News Scrapbook 1989
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B r Pushes Lawyer Skills Proposals
EL FILE Stevens will edit magazine . Margaret Stevens has been named editor in chief at Ranch & Coast maga- zine, r_ecently bought by Micromedia Affiliates Inc., a publishing company based mNew Jersey. Stevens had served as editor at The Executive magazine in Los Angeles smce 1983. Before that she wrote as a free-lancer in New York, published m • such magazines as Harper's Bazaar, Ladies' Home Journal, Vogue and Woman's World. Stevens is a native of London, England. Dr..~art.ha Minteer has been appointed medical director at San Diego Rehab1htatton Institute. She :,'-',ill function _as ~edical director for the 14-bed unit until the San Diego Rehab1htal!on !nsl!tute s ~0-bed Alvarado Campus facility is completed in 1990. At that time she will take on the same responsibilities at the new facility. Imperial Corp. of America has named Jorge D'Garay vice president and branc manager at the company's San Ysidro Investment Store. Adam Bloom~nstein and Diana Brown have joined the offices of Brobeck, ~hleger & Hamso~ as associates. Bloomenstein is a litigation attorney focus- mg on general busmess matters while Brown has an emphasis in real estate. Watkms Manufacturing Corp. has promoted Karen Stanley national sales coordinator. She will coordinate sales incentive programs, generate sales reports, develop dealer relations and manage international sales. Michael Gilligan ha been elected senior ·ce president nd chief financial officer at North County Bank. He started with the company in 1982. Torrey Pmes Bank has hired Susan Box as audit officer. She will be responsible for the internal auditing functions of the bank. Timothy Kelley, Cheri Manis and Karen Hemmes have been promoted to managers at Deloitte Haskins & Sells. Kelley and Hemmes are m the tax department and Manis is in the audit department. Emerald Syste~s Corp. has named Thomas Brown vice president of sales and s~rv1~e. He ~111 be responsible for the company's inside and outside sales orgamzat1on which encompasses product distributors, government and OEM sales. John Morris and Sheila Muldoon have been admitted to the law firm of Higgs, Fletcher & Mack as partners. Both have been with the firm for seven years. . Security Pacific Financial Services has promoted Bruce Ashcraft assistant v!ce president and consumer administrator in the company's consumer ser- v1c~ group. He comes from the company's Midwest division where he was regwnal director for Kansas and Ohio. . John P~welc~ak_ has Joined Gensia Pharmaceuticals as physical pharma- cist. He will assist m the formulation of Gensia pharmaceutical products now under development to fight human diseases. Coi:-O-~an, a st;atewide moving and storage company, has appointed Bud Schmit~ vice president and general manager of the San Diego district. He has been with the company six years and was previously district manager in Orange County. !im Mullennix, Linda Hobbs and Ralph Perkins have recently been ap- pointed _to. th~ board of directors at Occupational Training Services Inc. ~ullenmx 1~ d1r~tor of the services and repair division at SCI Manufactur- mg,_ Hobbs IS assistant general counsel at Titan Corp., and Perkins is legal adviser and contracts manager at General Atomics. The Los Penasquitos Lagoon Foundation's board of directors has added P~ter . avarr?, a . economics professor, and Frank Belock Jr., a San Diego city engmeer, to its ran . They will help restore the sensitive wetlands area.
..l...<'/ S'S Continued from Pag'e 1
tions of the Rules of Professional • That the bar consider establishing a two-year residency program under which lawyers would be allowed only a limited practice in their first two years after passing the California bar. During that period they would be coached in the day-to-day realities of law practice. During its session Friday, the profes- sional standards committee also voted to circulat.e various proposals for a law- gestion that lawyers promptly return Conduct. yers' code of conduct - including a sug- Eventually, under the plan by the bar's Statewide Committee on Professionalism and Public Action, an "aspirational" code of conduct would be adopted by the bar to help improve lawyers' image with However, some in the legal community favor making such a code mandatory the public. telephone calls - tions of the bar. for comment by sec-
the end shows character and mental toughness," aid USF coach Jim Bro- velli. McCathnon, the Dons' leading scorer (15.4) and rebounder (7.3), missed the game because of the death of his father Monday. The USF team attended the funeral yesterday morning. "It was obvious we missed Mark," aid Brovelh. "USO kicked the heck out of us on the boards. They were quick to the ball and we didn't do a good job of screenmg." Mouton led USF with 20 points. Forward Joel DeBortoli added 14 for the Dons, who had lost five of six. Forward Craig Cottrell paced the Toreros with 18 points before fouling out with 3:58 to play. Freshman forward Gylan Dottin scored 13. Bell scored 12 points, had a game-high eight rebounds, blocked two shots and had two steals in 24 minutes. Bell missed most of the first half with foul problems. He was playing his first game with contact lenses after going almost a month without after losing one lens. USD travels to Santa Clara (11-5, 0-3) tonight in a match of the only teams without a WCAC win. The Broncos were beaten, 76-48, by St Mary's last night. /
tra1ght
• That the bar commit resources to assist State Bar interest sections in im- proving competence among their • That the bar develop and "aggres- sively distribute" education materials to the public to provide clients and potential clients with some way to "assess and monitor lawyering perfonnance." • That the Board of Governors pro- claim 1990 "The Year of Preventive Law" and encourage lawyers to explain to the public how to avoid having to go to • That the Board of Governors urge all California law schools to modify their curriculums in light of the consortium's recommendation on internships. • That the bar establish voluntarypro- grams throughout the state that would work in coqjunction with the State Bar Court to provide peer review of lawyers who have been put on probation for viola- members. court.
on -and-on dunng a 3 minute tretch late m the game when USF (9-7, 1·2) wa prot cting a four-point lead While the Tor ro were mi ing, th Don w re perfect. USF's la t f Id goal w cored by Jeff Chris- tan with 8:04 to play and gave the n 51-47 lead Thereafter, USF s only pomts c me on 12-of-12 fre t row booting. 'We . hot a lo of free throws in practl this w ek," id USO coach Hank Egan "I don't know what el e you can do If you have a decent motion. 1t' mo tty a matter of confi- dence'' The Toreros are hooting only 58 percent on the 'eaS-On. D pit their fre throw w , the Torer 111 had a hot lat m the gam With 54 econ I ft, sopho- mor c nter Dondi Bell m1 ed a hort Jumper th t would hav given USO a 58-57 lead. Then USF guard Kevm Mouton hit two free throws to make It 59-56 When U o· Danny n · d thr point try for lne l1 with 32 econd left, USF held th ball unt U D wa fore d to foul Thi IJm Christian hit the two foul ho to put USF up by five. he way we hot free throws at
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Sprin8,Valley, CA (Sa~ ,ego Co.) $(,p_nng V il lley Bulletin C1f. W. 2,708) JAN 2 6 1989
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I v : .~ ·~ !' GOJJ i o; :~ 6am~s f ri . ~~., 6, ... {15 ~ Thr Torc:-o.s O C • q:' c s, 11 DJ1- . Cn \'('rs1ty - go 1/t'J l:>c 1 1'., to hrc•nk vCJ,<.nl( 11 r, C'llJnp lvsi streak w,i,,. 1 ., ng · ' ,,l .Y /;!Jet •1p ~-,inst ,<;;anta Clar:i F ' 7:3(, and R ulny at · in r.r,111,-.: ~ 0 ... hf'.\t ni[:ht ill [J,;D c, .,,,e t,•r. • ,,r•,rts C"n- TJ.':D has lost th gan- C'S by 5 5 .; ,., 'I, last 5 , • • , .,, .J und C lJ0'1 t 1 c-spccUvely, • 1 s In WCAC · t>nd th action la~t wee){. • ,e Toreros dro , games at US PfCcl road S.1tJ1 CJ ' F (G 3 .f.:S) and • a ara (6:l-5Sl, San Diego JJla dine Friday, Fets at Pepper. Loyola Mar . · 3 and at night. Yll1ount the ne>..-t / .• ·~
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SD: Fund-raising goal is $47.5 million
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ont~ tr:f:1 Valley, with the blue-tiled domes of t e Immaculala Church surrounded l>y a complex of white buildings m 6th century Spanish architectural yle. In 1978, USD added a $1.5 million ·hool of Nursing bu1ldmg, followed two student dormitone costing .5 rnllhon and $3.7 million, which ere add d in 1979 and 1981 The umver 1ty's building program d a bumper year in 1984 with com- etion of the $4.5 million Olm Hall hool of Busin • the $3.7 million J me S. and Helen K. Copley cen- t al library expansion and the $2.4 m1lhon Douglas F. Manchester Exec- utive Conference Center. An $11 million University Center f UowPd m 1986 with a 10.5 million
Catholic Diocese. In 1972, the two colleges merged and became the University of San Diego, a name that appeare~ in t_he original 1949 charter. The umvers1ty has 21,000 alumni. Though USD still has a strong ~e- lig1ous and moral com~nent to its educational atmosphere, 1t no longer is operated by the Order of the Sacred Heart or the Roman Catholic diocese. It is an an independent pri- vate university operated by a board of trustees. At the undergraduate level, the campus offers a liberal arts curricu- lum. Graduate education includes health and science graduate doctoral programs plus pr~fessional ~chools, including law, busmess, nursmg and educat10n.
student housing addition a year later. The expansion sought for th~ !aw library 1s expected to cost $6 m1lhon, and between $500,000 and $1 million will be spent for the new child devel- opment center, sources say Other campuses in the area recog- mze USD's rate of growth as an im- pressive accomplishment for a school with just 3,800 undergraduate and 2,100 graduate and professional students. December will be the 40th anniver- sary of the sigmng of the state char- ter that created the San Diego Col- lege for Women, overseen by nuns of the religious Order of the Sacred Heart. Ayear later the San Diego College for Men was chartered here and op- erated by the San Diego Roman
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San Diego, Thursday, January 26, 1989
!!~ E,= ~way ty s board of trustees, 1~cludmg BISh- Jeo T. _Maher, chairman of the S .bo~rd, de~eloper ~rnest Hahn, w~o IS vice ~ha~an; Kim Fletcher, chief ex~cutive officer of Home Fed- era! Savmgs & Loan Association; and de~elope~ Douglas F. M~nchest~r . San Diego ~eeds a private umver- sity fully d~dicated to the enrich- ment of th~ m~ellectual and cultural level of th1S fme community," said Hahn, a member of the 13-person C~p1tal Campaign Executive Com- m1ttee that is chaired by Trustee ~arren and her husband, Frank, ch~rman of the board of La Jolla Savmgs Bank, are regular supporters of USD through their membership in the President's Club. Committee officials have ear- m~rked $31 million for the universi- ty s endowment fund, which stands at $6.8 million. That money will be used Joanne C. Warren.
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tions such as Stanford and Harvard universities, the USO drive is consid- ered quite large for a school of 5800 "The largest we've undertaken is $18 million," said Pat Nicholson, a fund-raiser for the University of San Francisco, a Jesuit university of about the same size. "However we're planning one in that range" ' The University of California at San Diego, which receives more than half of its operating budget from state and federal sources, launched its largest capital campaign in 1985. The fund-raising drive coincided with its 25th anniversary and netted more students. ' · . In the past deca?e, USD has signif- icantly expand~d its campus, adding schools of ~urs~ng and business, stu- than $32 million.
dent dorm1tories, the Douglas F. for a variety of purposes, including Manchester Executive Conference the recruitment of permanent and Center and _the James S. and Helen visiting professors to add to the 405 _ K. Copley Library. member faculty. The latest campaign goals include . The rest of the money, $16.5 mil- $500,000 for a child-development cen- lion, has been set aside for construe- ter under construction on the north- tion projects that will add to the col- east edge of campus; $6 million to lecti~n of sparkling white, Spanish expand and renovate the law library; Rena1SSance buildings overlooking an~ $7.~ million to help pay for th~ Mission Bay. Umvers1ty Center, a student center While far larger campaigns have that opened in early 1987.
rn Diego, Ca lif. ou th ern Cross :ir. W. 27,500) I 2 6 1989
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/ Lecture series looks at modern th~ olo · es ALCALA PA e Institute for Christian Ministri present a lecture series entitled "Who Do You Say That I Am? " Th rsday evenings, Feb. 2, 9, ,16, ar. 2, 9, and 16 from 6:45-9: 15 p.m. at Salomon Lecture l-lall, University of San Diego. The series will be conducted by Father Ron Pachence, director of the ICM and an associate professor of practical theology at USD. The c"our se ~ will inve sti gate contemporary theologies of Jesus and students will be asked to evaluate' their own faith in Jesus and his mission. Cost is $35. Preregistration deadline is Jan. 26. For further information call 260-4784. /_
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