News Scrapbook 1984

SENTINEL

Tl MES-ADVOCATE APR 2 & 1984

SENTINEL APR 2 5 1984

SAN DIEGO UNION APR 2 6 1984 Neighborhood mediation centers backed Two neighborhood mediation cen- ters that have been praised for set- tling minor disputes before they in- volve police officers, lawyers and judges should receive continued funding through 1985, a City Council committee unanimously recom- mended yesterday. The Public Services and Safety Committee also agreed that the pro- gram should be expanded beyond the centers in Golden Hill and Mira Mesa into other San Diego neighbor• hoods. The committee voted 3-0 in favor of spending $170,000 for the two cen- ters and a training program for vol- unteers who mediate the disputes. The conceptual approval also includ- ed directions to city staff to identify funding sources for the program. Specific funding will be considered when the full council takes up the matter during budget sessions that begin next month. The program was created through the Uruversity of Sao Diego Law Center, which is still involved with evaluating the centers and training personnel. The centers ideally react quickly to settle minor problems - over loud stereos, barking dogs, com- mon fences, etc. - before they tum into major rifts and costly lawsuits between neighbors. The disputes are mediated by volunteers from within the neighborhood. The funding proposal was brought forth by Mayor Hedgecock 10 a rare appearance before the committee. "The importance of developing Community Mediation Centers in our neighborhoods has gone beyond the realization, in two particular com- munities, that they are important programs," Hedgecock said in a pre- pared statement. ''Their benefit to our legal, law~nforcement and judi- cial systems is shown by the active participation and public support of officials from these agencies." Hedgecock said residents of South- east San Diego, Ocean Beach, Linda Vista, Pacific Beach and Mission Beach have expressed interest in es- tablishing mediation programs.

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Summer session offers training in special ed A special summer sessio_n at the University of San Diego will inaugurate a new program leading to a master's degree for advanced specialization in the education of the learning handicapped or severely handicapped. According to Dr. DeFor~st L. trunk, direct?r of spec1~ and gifted education at USD s chool of Education, the 30-unit program is designed to be completed in three sum- mer or less and features the opportunity to combine ~P- propriate course work with directed field experience. Two four-week sessions will be of- fered each summer, with cla ses meetmg in the after- noon and early evening. Students in the program will tudy with faculty members and visiting scholars selected for their broad backgrounds and experience. Both visiting and regular faculty will of~er special seminars on to111cs dealing with c~rrent a_nd future issues rn special education. Interested persons may ob- tain additional information by writing to the Graduate Ad- mi sions Office, School of Graduate and Continuing Education, Founders Hall 102, University of San Diego, Alcala Park, San Diego 92110.

first movement of concerto Number 11 by Mozart. Other works on th~ ro- 'am are "Qverture and Allegro y ~uper!n-Mllhaud and excerpts fr?,m Dvorak's "New World Symphony. Featured work on the Spring C~~ral Concert Is Vivaldi's "Magniflcat. Other music ranges from Gergorian chants and motets to Renaissance works to American folk songs. The USD Symphony plays at 4 p.m., Sunday. The USD Spring Choral Con· cert Is at 7:30 p.m., May 2. Both Pt~o- ams are in Camino Theatre on . e rampus in Alcala Park. For additional Information, call 291-6480, Ext. 4427. ~

Music programs benefit USD scholarship fund University of San Diego programs will Include orchestral and choral mu- sic this week. Henry Kola will conduct the USD Symphony for the Sister Rossi Music Scholarship Fund concert, and Paul Carmona conducts the USD Cho- rus and Orchestra In a program of cho- ral works. Student soloists perform with the symphony in the scholarship concert. Clarinetist Amy Ivey plays von Weber's Concerto Number 2, an_d pia- nist Andrew Camacho ls he9:.i:d m the

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Scholarship concert Sunday SA:-.1 DIEGO - The Sr Ros ·i Music Scholarship Fund Concert will be held at the Umversity of San Diego, Sun- day, Apnl 29 at 4 p.m. in Camino Theatre, .. General admission is $4, students, semors and m1hta~y, $3. Ticket. may be purchased at the door. For mformat1on call 291-6480, Ext. 4427. Sponsored by the USO Department of Fine Arts, the concert benefits the mu ic scholarship fund.

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F.st. 1888 '--------~-~~- Law School News 295.J Rebecca Kuzins New USO Program Studies Mexican Law -

an Diego, Thursday, April 26, 1984

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T HE San Diego State University Ambassadors ~ill s nsor a "Summer Daze" brunch a~d fashion show Saturday on the Hepner Hall patio on cam- us. Clayton Brace, general manage~ of KGTV, and Mary ~Ii~ Hill, SDSU athletic directo~, will be hon~red guests. Proceeds from brunch will benefit a scholarship fund and campus program for disadvantaged youth. The brunch will begin at 11 a.m. Tickets are $15 each and can be reserved by phoning 2~ or 265-6336. The USD school of nursing will be bene le~ from Saturday's first ball in the new Hotel Inter-Continen~l. A champagne reception al 7 p.m. will be followed by~!:; and dancing. Three dance floors have been cons c for the event, expected to attract mor~ than 7~ gues~. Tickets are $250 each. For more information, p one Maggie Mazur at 698-1156.

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The University of San Diego Law School and the largest university in Mexico have joined forces in a program designed to en- hance the understanding of both countries' legal systems. Under the terms of an agreement approved last month, the law school and the National Autonomous Univer- sity of Mexico

opinions and other data. Located in Mexico City, UNAM Is the world's largest univ-ersity with more than 300,000 students. Vargas said about 30,000 students are enrolled In its law school, which offers the Mexican equivalent of a Juris doc- tor degree as well as masters and doctorate degrees and legal speciality programs. When Vargas is not busy coordinating the exchange program between the two univer- sities, he and other staff members of the Mexico-United States Law Institute are or- ganizing a project aimed at encouraging Hispanic high school students to better ap- preciate the American legal system. The in- stitute plans to send about 20 Mexican- American law students from USD into high schools in San Diego, National City, Chula Vista, and San Ysidro this fall to explain the role Hispanlcs lawyers and judges nave played within the American legal commu- nity. Vargas said he hopes the program will "get Mexican-American high school stu- dents excited and stimulated about a legal career. 'Out of half a million lawyers in the United States, only 2percent are either Mex- ican-Americans, Asians, or Indians.'• The law students and other participants in the program, whom Vargas said include a number of Hispanic judges and lawyers from the San Diego area, also may describe the legal system to the parents of Mexican- American high school students. "Many of them have a negative idea about lawyers and judges," said Vargas. "We will work with the judges and try to change that image." ••• VAN DE KAMP AWARD: Attorney Gen- eral John Van de Kamp has received the 1984 St. Thomas More Medallion from Loyola Law School's honor society. Van de Kamp, 47, was Los Angeles County District Attorney for seven years before being elected state attorney general in 1982. He was presented the award at a ceremony held April 1 at the Biltmore Hotel. The award commemorates the 16th century English scholar and lawyer. • ••• FEMINIST FIRST: It may not rank with passage of the Equal Rights Amendment, but the Columbia University School of Law has struck a small blow toward greater equality for women. After a year of planning by ~e school's women's association, a por- trait of Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg has been hung on the school's walls, the first portrait of a woman to be hung alongside the pictures of 36 male legal scholars. A member of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D,C., Ginsburg was the founder of the Women's Rights Project of the American Civil Liber- ties Union and has led numerous court bat- tles against sexual discrimination. She graduated first in her class at Columbia's law school in 1959 and 13 years later became the first tenured women law professor there.

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

Vlsalla, CA (Tulare Co.) Times Delta (Cir. 6xW. 20,137)

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2 Iw~caust childr~n 1 will be study topic Children who escaped the Nazis of World War II will~ the focus of a two-day synposiurn next week at the ve,D>.it)c. o1..Si.lJl.Piego . . ,, The symposium on "Child Survivors of the Holocaust, scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday at the Douglas F. Manchester Executive Conference Center, will feature a keynote address by Dr. Sarah Moskovitz, who has studi~ the lives of 24 children who escaped the murder by Nazis of 6 million European Jews. The program, sponsored by the National_ Conference of Christians and Jews, will include presentations by Mosko- vitz on her research into the psychological impact of the Nazi terror on the adult lives of child survivors. Iri addition, the films "Camera of My Family" and "Children of the Holocaust" will be shown. . . Amarriage, family and child therapist, Moskov1~z IS a .professor of human development and counseling _m .e ·Department of Educational Psychology at Califorrua State University, Northridge. In 1977, she began following up on the lives of 24 child survivors who came to England as youngsters at the e~d of World War II. Now in midlife, their stories are told 10 her recent book "Love Despite Hate: Child Survivors of the Holocaust and Their Adult Lives," which challenges the current notion that severe emotional disability neces- sarily follows early childhood trauma. Moskowitz has been awarded a grant from Cal State Northridge to videotape surnvors' lif~ stories, t~e only d?Cumentation project focus10g exclusively on child s~ v1vors. /

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Gall-Cruickshank Cheryl Ann Cruickshank and Teran John Gall were married March 17. th R The wedding ceremony was performed by e. ev. Thomas J. Pastuska at the Fir~t Congregational Church in Santa Barbara. A reception was held at the Santa Barbara Biltmore Hotel. .d 1 The bride is a daughter of tr. and Mrs. Davi Mt. Cruickshank of Visalia. She ra~uated fro~ . . Wh'tney High School, the Umvers1ty of California, • I Barbara and Northwestern School of_ D_en- f:f ~ygiene in Chicago, Ill. She is a dental hyg1ems~ Mr and Mrs. John Gall llf Santa Rosa ar~ pare~ . of th~ bridegroom. He graduate_d from the Umver~1t'i of S n Diego, Northwestern Umvers_1ty Dental S~ oo in ci1cago and the University of Mmnesota Resident Dental School. D · St · h Brides- Matron of honor was Mrs. enms re1c . maids were Lora Ricca, Karen Gregory, Carol!11 Johnson, Mrs. Robert Van Vorhi and Mrs. John G1b- bo~;·t Connor served as best man. Groomsmen were Cre Karr Scott Keith, Geoff Coster, G~ry Gall, brot1er of ihe bridegroom; and Keith Cruickshank, brother of the bride. .. 1 h Following a honeymoon in _Hawau, the coupe ave e tablished a home in San Diego.

SAN DIEGO UNION

LOS ANGELES TIMES APR 7 l984

APR 2 9

LOS ANGELES TIMES

SAN DIEGO UNION APR 2 9 1984

Foanden I Gallery: "Senior Ex- hibition," works by Uruversily of San Dtego graduating art maiors, through May 21. Uruversity of San Diego. Weekdays. noon to 5 p.m

APR 2 7 1984 FOUNDERS GALLERY (Umverstty of San Diego), "Class of '84," an exhibition of studio projects by 16 graduating students. will open with a reception from 7 to 10 tonight and show through May 21. Gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m. Monday through Fnday and until 9 p.m. Wednesday.

USD CHORUS AND OR~TRA - The University of San Diego Chorus and members of the orchestra, conducted by Paul Carmona, will present a Spring Choral Concert at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Camino Theater, USD. USD SYMPHONY - The University of San Diego Symphony, conducted by Henry Kolar, will perform works by Weber Mozart, Couperin-Milhaud and Dvorak, with clarinetist Amy Ivey and pianist Andrew Camacho, for the Sr. Rossi Music Scholarship Fund Concert at 4 p.m. today in the Camino Theater, USO.

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