolas Reveles and Irvin King, both of the university's music department faculty , will perform solos at 4 p.m. today with the USD Sym- phony Orchestra Concert in Camino Theatre. For more infor- mation, call 260-4600, ext. 4427 or 260-4682. 'f 5 ') / P. c. B

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

AliLns ,o?J Cont~ from page A 1

temporary permits, Rogers said. ' A special program is set up un- der the new law to help provide a labor force to harvest perishable crop . Undocumented workers · who have done seasonal agricultur- · al work in the United States for. three months or more between l98 3 and 1986 will have 18 months ' to apply for a temporary residency · permit between June 1987 and De- cember 1988. Worker who have done seas~n- al work for th ree years will only · have to wait 12 months to apply for ' permanent residency. A total of' 35~,000 workers will be eligible for ; this program. · Workers who have done seas~n- al work fo r t hree months during 1985 or 1986 can apply for perma- ne.nt status after two years, Rogers said. eason al agricultu ra l workers may apply a t a U.S. consulate abroad. T hose who are granted tempo- ra~ status are not eligible for cer- t~m fori_ns of federally funded pub- lic as~1stance for five years. Exceptions will be made for Cuban ~nd !'laitian nationals and illegal u~m1grants who are blind, aged or d1~abled. Also, pregnant women, mm_ors or anyone who needs emer• El g~ncy care will be eligible for Me- di ·$;el Bt{llll health insurance-.-- ~he fed~ral government will pay soc1af service agencies to help peo- ple fill out the application forms and get the documents they need Rogers said. Applications will not be submitted without the appli- cants' consent, he added. _Rogers said all applications sub- m1tte~ will remain confidential and will not be used as evidence for dep~rtation if the applicant fails to qualify for amnesty. · However, a nyone who uses , fraudulent documents will be p ros- ecuted, he said. • · 1:he new law includes sanctions against employers who knowingly hire undocumented workers. The 1 s~nctions will be phased in after a f six-month education period. • · E!mp loye rs will be required to J verify t hat all employees, regard- less of race or citizenship, hired af- t er _N?v. 6 ?ave provided proof of t he1~ !dentity - a passport, birth certificate or driver's license _ and t~at t hey can work _ a Social Secunty card or work permit. , · "The employee must at test that they are his documents, and the employer must attest t hat he saw t hem," Rogers said. "I expect an I unprecedented dash to the Depart- • ment of Vital Statistics for birth certificates." ' \ Penalties will not be given o~t over the next six months to ems ployers for not complying with the "?-J law. ~rom June 1987 to June 1988 warmng citations will be given fo; a first ?ffense to employers who ei- ther hire undocumented workers or have not kept the proper re- cords. After that, employers face fines ranging from $250 to $2,000 for each worker for their first of- fenses _and from $2,000 to $5,000 for their second. · If they continue to violate th~ l~w, the~ will face criminal penal- ties,. which could result in fine.a r~ngmg fro~ $3,000 to $10,000 and six months imprisonment. James Grim, associate chief of th e Bor9er ~rol's San Diego sec- tor, 881 the ill prohibits Border Patrol_ agents from raiding far ms or businesses without a warrant or th~ c~nsent of the owners. It going to change our operations considerably," he said. Along the border, it's business as usual, he said. A~y?ne apprehended who may b~ ehg1ble for legalization will be gwen.a ~ocument aJlowing them to remam m the United States until th_ey can apply next June, Grim said. ./

NOV 2 6 19

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College basketball 1986-87

a By Kirk K nney Tribune Sportswriter

I N CHARTING a course for the USO-IHm:etball team, Toreros coach Hank Egan places more emphasis on perspiration than inspi- ration. Egan believes a strong foundation in the former leads naturally to the latter. "We just want to play hard and win," said Egan, whose team opens the season Friday against utah. "We don't have any themes here. This ain't a Walt Disney movie. I don't think yo'J can sit around in the office and come up with a theme. I think anything that comes naturally, some- thing spontaneous, is something that can be used." The Toreros break from each hud- dle with a collective shout of "My best." U they live up to their expecta- tions, expectations which are shared by many in the basketball communi- ty, the shout may be amended to "The WCAC's best" by the conclusion of the 1986-87 season. USD will go after its second WCAC championship in four years when conference play opens in J anuary. However, representing the confer- ence in the NCAA Tournament will not be as simple as in past years since the WCAC will institute a post- season tournam nt this season. Please ue US. C-9

Said Egan, who is 35-20 in his two years at USD: "We have enough essential pieces that if we get some other guys to fill in the puzzle, we have a chance to be a pretty good oasketball team. It's how well we fit together. '·Coaching is a lot like being a mechanic was before they came up with all that diagnostic equipment. You're always torn between fouling it up and making it better. You're always going around with a screwdriver and mak- ing adjustments." • When practice began Oct. 15, Egan popped the hood aud found a team with a strong returning contingent of senior starters in 7-foot center Scott Thompson, 6-8 for- ward Nils Madden and 6-1 guard Paul Leonard. Thompson, a two-time All-WCAC first team member averaged 14.4 points and 7.3 rebounds a game last season. He should be among the country's premier centers this season and will again be the hub around which the rest of the team revolves. "First of all, we need his scoring," Egan said. "We need him to have the basketball a lot. This is a game of relative motion. A lot of it happens at the same time. So many variables are impossible to coach. Scott has the ability to know when to take the shot and how to get the ball to someone else when thP,ir shot is there." Adds Thompson: "But I don't think I'm a one-man team. Teams will be keying on me, so the other guys will have to make their shots and play their roles for us to be successful." Madden, who averaged 5.6 rebounds and 9.3 points a game last season, was a big help on defense and under the boards. Egan would like to see him shoulder more of the scormg load this year. Additional help will come from 6-8 senior Steve Krallman, who came off the benc~ last season, but is pushing for Madden's spot at forward; "He pla•":: defense very well," Egan said. "And he's great under pre<>sure. He's as good under pressure as he is every day. es very tough mentally and physically. He's one of thA guy.. you want if you need a couple free throws down the stretch." Senior swingman Mark Manor, who averaged 6.5 poi off the bench, will also start at forward where he provicl- ed a glimpse of his scoring potential with a game-high 22 points in the Toreros' exhibition game two weeks a.go against Athletes In Action. Replacements must be found for guard Pete Murpiy and swingman Mark Bostic, who were the team's second- and third-leading scr,re , if the Toreros are to appr ch the school-recorc' 1 mark they compiled last season. "It's going I J 1iu1 e a bit different this year because of the senio na I ft, ' Leonard said. "I'm going to have to look for rny shot a little bit more and try to create more things on offense. I'd have to say my biggest re- sponsibility will be setting the pace, knowing when to slow things down and when to speed it up." Egan expects Leonard, who averaged 6.8 points a me last season, to be among a group of players who will be called upon to replace the points that departed i!Iong with Murphy and Bostic. Another one will be soph011ore guard Danny Means, who will also be asked to do more ball-handling. Senior guard Eric Musselman will spell Leonard and Means. Newcomers Craig Cottrell, a 6-5 freshman, and ~arty Munn, a 6-6 swingman from Salinas Hartnell CC, also figure in the team's backcourt plans once they become more familiar with the offense. The Toreros wf l get

USD

Nov. 28 Oec.4 Dec 6 Oec.8 Dec. 11 Dec 13 Dec. 19 Dec 20 Oec.23 Dec 27 Dec. 31 Jan. 10 Jan. 15 Jan. 17 Jan.23 Jan.24 Jan.29 Jan.31 feb, 6 Feb. 7 Feb. 12 Feb. 14 Feb. 19 F"eti. 2 Feb.25 Feb.28 Marcil 6 March 7 Jan.2 Jan. 8

at Utah

Boise State Nevada Re o at Montana St te SDSU UC Santa Barb a

at Albertson Toum (Bolso) at Albertson Tourn (Bol ) Rice Loyola College Balltmore Colorado Ohio Northern

at Portland at Gonzaga at Santa Clara at San Francisco at San Francisco at Santa Clara at Loyola Pepperdlne at Pepperdine at Loyola at USIU St. Mary's

Gonzaga Portland at St. Mary's

WCAC T oornament WCAC Tournament WCAC Tournament

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Leonard, Paul Musselman, Eric Anderson.Brian Haupt, Mike Means. Danny Cottrell, Craig Munn, Marty Manor, Mark Madden, Nils Pelton,J1111 Thompson. Scott Krallman. Steve

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Diamond Ber Broadview Hts., OH Los An/J!?les San0i6go

SA SA FA so so FR JR SR so SR JR SA SA

Los Angeles Tempe. Ariz Salinas Phoenrx Seattle Forestville Patos Verdes Citrus Heights Anaheim

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

additional help off the bench from 6-9 Junior Jim Pelton, 6-6 sophomore Charlie Wickstrand and 6-7 freshman Brian Anderson. "I think this team has enough weapons," Egan said. "We have a little bit of everything offensively. What we've got to do is stop some people defensively." The Toreros should have a good idea of w~ere they stand in both regards by the time nonconference play is completed. USD plays 12 preconference games, including two contests in the Boise State Christmas Tournament and games with San Diego State, Nevada-Reno and Rice.

NOV 27

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~ he Wor~Council of San Diego wfff-Kt,lJ ·l( "California

Wine Evening," featurmg tastin ? Ila a~ Ines and a ta! on rn1a wmes, from 5 p m to 7 . . . . ~~et:1a;c~ester Conf~r~ Diego campus. cistTivers1ty of San hers and $10 c $1 for mem- . or non-members F information, call 231-0111. . or !aJi. pm ; nee ;:ai:

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