News Scrapbook 1989

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Update (Cir. W.)

Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) North County Blade Tribune (Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498) MAR 6 1

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Reader (Cir. W. 100,000

San Diego, CA (Sa n Diego Co.) San Dieg__o Uni o n (Cir . D . 217 ,089)) (Cir . S. 341 ,840

Update ___ Wednesday, March 22, 1989 Roe V. Wade Attorney Second-Guesses Courts ?-Cf 5~

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--~~---•·~·z Venger selects USO over Oregon State vif!l $' ~ris Enger, who led bounding. the Vista High girls basketball In 1988-89, Enger and Monica team to the CIF 2A championship Filer of Point Loma were named this season, has decided to play the county's co-players of the for the Universjty of San Diego year. Enger received the honor next season. -- outright in 1987-88. Enger, a 6-foot-4 center, had This past season, Enger led narrowed her final decision to Vista to a second place finish in USD or Oregon State. the Southern California "I tried to get basketball out of Regionals. She was also named my mind and decide where I to the all-state team by Califor- would rather be at academically nia Basketball Magazine.

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• "The US u a Neighbon-K Canadian Pcnpective," Stephen ~wrs, fonner Canadian ambassador to the U.N , will be peaking~ Tuesday, Aprrl 4, 7 p.m., -<'. Univcrmy Cencer Forum, US , Alcala Park, Lmda V15c1rRc5:ia.' Linda Vi,ta. Free. Z60-4798 or' Z60-4682. -------~...........,

By Laurel F1u11 For Upd Ill

In Dallas for her former evidence professor Texas law forbad abor- tions At a garage sale she ran into a group of women who enlisted her aid In the problem of women who went to Mexico for abortions. They were experiencing serious medical complications from poor services at a clinic In Mexico Weddington agreed to try a case against Henry Wade, the Dallas di trict attorney, and she chose Jane Roe to be the pl lntilf She described going to the Supremo Court 1n detail; Its 13 kin ds of marble; Its heavy, dark velvet curtains eparallng 1ustlces' chambers from the courtroom; the lack of a ladies room at the time; and the memorial handmade goose quil pen given to attorneys as a souvenir She described how, as the Justices finally are ceremoniously called into the cour• troom. they ere silhouetted in their robes aga,nst the backdrop of cur- tains And she laughed about the "cheat sheet" on the attorney podiums to help Identify the Justices by name Weddington spoke of lighter moments In en otherwise serious c e. One concerned whether Roe was actually moot, as the state argued, because Roe had already had her baby, which was given up

for adoption. "Finally Justice Stewart looked at me and said, 'It 's not her fault the gestation period of a lawsuit is longer than for a baby'," Wed- dington recalled. · Later Justice White asked where In the constitution one found the notion of privacy. "I said, 'Your honor, if you look in the brief, you'll know we have pledged in the alternative the First. the Fourth, the Fifth, lhe Eighth, the Ninth, the Eleventh , and the Fourteenth (Amendments).' "He said, 'In other words, anywhere we find it it's okay with you.' And Isaid 'Yes, sir'.'' Terrell said privacy 1s a dichotomy. There ar those who view it as a fundamental right and those who view 11 as a "house on stilts." He opined that the Bowers case indicates a shift away from the nollon of privacy as a fun- damental right. This means gover- nment will have greater occasion to make dec1s1ons about who can or cannot do what - such as engaging in non-procreative sex or choosing to have an abortion. In Webster v. Reproductive Health SeNlces , set to be heard April 26th, the Supreme Court will make another ruling on the right to privacy In this case the court will rule on the constitutionality of a Missouri law which: 1) prohibits the use of public funds, facilities, and employees to perform, assist, counsel or encourage abortion, 2) mandates hosp1tal1zation for second-trimester abortions; and 3) declares tl'>a 1( begins al concep tion Restrict ng pi.bile employees from rr:o •ag ng abort1ors ..,.. ght mean ro• m '1110 ng that 11 ts an alte a• ~e nd v I te ree speec Does t an ,1 you are a (public) s c worker d a G 1ent comes to yoJ and says I m pregrant Tel me all lt>e opt ens· tl'at you canno• tell •hem that there 1s an option of abort on? Wed• d1 gton said The Missouri law's Mandatory l'osp1talization 1s for tests to determine the fetus ' viability The tests are costly sometimes inac- curate, and can endanger maternal h~alth or fetal life. Weddington claimed that even ti the court rules that abortion may be restricted at viability 11 will have little impact because 94 to 96 percent of abor· lions are done during the first trimester Both speakers thought t unlikely the court will rule that life begins at conception Weddington said it's more likely I e court will rule there is no r,gM to privacy and that states should decide at what point legal rights allach Ttie life-at-conceptlor argument, sl' says presents a dilemma. Does it mear that a woman

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BaHball - USD's no,n-c,111111:ri ,ence game with visiting Wisconsin was postponed because of wet groun~. The Toreros (14-11) and Badgers will play a double-header today at n/1

if I had an injury," Enger said. "I'd rather be in San Diego than Oregon, that's for sure." Enger finished her career as the county's all-time leader in blocked shots. She is also second m both career scoring and re-

San Diego , CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089 ) (C ir . S. 341,840) R 1 9 .Jl//c,. P. C. B

"USD as possibly a person to get their program headed toward being one of the top Division-I teams on the West Coast," Vista coach Joe DeMar,a said. really sees her

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San D1e9.o Union (Cir. D. 217 ,089) (Cir . S. 341 ,840)

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/ Fur Ball puts on the dog until the cows come home ;:zq;t 'p ut on the &og for the Academy Awards" is the ~• card party and luncheon.from opening line on the invita- ! .. 11:30 a.m. Friday at Trinity Presby- ti t th third I Fur Ball, terlan Church. Tickets are $7.50; _on o e annua a - call 444-8429. big benefit for San Diego Humana I Society on April 7. It will be at the \ U.S. Grant Hotel from 6 p.m. "until 1 1 American Jewiah Commlttff.

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then ties Wisconsin Andy~~loop single with one out in the bottom of the seventh inning drove in Scott Kowall and Chuck Graham to cap a three-run rally, giving USO an 8-7 victory over Wisconsin in the first game of a dou- ble-header at Cunningham Stadium. The Toreros (15-11-1) and Badgers played to a 10-inning, 6-6 tie in the second game. Wisconsin scored six runs in the sixth inning of the first game to take a 7-5 lead. Bob Grandpre (1-0) picked up the win in relief for the Toreros. Paul Quantrill lost (3-4). Iii the sec- ond game, Wisconsin (4-13-1) scored twice in the ninth on a double by od Myers to gain the tie. USD's Chuck Graham set a West Coast Athletic Conference record with his 50th ca- reer double. Mora baseball - Point Loma Na- zarene College lost both games of its double-header to Cal Lutheran. 'The Crusaders (14-14) lost the opener, 4-0, as Ted Anderson threw a complete- game four-hitter. Rich Johnson (3-2) lost. In the second game, Cal Luther- an (4-6) scored four times in the first inning en route to a 7-2 victory Dave Clark won. Dave Pierce (4-4) lost for PLNC. Tennia - Sig Huber beat Brian Brown 6-2, 6-2 at No. 2 singles to lead UCSD to a 5-4 win over visiting Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy. MIT's Kai Yee Ho beat Randy Mark 6-2, 7-6 at No. 1 singles. Ho teamed with Brown at No. 1 doubles for a 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 win over Huber_ and Francois Monnar ... Carol Curm1 de- feated Jamie Henikott 7-5, 6-2 at No. 2 singles to lead USIU (10-12) to a 6-3 win over 22nd-ranked Harvard ... Kim Wright defeated Shauna Tendal 6-2, 6-1 at No. 1 singles to lead host Point Loma Nazarene College (6-7) to a 7-2 win against Southern Colorado.

the cows come horn'!." Alex, the Stroh's beer dog, will be the "top dog" there. As to the awards - guests will vote on pets brought by local celebrities and pollticans, plus prominent local mascots. The Soul Patrol will provide the music. Tick-

Developer Ernest W. Hahn will receive the National Institute of Human Relations Award on Satur- day at the Catamaran Hotel. BIii Green's orchestra will play for the black-tie dinner dance, beginning with a reception at 6:30 p.m. Res- ervations are $200 per person; call 546-8777. Child Abuae Prevention Foun- dation. A "Taste of Mission Valley" will offer a movable feast to seven restaurants, via the Molly Trolley, from no n to 4 p. . ne unday. The outing will begin and end at Nordstrom, Fashion Valley, with guests tasting exotic fare such as red chill stuffed with jack cheese, black linguine with clams, shrimp and calamari. Tickets are $20; call 295-4441, ext. 1319. M. Znerold of Des Moines, Iowa, returning tor the fourth time, will give a seminar on "The Magical Charm of Porcelain." Hours wlll be 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. April 5 at Town & Country Convention Center. Seminar and luncheon will be $30; call 944-6962. Junior League of San Diego. The spring home tour April 6 will focus on four estates in Rancho Santa Fe, chosen tor th~ir architec- ture and interior design. Hours will be from noon to 4 p.m. Tickets are $12; call 234-2253. / A11i1tanca League of San Diego County. Antiques authority Gwen

AcAIBMY AWARDS

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Spindrift Janet Sutter

ets are $20 in advance, $25 at the door; call 670-8304. These events make a difference. Last year's Fur Ball raised $25,000, helping the Humane Society in the purchase of a mobile pet adoption van and helping with construction of the new Poway Humane Society facility. Old Station Six at 1572 Columbia Street is now the Firehouse Muse- um, complete with old-fashioned fire engines. Anybody can toddle by there Thursday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., but after hours on Saturday, April Fool's night, it will be the scene of the "Fire House Furor." That's what the Kl" Wyka of the Muaeum of Man are calling their party, which starts at 6:30 p.m. with no-host cocktails and a tour of the museum, followed by a seated dinner and entertain- ment and music for dancing by The

Invitation cover to the third annual Fur Ball.

Squires. Reservations are $35 per person; call 582-7769 or 278-3559.

Wednesday will feature a program of song medleys, and will begin with cocktails at 11 a.m. at the Kona Kai Club. Reservations are $15; call 454-0231 Gro11mont Community Concert A11QCiation. The music scholarship fund will be boosted by the annual

who goes ski ng and falls down 1s guilty of neg ,ger I hor,c,de? Does ,t mean that tie crime of aborllor should ther b!l the crime of mur- der? Who wou d be gLl lty? Would 11 be Just the ace- or r would II be the WOIT'an as well?' Durmg the presidential debt1le then candidate George 8 ~h fumbled over this sam quest on The Missouri law may be upheld, overturned, restricted to that state, or abortion issues rE legated to the states. The decis1or Nill have a great ,mpact on the notion of privacy for everyone - which ,s why many people are second- guessing the judges, especially Justice Anthony Kennedy. "What has got to be the issue is who has the right to decide: the in- dividual that"s pregnant - with her moral advisors, her significant others, her family members - is it that person, or is ii the gover- nment?" said Weddington. The court WIii decide in the erw.

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) MAR 3 C 9a9

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P. C 8 £,r 1888 ~t its Deans' Ball April 15 at the Hilton, US~r Home Fed president a grad Ro- bert Adelizzi for service to the law school, philantrhopist Sally Thorn- ton for contributions to the College of Arts and Sciences, Wells Fargo senior v.p. and 1981 grad Liam McGee for support for the School of Business, School of Education ad- visory board nember Alison Tib-

San Francisco, CA (San Francisco Co.) San Francisco Banner Daily Journal (Cir. 5xW. 1,500)

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TEN,~N~IS~-------- USD' men defeat 0 • 1 Cal in tennis U s men's tenms team slrengthened !ts chances:: its fu'St CAA tournament berth by beating top-ran Cal, S-4, yesterday in Berkeley. The 21st-ranked Toreros (17-3) got a strong pe~orr- ance from junior Chris Toomey. In the No. 2 smg es match, which was a battle between North County high- school alumm, Toomey beat sophomore Carl Chang 5-7, 7-5ct~g. who attended San Oieguito with. his younger brother, Michael. was serving for the match m the second set But Toomey, who attended Poway, fought off Chan~ and later teamed with Mark Farren to beat Chang an Curt Street r, 7-6, &-3. ''This is probably our biggest and timeliest wi~, bi:~ tlll think we've got to beat somebody else that s g. chance to go to the NCAAs," said_ USO coach Ed Collt'::is The Toreros were without their top p_layer, _Jo~ lbl Noriega, who has been declared academically me ig e. Also wmning for USD were Farren, Matt Mattera an,d the learn of Dan Stewart and Mattera. _It was US~! second victory against a top 10 team this season. T Toreros beat use, then No. 7, last month. Cal Is 11·2. USO plays at San Jose State today.

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bits and Schoolof Nursing advisory board member '1arion Hubbard. / ~~~!j£E,reof State tiaf -~w~~:,tm,m~•~,e:~,~~~~~~~~,ort · side over California's new system for dis- the Bar Beat settled on a list of pominees they thought buildings in San Francisco. ciplining errant lawyers has retreated meritted serious consideration, the ·--

San Diego , CA (San Diego Co.) Reader (Cir. W. 100,000 RZ31989

behind closed doors after the State Bar made a commendable start at keeping the selection process as open as possible. Secrecy was one of the many com- plaints bar critics had about the old way of taking lawyers to task, and bar gover- ten vowed to keep the revamping of the attorney-discipline system as open as Legislators even forced the appoint• ment of a monitor - UC San~o law professor Robert Fellmeth - to oversee and rep_grt on the effort, and both the le- gal press and some large general-circula- An expeditied way to keep lawyers ac- cused of serious misdeeds has been put into effect, a whole new corps of reputed- ly no-nonsense investigators and prose- cutors has been brought on board, and the State Bar communications office now spends much of its time publicizing the outcome of disciplinary cases. Those measures, plus a substantial de- crease in what had been a lengthy case backlog, have already resulted in some cautious complements from former But it's the new bar court, by most ac- counts, that will be the real litmus test for the three-year-old reform effort. For the first time, charges of miscon- duct against California lawyers will be de- nors - and the Legislature - have of- possible. on the-changes. critics.

names of those nominees and brief biog- raphies of each were made public. In all, bar governors had narrowed the list of hundreds to 33 applicants, some of whom were applying for more than one position. Included were a sitting Los An- geles Superior Court judge, federal and state administrative law judges, research and staff attorneys for appellate courts, and several senior staff attorneys for the current State Bar Court. The bar's governing board had been scheduled to pare the list of nominees at a meeting a week and a half Jgo, and it was expected that after the disappointed applicants had been notified that the list of those whose names had been forwarded to the Supreme Court But suddenly, after debating their choices in closed session, members of the bar's governing board decided they would not release the names, even though the most they could have done was to trim six names from the 33 who had been announced as semi-finalists. No explanation was made for the re- versa], and the Supreme Court has not decided whether it will make the names public. That awaits a conference of the justices once they officially receive the As of Friday, the nominations hadn't yet made their way down the two blocks · down to 27 names - three for each posi- tion - .,..ould be made public. bar's nominations.

At the State Bar, they'll only say that · the nominations will be delivered to the Supreme Court by the April 1 deadline. They won' t talk abo ut why the bar's · promising experiment with openness has

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by Michael J. Hall

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cided by a corps of full-time judges. The judges will be hard to remove, rel- atively insulated from policital pressure and paid salaries identical to those drawn by the state's trial court jurists - all part of a plan to assure a system that is as in- dependent and worthy of public respect hearings and three, including one non- lawyer, to handle appeals - are due to practice of having a volunteer attorney- hearing officer preside over each case. To make sure they are as isolated from pressure as possible, the final selection of the judges is to be made by the California The process of selecting the judges be- gan last faJJ with a flurry of news releases from the State Bar soliciting applications Applicants were asked to fill out the same detailed forms used by Gov. George Deukmejian's office to screen po- tential nominees to the municipal and su- perior court benches, and members of a special committee of the bar Board of Governors spent several long weekends in December winnowing the applications to come up with candidates for the jobs. Supreme Court. for the positions. as possible. The nine judges - six to preside over

come to a close.

~lie,.', , . c. 8 ,,u The l.o.~Archire of ,,,,,,,- Kiev," d · \'tet repression of Ukram1an ure begmnmg m the l9JOs, many of the historical bu1ldmg, m the once-grand wy of Kiev were destroyed. me of the buildings dated back to the I 2th Century. An exh1b1t at tb,c U$Q Founders' Gallery wi II include photographs, maps, and drawings of the "lost" cit1 f K,ev Th, 1, the tirst We!it Coan ~ho'-'"·mg for the exhib,t arranged by USD's director ot design Ther«e Whrtcomb through the Ukram,an Museum m New York City and the Ukram1an M1llenrum Commrttec of San Diego. The exh1b1t remains on view through March 3I Gallery h urs are noon to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. USO " located m Akal~ Park, Lmda Vista Road, Linda Vma. 260-4682 . E,1.

Imperial Beach, CA (San D1eg__o Co ., Imperial Beach Star News (Cir. 2 x w. 2l730) (Cir. S. 2,568 HAR 2 6 1989

• • • The State Bar last week formally con- , firmed what it had informally decided: that it will hold a special election for a new member of the Board of Governors to succeed Oroville attorney Darrell Ste• vens as the representive of the far north- ern part of California. : Stevens has been appointed a Chico municipal court judge, and as a result, ; had to resign from the board. • I The election will be held at the sam, I time as the bar's regular election of new , governors. Ballots will be circulated from ' • ' I July 7 to Aug. 11, and results will lie an- l nouncedAug. 17. ' Candidates for the two years remain- : ing in Stevens' three-year term, or for , the other five open positions on the , boarei, have until June 16 to file official , nominating petitions at State Bar head- ' quarters in San Francisco. For more infonnation, contact Bilj.mna · Sivanov at the bar offices, 555 Franklin St., San Francisco, 94102-4498. '

tion newspapers have reported regularlL take office July 1, replacing the longtime

Jlflm'• P. c _!J, _ 1,, ms /2iversity of San Diego'· Founders 'Gallery exhibt1s "Th, Lost Architecture of Kiev' thro ugh March 31 . For more in formation, call Therese Whi1 comb at 260-4600 or John Nune at 260-4682. ;;:i..._? S-S-/, ...

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