News Scrapbook 1989

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San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OCT 1 - 19B9

OCT 4 -1989

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andatory CLE Bill Is Signed By Deukmejian Key Components: Attorney Ethics and Practic~anagement ;J-Cf£ __ Will Insurance Rates Drop? . ~ACRAMENTO - Most of Califor· ma s 115,000 active lawyers will join the ranks of other ~rofessionals required to undergo contmumg education under tegis- lat.Jon si~ned into law by Gov. George Deukmei1an State Bar officials and other experts agree the pro~am could help reduce dis- oplmc complamts. Thus, while the law Chart showing the requirements of the CLE law, and a story on the other bills of interest to the legal community signed b the governor. Page 11. 1 places a new burden on the state's attor- neys, it also could help relieve them of an alba_tross that has hung around their col• lect1ve neck for years. And there is some speculation the re- quirement - established under SB 905 b Sen. Ed Davis, R-Northridge - eve~ could pay off for lawyers on a cost-benefit level. Th_ey _will have to pay to complete the contmumg legal education courses but their malpractice insurance premium~ could dechne as a result. The program also will have an impact on CLE course providers. They may have to setve a new market of senior' experi- enced attorneys and rural lawyers d I op area-specific courses that m~e:;~~ needs of local lawyers, and offer more courses mskills training. Many obsexve~s expect current provid- ers to reap a wmdfall from the new re qmrement. ~ut the program ,s likely to s1gmficantly increase competition, which could cut mto mcreased profits. W~1le the requirement is now law sev- eral issu~s. remain unresolved abo~t the prigram s implementation. They include· ; en the requirement becomes effective·· ow much of the requirement can be met through video or audio tapes; how to en- force the requirement; how to accredit course providers and certify courses. and whether to assess providers a fee to' hel pay for the costs of administering t/ program. e Those qu_estions will be resolved by the new Committee on Education of the bar's Board of _Governors, which will hold its first meetmg mNovember One thi~g appears ce~tain, thou h: Lawyers will not be hit with a dues hik: to pay for the program. New bar President Alan I. Rothenb of Los Angeles said, •'This is a grand ment_ f?r the prof~ssion and the public. To me, it s an exc1~mg thing. It's going t gua'.antee continued, improved h' quahty [practice] in the state." ' ,g Added bar Discipline Monitor Robert Fellmeth, director of the Center for p b he Interest Law lversit of S· iego, "It is an important • to consu:. ers. A gre~t number of professions and trades require continuing education In a area that changes as fast as the law·does" consumers need assurance attorneys ar~ expected to keep up to speed.,, Ethic~, Pra~tice Management b In lscussmg the program•s potential e_ne it to lawyers and consumers, bar of- ficials and Fellmeth focused on the ethics an?,Pr~ct1c~ management components. .This will reduce discipline problems which are ~o ofte~ traced back to not ~nowi~~ ethics and Just having bad proce- ures, Rothenberg said. Fellmeth called the practice mana e- ment c??1ponent "probably the most ~- ?_Ortant .pan of the program. He added ~h looking at_ ?iscipline files• especially wit solo pr_act1t.Joners, that is an area th keeps p~ppmg up .•• Fellmeth said the ett~ ics requirement "is al o going to be im- Sea Paga 11 - CLE By Tom Dresslar Ddily )011r11al St4/J Rtporltr

Coll ge Notes

cocktails at 5 :30 vatlons are $ 75 P.m. Dinner reser- 756-0844. per person; call Mercy Ho•plt I " Generation Cele~· The Mercy annual ball will b ration," the 20th woman Ly~n SIi 8 Oct. 14. Chair- Mercy and is t va was born at ball chalrwom he daughter of 1973 ball at the Sana~_Kay Rippee, The and Marina begl iego Marriott Hotel and a silent auct~s with cocktails followed by din on at 6:30 p.m. Bill Green's O ner and music by' Sealed & Deli:i~~st ra and Signed, are $150, $JOO 0 ~ $"Reservations call 291-22 44 _ ;.,OO per person; . Community Child , 9 wllr offer sam- Valley Vintne~ ~9;"1es of the Napa tasting will b f soclallon. The e rorn 4·30 t p.m. Oct. 1 4 at th · o 7:30 Hotel. Tickets are 8 $~ 0~- Grant Datea ahead· Fa • 459-6378 author Eudora W mous Southern benefit for Frie deity will speak at a on Nov. 10 at t::O • of UCSO Libary Center The C th eater In Price t1on Winetaste '8 pfes from 28 ren • Founda- 1

Oct. 13 offerin concert. The date is singerjpianist !n~ chance to hear the Globe Theatr Thsupport the Old f d •· e black t· un -raiser will be . . · 1e gala on the Lowell Daim w1th cocktails at 6 p.m., then di es Festival Stage tented lawn, follo':er at 7 o~ the performance on st.aed by ~emstein's Barnes has called hge. f Cr1tic Clive young master of ~:. t~e new popular musi~ ") rica s classical Afterward guests stage at the GI can dance on Bill Green's Or~~esto the mu~ic of non-stop disco at Ira or en1oy a Centre Stage Reslbe C~ss1us Carter $500 per · . ervatJons, $250 and ing. Or J:i~~~• tclude valet park- come ;t IO P m f uy a $50 ticket and dancing Co~ i'· or dessert and will be ~vailahl~~entallry cocktails 1941. 0 a • Call 231- eek, on Satur- ent their annual Guilder• Will pres- ' The Way We w:w~.r:s night called begin at 6 p m in~~- he event will den Cale S~n i:re ~Sculpture Gar- with cocktails d· go useum of Art entertainment' ~?~er, awards and ' person; call 444-5~~ts are $35 per Meanwhile this w day, the 010 j,.

Utah. I'm not saying he won't I · · · that depends on hi p_ay habits and attitude this ~:::~t•ce Paul was kicked out of th . tt~h: f~! quarter for a:fii!: m k. an mto an opponent's face . "No, he didn't mean to do it b t •t. was very nafl'ant ·d L ' . u bill. "I can't condone'th:t• behu~n- nd not addr it. av1or "And ·t h t hd • i urt us. It co t us a ouc own." is fir t: Escondido High oo graduate Ben Last wa n_amed Baker University' def: s eive !meman of the week after:~· cordm three quarterback sack; an_d four tackles for lo e . Bak er 8 37-2,8 victory over ~ean ei ~olle~e aturday in the Heartgof ~nc~ Athletic Conference. . t 18 a 6-foot-3, 231-pound e B:ldB~ec~niversity is located~ NAIADm.. !ty, Kan. and is an •~•s1on II chool. Baker 18 2-0 overall th. and 1-0 in the conference~s season uitina up• Jo . vem son the first IIIX games of the . soccer eason because of omm1tments back home in I !::~ili~c!·1td c~! ~:: (Fra~i eled to R . en trav- to the Na~:!~ 11 A;~ere Fram lost Buchare t) 4 _0 . team (Steua Cup m t e European set••: · usS:-i} "' · n c It didn' . t ta e long for Sveinsson get his first major les on in h. ~~:rf~~dtofkstud)'., Including la;~ vemsson 24 h to get from Iceland to San D_ours ~urrise, his luggage was som:h~~ •~t JU&t d1dn 't get here~ sa. Svemsson. "I was told ·t h • id appens tes~member that, Jon, you'll be k to ' 1 00 ll the time." 1 One of the reasons the 24 old wee h was because it offered a Management 'fra I -year- per c ose t.o attend USIU . . md&Jor m ve an Tour- ism. '

:torFrorhe!lo has his 'camera' a· imed at Don and D held Sept. 23 at them of Photographic Arts' 1,200 people attend dnew ~an Diego Design ~g fund-raiser e • netting about $50 DO enter. About The San Diego Union/Jerry McClard as ' the Museu . ale Goldman

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1s the theme of h h w and lunch t e annual fashion a social hour at ~~n, beginning with at the Town & C a.m. Thursday Center. Tickets ~run$try3 Convention 2631. 8 5; call 276- . lion. "An Even! merican Founda- '89" will h ng Wi th the Stars onor Cata/' . do, treasurer-des; ma V1llalpan- ed States· Con gnate of the Unit. Hunter; C~rme~~~sman Duncan 6aldes, president o~~f ;iazuelos de and Carlos Hu ren and fam1lles; founder of an ;song Gonzales, Ing fleet. The bl;~nada tuna-fish- _7 at the Convent· ·he ent Is Oct. mg Arts Center ~o\and Perform- and $500; call 23~~1;~0 re $300 music by Ruthie iOs Drive In" wllh. be Saturday with dThe Cruisers w111 p.m. to mld~1ght I anclng from 8 Club The Rich a Bonita Golf Radio will entertBrothers of B-100 Mexicari and A allfornia project t health for child , a Baja O promote ,. YMCA Juvenile c · •· Rockm' at the' ne1• Program Pie; call 28~;;~nir $25 per cou- will help runaw · oney raised teen-agers ser::d a~d homeless shelter. Y the YMCA San Diego s lion. The seas y~phony AHocia- on s openl cert, underwritten b ng con- board president El ly symphony se and Frank are $15 per am, too. Tickets

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mystic, the Vic~~a. was a bit of a the scene of an a r1an house now is The next one is ~~:'J PS)'.Chic fair. house at 1925 K St. ay, m the On the south "fo H11torical Society. pa ms, tarot ~rystal balls. ~e 1 ~rts. and gaze into mmute read- goes to the Villa~~h, i3nd ~he money es oration and The next w~fams; call 239-2211. society will s • Oct. 13 to 15, the IDg tours be~~or a series of walk- rung at Matston at 10 a.m. n:~~!;enue. The tours tinue do~ the block P-~-• will con.' tenors of six Gill h to view the ex- up with refreshm ouses, and wind ent:5 on the terrace call 232-6203. use. Tickets are $15, The San Di .' now owned by 20 • awn, from 1 to 5 psychics will read I p.m., cards, astrolo ch mgs will be $10 educational pr House on' Se of Marston Ho

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500)

OCT 2 -

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,....of~;~~nitio~ of their service to and support E t~ Umvers,Jy Center was renamed the 5 ;np~ 8 22 8nd Jean Hahn University Center at · ceremonies Through th • and fund-raising eff~rts, Mr. ande~rsrsonal gift ~~s:ns,~le for contributions of nearly . es ,mated $11 million that fina ad on- struct1on of the Umversily Center.

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USO ,, , salute to the Fry. C est Chic," 8 ranch Bicentennial, """Hi•

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.} San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OCT 3 - 198

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) OCT 2 - 889 .Jl.{l,n 's P C. B 1-<1

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) OCT 2 - 1989

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P C. B r. 1888 .,..Anl;,(_ersity of San Diego's Certificate in lnternatlorial Susiness program is ottering a course, 'lnlernational Negotiation Strategies," Wednesdays from 6:30 to 9,30 p.m. through October 25 at the USO Manchester Executive Conference Center The cost is $215 per per- son, which includes course mate~. 1g,seg1s- !er by telephone, call 260-4644. .::c!'{:J~ /

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p C 8 1831 rforeros halt R dlan~s rally, . s!~!~~~~!~~-•ffl t me la t week practicing on how to top. USD's wing-T offense. Maybe the Bulldogs should have concentrated on other facets - like special teams A fumbled kickoff by Redland and a 76-yard kickoff return by USO allowed the Torero to escape with a 23--17 victory last night m Redland . The Toreros (4-0), off to their best tart in six years, led, 23-3, before the Bulldogs {l-3) rallied. USO kicker Dave Bergmann kicked three first-half field goals, but it was a 40-yard touchdown pass from Brendan Murphy to Ken Jones that gave USO a 16-3 hal£time lead. "We knew Redland wa a good football team," USO coach Brian Fogarty 1d. "Our special teams gave us LOCAL TEAMS the big play and good field position all night." One uch big play came wtth 2·08 left m th first half. After Dave Bergmann's second 33-yard field goal {he also had a 30-yarder), Redlands fumbled the ensuing kickoff. USO's Jeff Blazevich recovered - four play later, Mur· phy found Jackson deep m the right corner of the end LOn , The Toreros truck quickly in the econd half when Greg Frln 11 returned the opening kickoff to the Red- Ian 15. Todd Jackson scored from there two plays later. But then Fogarty said he did omething he hadn't much thts eason he became conservative. Meanwhile, Red- lands' offen e started moving. Eight play . 52 yard . Touchdown Fifteen play , 73 yard Touchdown. The Bulldogs' final score - a Brian Harmon 1-yard run that capped that 73-yard drive came with 17 sec- ond left. An attempted on sid kick failed, assuring USO the win. USO hosts Pomona Pitzer on Saturday at 1:30. In community college football: Palomar 23, 8addleback 12 - The visiting Comets (1· 2) beat th Gauchos (0-3) for the first time in 18 years. Mark King ran for lll yard on 25 carries, scoring on run of 2. 6 nd 22 yard Former San Diego State quart- erback Scott Barrick finished ll-of-21 for 107 yards. Paaadena 21, Gro11monl 10 - Freshman Ostel Miles ran for two TDs to lift host Pa adena (2-1) past the Griffins {1·2). MeH 22, Cerrito• 19 - Scott Allen's 18-yard TD pass left gave the host Olympi• ans (2-1) th wm. Allen had three fourth-quarter TD pa • e Cerritos i 2 1-1. R1ver•lde 27, D City O - The visiting Knights (0-4) were held to 40 yards ru bing Riverside's Daryl McChnstian ran for 214 y rds on 18 carries. Riverside 1 3-0 lo Joe Welch with 17 second

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.I Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) OCT 2

~he ~attle SuperSonics will spend their f~rst ~eek of training camp at the Umvers1ty of San Diego, the NBA teambas~ Two-a-day practices begin Friday and continue through Oct. 11. The fol- lowing evening. Seattle is scheduled to. open the preseason against the Clippers at the Sports Arena. The Sonics had planned to train ,U Northwest College in Kirkland Wash., but a zoning problem in Kirk: land forced them to seek another venue at the 11th hour. So Sonics coach Bernie Bickerstaff called USO where he played (1964-66) and late; coached (head coach, 1969-73; assist- ant coach, 1!167-69). The Sonics will practice at USO every day except Saturday when they will move across the street to University of San Diego High School. The evening sessions (6-8 p.m.) are open to the public, including the Green vs. Gold scrimmage Oct. 11 at 7.

' Scripps Bank and Jassoy, Graff & Douglas are sponsoring a disc~ James Burns Dean of ~hoot"ii°f-=slrsiness, on "Th~ Cnt,cal Importance of Business Ethics Today " The talk will be held at 5:30 p.m. at Scripps Bank, 7817 Ivanhoe, La Jolla. Reseivallons are required by calling Lisa White at 454-3188. ./""

National CitY, Cf:>. (San Diego co.) Star News (Cir. 2 x W. 3\336) (Cir. S. 3,301 OCl 4 - 1989

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TIIE<:i:TRIBUNE San Diego, Monday, October 2, 1989 'r~'J

Tennis Patrons to hold auction or Junior Tennis

In another finals match between two top seeds, the Women's Open title went to Lesley Hakala, who de- feated second-seeded Jennifer Daw- son 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. Hakala, a former Santana High standout now in her final semester at BYU, has been competing this sum- mer in selected pro events. She said she felt more pressure yesterday than in those tournaments. "I grew up playing in the juniors here and everybody expects certain things from me," she said. "I swear, there's a Jot more nerves in a match like this." Hakala said she "played an OK match, nothing special" against Dawson. "I played solid when I had to," she said. "I played quite a few loose points in the second set and Jenny came on like gangbusters." In other singles finals yesterday (see page D-4 for complete results): • Men's 30 - Jack Galloway de- feated Geoff Griffin 6-7, 6-1, 6-3. • Men's 35 - Richard Ravrevy de- feated Larry Belinsky 6-3, 6-7, 6-4. • Men's 40 - Terry Timmons de- feated Dale Steidley 6-3, 6-1. • Men's 45 - Leland Housman de- feated Bob Duesler 7-6, 6-1. Janice Fitch de- feated Reene Faulstich 3-6, 6-2, 6-2. • Women's 35 - Christine Putman defeated Liane Bryson 6-1, 6-3. • Women's 40 - Brenda Stillman defeated Karen Alexander 6-1, 6-3. • Women's 30 -

The Tennis Patrons of San Diego will hold their first annual auction, "An Evening at Wimble- don, Auction '89" Saturday, Oc- to)>er 14, at the~an Diego, University Center. All proceeds will benefit the new Ju- nior Tennis Development pro- gram. Festivities begin at 6:00 p.m. with an open bar, hor d'oevres and a Silent Auction, followed by a dinner at 7:30 p.m. Nationally renoened auc- tioneers from Texas, Oklahoma and California, will call the Liv~ Auction, which will include two trips to the U.S. Open; dinner for three couples with Tommy La- sorda; en all-expense paid trip for four to the Nick Bollettieri Ten- nis Academy; a doubles clinic with Jim Pugh and Rick Leach· and many more surprises. • Co-Chairperson Audrey Phil- lips talked about what the bene- fits of the auction really mean. "I feel excited that any child who wants to play tennis, can" she said. "I am thrilled by that. As a psychol?gist, I _call it primary prevention, helping the kids feel good about themselves. And that's what all of this means." /

rules.'" USO coach FA Collins was espe- cially pleased with FAwards' win, which featured lengthy, spirited ral- Tribune Tennis Tournament 'A year ago, I would've been real surprised (to win), but not now' - J.R. Edwards lies inside Morley Field's Maureen Connolly Stadium. 'Historically, he's had trouble sus- taining his elfort in long matches," said Collins. "He'd be great at first and then he'd get sidetracked and end up squandering the match. But recently he's been real purposeful on the court." Collins sees the victory as a likely milestone as FAwards begins his final season at USO. "It's the biggest tournament he's ever won," said Collins. "He'll see himself differently from now on."

It took J.R. FAwards more than 2* hours yesterday to claim the en's Open singles title of The Tri· bane Tennis Tournament. And when it was over, the USO senior was not sarprised he had won the event. "A year ago, I would've been real surprised, but not now," Edwards, the fourth seed, said after his 6-7, 6-4, 7-5 wm over second-seeded Piero La- gioia. "I've worked real hard over the summer and now I give 100 per- cent when I walk out on the court. Something good happens when I do that.' Lagioia, a 24-year-old native of Venezuela who lived in San Diego briefly several years ago before at- tending McLennen JC in Waco, Texas, and Northeast Louisiana, was upset with several line calls that went against him in the final two ts. "I don't mind losing," he said, '"but not the way the umpires were calling the balls and not the way I was treat- ed on the court " Lag1oia claimed the head umpire upset his concentration by telling him not to mutter to himself in Span- ish and Italian during the changeo- vers. Said Lagioia, who sports an Andre Agassi•like mane of shoulder-length blond hair and two earrings: "I told him, 'Just leave me alone. I'm not

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