News Scrapbook 1989

San • ,ego, Calif. Union (Circ. D 217,324) {C1rc;. S. 339, 788)

:;a., J1c:(o, Calif ..,nion (C re D 217 324) Cir~ S. 339, 188)

Paso Robles, CA (San Luis Obispo Co.) Press (Cir. 5xW. 4,977)

11 98 Jlll~n'• P. c. e. Est. 1888 /r eath is fast~r d--Ji rs

MAY 1 2 1989

MAY 11 1989

• Will • tennis ornmg U D (18-7) plays second- eedcd Florida this afternoon. "I m not surpr1Sed that Jennifer won " USD coach Sherri Stephens a d of Larking's 6-4, 6-4 victory over Stacey Martin l.arklng, a Poway High graduate, played her fr hman ason at Okla- homa but became 111 ftcr six match- es and miSS d the re t of the season. She tran !erred to USD and began appealing to the NCAA for an extra year of eligibility. , and we went through a lot of wrong people,· Ste- phens said •· he felt he deserved the year all r hardly playing at Oklaho- ma Finally, we got the right paper. written and she was granted U,

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r(_l 'J Aztecs, Toreras ousted at NCAA tennis tourney . TheJ.l,SD and San Diego State women's ten- r---~-~~------

That the well-being of dii~ oir ians in very large numbers is reatened by inept and careless doctors has become an ,ntolerable reality. According to a 100-page report just issued by a clearly 1mpart1al group, medical monitoring by California's Board of e 1 Quality Assurance ls failing to protect Californians from nskilliul and dishonest physicians. Authors of the study by the Center for Public Interest Law at t e Urn ersity of San Diego estunate that 10 to 15 percent of the 0 000 Ileen ed California doctors are so se 1) unpaired they arc not ft to practice medicine." Th1:s simply means that as - .C uO California doctors jeopardize th life and limb of t ousands of patients in this state bec;mse of their of re on drug· and alcohol, other incapacities, and lp nee. T mvesllgators found that last year only 12 doctors statewide ere disciplined by the board or incompetence or neglect. ,. ~a ·oo, owever, C{'ntel, n the iiiCr 7 alpractire a\\su1t aY.ards m excess of $30,000 and some 2ii0 p )' 1C1ans were forced out of California hospitals because of their I ro medical malpractices. Burcarratic sloth so profound that its investigations go on as l ng as eight years have rendered the board virtually moribund," the investigators concluded. "This system, is so low, o meager, and so trivial that death is weeding out mcomp tent physicians much faster than is the board,'' commented one member of the center. Californians are indebt d to the center for this lucid, arousing rep rt Even so, misgivings about the report's proposal to create medical quality court'' of judges and an expanded staff of prosecutors in the Attorney General's office have come from reputable organizations, including the California Medical Assoc1al!on. The problem with medical misgivings about medical reform is t 1al doctors have shown themselves to be incapable of policing their own house. Clearly, the Legislature must now act to weed out a many as 10,000 California doctors who should not be practicing medicine on a relatively helpless public.

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Child-advocacy group is born here 1V/°4 I i> By Jan Clifford ,, "?f-' - or ent repr ntatlves - to make Steve Barrow, ·who will be the insti- Trlbune, utl wr11 r .+ r L)J1 • th ir needs known And things began to tute's man in Sacramento, puts it this T IIERE RI 780 lobbyis m ac- happen: Dips were carved in concrete way: Children are a group "for whom ram nto, hand-shaking and back- curbs, doors were opened to disabled there is a great deal of sympathy, but lapping to protect the special in- workers, worthle or unsafe products who are intrinsically unorganized and t r ts of and nar 8 portion of the were forced off th market . . underrepresented in Sacramento .. We tat ' $79 h11l1on budget for - the 300 to The rationale 1s simple, said Fellmeth. hope to do our part ... so that their voic- -400 group th y r pr nl ow th re People who are there to lobby get heard. es are heard loud and clear." will be one working full time for the spe- And people who are heard get results. The 1nstitute's initial projects, funded c1al mterests of Cahfornia children "Children are not there to wine and by a $409,000 grant from the Weingart Robert Fellmeth, a Unive of San dine legislators," he said. ''They're not Foundation, will do just that. The focus Diego law fr• d one-time mem- there to give campaign contributions. will be on three high-profile children's ber o ad r's • aid , · has waited 20 They're not there with information about issues: years to s it happen their causes. They're not there to press • The availability and affordability of He's executive director of the Califor- their pomts." child care. ma Children's Advocacy Institute. Its But the Institute will be. Well, at least • The detection of child abuse, using fonnat1on was announced today al a ror those last two items. San Diego as a case study. pr conference at ' The institute - with offices in San • The overall provision of services to ' Wh n I work~ or Nader, I saw the Diego, San Francisco and Sacramento - children by the state. public Inter t movement orgamze," he is the only comprehen tve public interest The objective is to identify problems recalled. "People who were under- law center in California to address chil• and recommend reforms as needed in repr nted - mors, the handicapped, dren's ISSUes. It joins a handful of other each area. mmorlll became represented" groups, among them the California Chi!- "We intend to work quickly on all They marched on Wa mgton, Sacra• dren's Lobby, to advocate on behaU of three projects, while at the same time mento and 49 other gov mment centers the health and safety of children. Please see CHILD: D-3, Col. J

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MAY 1 2 1989

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

HAY 1 9 1989

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

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"We will have the tenacity of an Enghsh bulldog." Fellmeth said with a smile. "Every single project we've Ject without a meamngful outcome." For at least its first two year the institute will operate as part of the Center lor Public Interest Law, but plan is to extend beyond the state mto national and mternalional advo- cacy on behalf of young children's "The state Legislature Is the place to start for us, "said Fellmeth. "A lot of critical decisions are made al the health and sarety The institute staff already 1s domg its homework and Fellmeth hinted ~t future proiects to help unprove ch1l- • A"very aggre 1ve program to educate first-time parents on how to • An institute publication t,? r~te ats tell parents how to_ ch1ld- proof' the.r home, how to find and dren's lives: . " do the Job - right. car state level - on child abuse, chi_ld care, seat belts and other safety 1s- sues." . .

MAY 5 - 1989

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"I would defl~itely try_ to encour- age basic ed_ucatton on child dev~! 0 P- ment f~r hi~,h school st udents,. he emphas1Zed, so the,y h~ve some ~dea of what to expect. Id hke tb see 1t as p~rt of a required course such as _so- c1al problems, not borne economics.

He expects bipartisan support in the state Legislature for 'the insti-

Carlsbad, CA (San Diego Co.) La Costan (Cir. W. 5,000)

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Th children' advocacy mstltutc wa on of th original goals of th Center for Public Interest Law (CPILI. a 9-year-old organization on th USO campus that tracks the ac- tale r gulalory agencies leamed pubhc mterest law from the lion of F cllmeth s CPIL' director lie talf will be doing what th y do best tlus time for children The key to the mst1tute's ucce , Fellmetb said, i cap1talmng on the b yond th familiar 'study of what's Studies outline problems," he sa1d We don't top with the report. nslb11ity for solubons. · xpcruse of I par nt group gomg wrong• That could be through rewntmg chUd care hcensmg poh i , draftmg on child abus , or court n w law m ter h and his under ag 14 Ralph Nader - and said We take r We make qucnce_" ure there IS a conse

"I don't think you have to convince them to care about children," he said. "You have to show them how~

eventually woul~ like to become an r-;::=:!::=----------- Independent entity. Its long-range

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SAN DIEGO - "A Morning Like This," a~ of th r~surrected anch~m'rning Christ will be held on Friday, April 28,at 8 p.m. and Saturday, April 29, _at 81;>,m, in Founders Chapel, mv~rs1ty of San Diego, Alcala Park, San bte'!"o. This presentation is being per- formed by the USD Opera W?r~shop and is airected by William J. Eichorn of the Uni- versity's music department. Prices are as folJowsi general admi ~•on, $7; senior citizens $5 • students, $4. ' '

Carlsbad, CA (San Diego Co.) La Costan (Cir. W. 5,000)

MAY 5 - 1989

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San Diego, Calif. Union (C1rc. D 217,324) (Cir~ S. 339, 788)

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) MAY 1 11989

HAY 19 19SQ

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,0001 MAY 12 1989

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Victoria Chick pre nls paint ing and drawings Thursday through 1)t. 1 t the Founder • Gallery at US reception is I ,ted there Tue day from 5 to 7 pm <'hick' figurative , nd animal studtf' tn acrylic or 01! pastel have bt·t•n w1dl·ly xh1b1t<•d in the .\1,dw t • • *

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wr/1 be held M aw2c0ommencemenl th T ay ' 10:30 am at e orero stadium ·• Baccalaureate Mas~ for the undergraduate classes w,JJ be ~~Id at 4 p.m. Graduate studenl 21 ~~;;;cement w,11 be held May ' . a.m., and the under- graduate commencement ceremon es begin at 2:30 p.m.

(24-6) nth-ranked USO men'; p YI g.m the NCAA D1v1s1on tune fa~~~pw;ships for the first ota' on F ~gd en ~hampion Minne- rt ay ID Athen G Toreros freshman J . s, . a. (.ranked 24th) will fe ~UIS Noriega singles h . P ay m the NCAA Athens Nc ai_np10nships, May 24 in · oriega and D are ~lternates in the dou~i!aewa~t onships. .Z

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