News Scrapbook 1985

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

JUL4 1985

JUL 4 1

U 5 1985

Jl{l,:,i ', P. C. B t 888 / USD Sponsors ecture Series ?-•rs-s- The University oI 'an Diego is sponsoring several lecture series this summer. On July 12 from 7-9 p.m. Gabriel Mo 1·an, Ph.D., w:ill speak on "Ed- u ational Morality." The lee. ture will take place at th e 1'fanchester Conference Center and registration is $3. "Ireland in the 20th Cen- tury," is the title of a 6-session eminar from July 9-25. The lectures are held from 7.9 p.m. at the :-.ranchester Center. The cost is $30 for the series and $3 for single session, Prof. Donal O'Sul!irnn, Univ. o f Dublin wilJ give series. "Sensitive Issues in Recent Biblical Discussions" is a ser- ies present<'d July 15-19 by Ra~monrt E. Brown, S.S. Times nrc 7-9 p.m. and cost is S60 for 5 lectures. Also held at Manchester Center. For information o n these events contact 2604585. / fa t.

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P C. B r,1 1888 Sie.pan appointed to commissioil '-u~ <; · 1· • o· mvers1t o an 1e o Law fes or , and the only San Diegan, USO, is author or editor of seven hool Prole sor Uemard Siegan on the commas ion. books, has written chapters in 11 ha been appointed by President 1egan teache constitutional other books and is completing a Reagan to the ornmission on the law at U D and .has ·written and book entitled, "The Supreme B1centennial of the U. S. spoken extensively on the Court's Constitution." on,titution. subject.

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begins computer camp Sunday for children ages 9 through 15. A second session of the two- week camp begins ,July 21. Thi8 is the second year for the residential camps that feature a hands-on ap• proach to computer literacY,, along with sports, social act1v1tics, and campfires at the beach Reserva- tions are recommended, but walk in registratio.ns will ~Jlf~e.E.!!!d for both sessions -

Siegan, formerly an attorney in Chicago, said, "I look forward to the commission encouraging the study of our fundamental law, and in particular, the inten- tions and objectives of those who framed its provisions and amendments. "As a society dedicated to the rule of the law, it is most desirable that the public knows more about and better understands the Constitution which is the most important of all the nation's laws."

( h1ef Justk:e Warren Uurger will chair the comm1s ion, which will develop activit1e to com- m morate the framing of the onstitut1on in 1787 and its ratification in 1789. Other prominent people on the 23-member commission in ludt: Speakt:r of the Home Tip O'Neill, enate Pre ident Pro- tern Strom Thurmond, Phyllis cha0y, GOP leader I red Biebal and Ron Walker, who was chief of advance for President ixon. iegan, a I a Jolla re ident, 1 one of three law school pro-

Siegan's book on the Constitu t10n, "Economic Liberties and the Constitution," published in 1981 by the University of Chicago Press, deals with the in- tentions of the Constitution's uthors, regarding property and economic libe1tie ·. He has criticized the contemporary courts for failini to observe the original unders anding of the Constitution. S1egan, who IS Distinguished Professor of La~ and Director of I.aw and Economic Studies at

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

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

NOTEPAD: Police Chief Bill ~olender carried his beeper with h•'?. yesterday, but joined the spmt of the holiday, first at Mary and Bruce Hazard's party in Mis- sion Hills, and then aboard Jeanne and Larry Lawrence's Soave Lino docked at Glorietta Bay. No beeps.... Sen. Pete Wil- son, ~hose birthday party each year 1s a fund-raiser, will con- vene the faithful on Sept. 7 at Daley Ranch in Jamul. But his real birthday is Aug. 23. (He'll be 52.) •• . Another sign of our fading tuna industry: Muscular Dystro- phy Assn. volunteers are leaning toward canceling summer's an- nual MDA Tuna Day. AIRFAIR: Brad Frazee who attends Middlebury College in Vermont, came home to La Jolla for summer. But first there was a Greek holiday, timed around the hostage crises: "There was such contrast. Arriving in Athens was no big deal. But when I left, the place was swarming with Greek police, young guys armed with Uzis, all laughing, drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes. They seemed so laid back, so different from what it would have been like if that had happened in the United States." SCALES: Western State is the third-largest law school in the na- tion, behind New York University and Georgetown. But only about 13 percent of its graduates passed the bar last fall, com- pared to about 42 percent state- wide. The pass-rate alUSU. was 47 percent. Berkeley's Boalt Hall ranked highest in California with 76 percent passing.... The latest survey shows California public school teachers are fourth-high- est paid among the states. At an average of $26,403, they follow teachers of Alaska New York and Michigan. '

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RESTORATION: When Hotel d~I C~ronado observes its centen- mal I~ 1988, Scott Anderson hopes, its traditional veranda, re- moved more than 20 years ago will have been rebuilt. (It gav~ wa~ to the current porte cochere durmg the era of Alessio family own~rship.) .The veranda and its r?Cking chairs provided the set- h~g for a funny scene in "Some Like. It Hot," filmed in 1958 when Marilyn Monroe and Jack Lem- ~on ~ave the hotel one of its live- hest mtervals. JEEP TRICK: State park rangers, alarmed by damage to Coyote Canyon above Borrego Valley, propose to reroute the present jeep road out of the can- yon. It will take hardy desert rats to protest. The public hearing has been called for Borrego Springs Youth Center on July 15 when 115-degree heat is routine.'

,_q,5Ci New USD student center :c~t~ts ~osber/Drew/Watson/Ferguson bas completed the design of a new student center at e nivemty of San ~iego. The $9 m~on, two-story building will provide 74,000 square feet of spae~ for student services and recreation. The center will house administrative offices lounges meetmg ~~ms, a 500-seat th.e~tre/mulli-purpose room, a 400-seat student dining room, 124-seat )facultybdlDIDg room, and fac1htes for the publication of the university's newspaper year book and aw sc ool newspaper. '

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