News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, CA l San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) OCT 4

1988

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573)

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Managing InheritedWealth: Attor ey To Lead Seminar qe,'5 J h d • v har holders at \\ l'S t , • & s h ·u h un oid ,blc cit n

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

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

1988

OCT

1988

OCT 6

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573)

OCT 6

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

1988

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,John ton, Turnqu1. t 11r ~ura Coolc:i,' Ed Kitros_ser, 11nd Hohcrt Athy. CoolPy Joined th firm 111 1983, pec1ul1ZPs 111 real e tat p,,rtner hip und u,d,v1clual tux pl nnrn . Kitrn (•r .111mPd thr firm 111 19 5, ,md hi empha 1s 1s 111 • ,. m1

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:JJJ ;_yj . nal University USv l~erna~~he Unive2si~f women defeate 15 15-1 ' -5, San Diego 1~1~,:~dia· Johnson led 15-10 at US · 26 kills. Cindy the Gulls with . and Stephanie Kehter had 2d3 ilg~ists for USIU Milbrandt ha Conners had RaLS had 22 kills, JiyTeresa Myers 28 digs as setter an (4-7). s (5-9). Angie For the Triton

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OCT 6

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Propo itlona, the recent debate bet,.een Ralph Nader and law profe sor Jeffrey O"Connell, with add1t1onal discus ion by repr entat,ves from the in urance 1nJusrry and othtr interested 1 u~, w, II be broadcast over local ~able channels at various time, betwe n now and election day. TI,e first broadcast is for viewers of outhwcstem Cable, Sunday, October 9, from 6 p.m to 8 p.m., •n public-acccs Channel 15. For ub tnbers to other cable systems, •he program will be aired on Octt•ber 30. The pon or of the b t ._u D, •Lill preparing a ran npt of the di cussion. For more mfonnat ,on, call 260-4682 or 695-3110 ..i<_l.fg<;; ~-- -

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red twice fort e USD. Jeff Betts scoMarcelo Balboa, A~tecs (10-l-l l· te Kyle Wh1tle- Bnan Craft Net~~lda completed more and Eric SDSU's scoring.

Coronado, CA (San Diego Co.) Journal (Cir. W. 5,237) OCT 6

1988

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oint man: It didn't take a TV debate. The Dan Quayle phenomenon hail a ready

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begun to seep 10to our culture. At the local law firm of Lorber, Grady, Farley & Volk, the partners received a resume this week from one David Glenn Bebb, who expects to win his juris doctorate from USD spring. Under "CLASS STANDING," Bebb writes: "'Less than stellar' - Dan Quayle, Campaign 1988."

B:t 0) q '5c=:;- "'For advanced students, CHS offers a class full of challenges • Journa1 Report er usan Thomas

ors sift through teacher ndations. They also talk previous teachers from ents' !0th-grade year. though there is no 1 grade point average, must have taken at least ~rs class. said that when the pro- an some students didn't ; intensity and eventaully said, talk among themselves their own counseling." of this, he said, very few program. 'hile the classes require :>n and determination, d Moore hesitatingly ad- f only study about an d a half on a normal ighf. Both actively par- n school activities as do r students working for diploma, they said. IM o ore and Bejar ~s is only part of their hool tenure. Moore is out. Now, he

in the two-year program at Coronado High School. They must enroll in six subjects including English, a foreign language, history, an experimental science, mathematics and either computer science, a second science, a second language or further math . All classes m the J.B. program are at honors or Ad- vanced Placement level and of the six subjects, students must take at least three for a two-year period. "There's a real pressure on schools to become more rigorous," said George Arnall, vice principal at Coronado Higr School. The school was .the se- cond school in the county to instaJI the program five years ago. ow five schools use the program in the county (CHS, Vista, San Diego, Rancho Buena Vista and Bonita Vista high schools), 19 in Califor- nia and several hundred throughout the United States.

It ', "zero" period at Coronado High School - the time before fir I period when most students eat breakfast, fim h la~t minute homework or simply hang around m group "aiting for the school day to begin . But several tudent triving for the International , Baccalaureate (I.B.) diploma wake up t heir minds at 6:30 a.m . to figure out "how ·e know what we know." While the "Theory of Knowlege" class is open to all, it' just one of the rigorous re- quirement s for those pursuing the LB. diploma. The I. B. program strives to breed a modern day "Renais ance·' per~on. If the program does what it aims to , it grooms good students mto those who hold an indepth understanding of various college- level ubjects, a global perspective and a general well-rounded knowledge. Approximately 40 juniors and seniors participate

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co,) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000)

OCT 6

1988 . .

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The hig insurance proposition,; d<'bate between R 1lph NadC'r and no.fault "fath,•r" ,lt·tfi,,y o·connell that drl'w I,000 Pl'ople to USD &·pt. 18 will ~how on Joe~ TV Southwestern C.1ble broad casts 1t Sunday, 6'l0-8:30 p.m., - No . 7, 6::30-8:30 p.m It will also H/Jnw Oct. ,'JO, 9 I I p.m. on Cox, Dun nsion, Amrricar Cal D.1111 Is ,,rf, bad ai1d ,Julia; cable . The d,,bate rn,· ud,•d infor. mative modLrating by Howard 1\1i1Jer and que'l[Jnng by,· again "" Oct :,J, 9 I I p.m., and

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only the "most motivated kids" rogram because it's very demanding.

Arnall SaJ enroll in the

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the program wa tnai ll wvu1u provide "some additional focus." And senior Rafael Bejar half laughingly aid the program was heavily pushed. But Bejar agreed the program offers a lot of benefits. L. - On the strictly academic side of , the program, I.B. students "get l the best teachers," Bejar said. nd, he said, the students are ex- empt from the required govern- ment class. Though the program is relatively new and just beginning to receive recognition from many schools, the most selective col- leges look favorably on the I.B. diploma, said Maureen Phalen, assistant director of undergraduate admissions at the Univi.rsity of San Die o USO . • Phalen saTd SD is currently investigating the program and will probably begin honoring it once it finishes the investigation. -ri..A • • · • f California

said. Because often teach more than an LB. class, their knowledge and motivation "'ill carry o, er to the students not enrolled in the I.B. program, he said. "It elevates the standards not just on one level," Arnall said. Along with the students who work diligently, those on the other side of the lectern spend copious amounts of time prepar- ing for an l.B. class. History teacher Sandy Ferguson sa teaching an LB. class require~ lot more work than teaching, regular class. "The most diffict is the depth and the mre rigorous program. I had to lea1 more to move along through te material at the necessary pace. "It's made me a much bettr teacher," Ferguson said. It's als:> nice to work with students wm are more disciplined, he said. "Quite simply, it's a lot more work." Away from the classroom teachers

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• ·······-tedStudent Body presi- dent, runs on the cross country team and plays soccer. Both par- ticipate in the Youth-to-Youth program, the Roundtable Club and leadership class. Bejar also works." And Moore said her parents sometimes restrict her activities. to do all this, they said, one needs to have a certain amount of natural ability to ab- sorb what's said in the cl.f!lsroom. In orde1

<,)...,._ .............._.,, ·-· -- people from all over the world and had an African Zulu she met spend time with her over Christmas last year. And Bejar, a Coronado student whose family orginally hails from Uruguay, said during his trip he met for the first time other students from Uruguay. The program however is not for everyone. Before students enter the program, ad- • ........ ., -

local trial Juwyer Ha~ve for Prop 100, P1op. 10 Harve~ RosenJ1cld, 104 Allen Kat?. and in.surance !"Pp Tom Skornia for I 06.

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

OCT 6

1988

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Conference to f~cus on roles and behav1~or DIEGO_ T ·zation for SAN ua e le Study of Commu~ n, Lang g t • d Gender will host its 11th annual an . 6-9 at the Hacienda Hotel conference ct. . and the University of San Diego. S 65 "ender and language omc "' 11 d communicanon experts from co egeSs an . . h the Urnted tates universities throug out I d will explore the changing roes an behaviors of men and women.

San Diego, CA (San Oiego_Co.l Evening T2r~b~G~I (Cir.D.1 • QCi 7

1988

knowledges ·n the I.B.

San Diego, CA (San Diego C~.) San Diego Uni on (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S . 341,840) OCT 7 1988

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L 10 11 Grov CA (San 01 go Co . ) (Cir. W. t, 884)

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Spring Valley, CA (San Diego Co.) . Spring Valley Bulletin (Cir. W. 2,708)

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,;z~d By Ron Roach"'

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The two-year undercover "S t ing" ration involved dummy compa- - nles set up by the _FBI_ to lo~by fo~ cal-interest leg1slation while g1~ ing thousands of dollars to lawma . o s

OCT 6

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1988

A little light

as !1Jore timely disclosure of hono- rarmms received. Proposftlon..73 ap- prove~ by voters last Ju9e, u:nits speak10g fees to $1 000 per event but there are those wh~ advocate a total • Higher salaries for state legisla- tors, who will be making more than

OCT 6

Tribune Sacramento Bureau Chief SACRAMENTO - When Cah~orl nia legislators r~turn to theh~ap:~1 for the new session Dec. 5, t y. . be faced with demands fro~ w1~h!n and without to clean up their ac in t:•o wake of a scandal-~lag?ed 1 ;8 8 · ·As the federal investigation o_ car- rupt1on in the Legislature continb~f~: California Common Cause, a p~ interest lobby, already ~as dee ~.r:e !a,-re,ebi,g a,d eompreher sive state government ethics pac - . Jans to pursue what it calls wood says lawmakers will instigate their, own house~cleaning proposa~ adding that it will be good for ~eed to also consider concepts deve p When the .L~gLS!ature ad3ourn~I the 1987-88 session on Sept. 1, th_~r and U.S. attorney w_ere through material seized i,n an_Aug. as raid of four legislators off1c~ well as those of some staff mem by others. . . age" ever submitted to a st lawmaking body. p 'de t A spokesman for Senate Pro Tern David Roberh, .

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Though there have been no arrests and a federal grand jury has not re: ban. .

It is an anomaly of the Califor- nia Constitution that a judge of a court of record may accept a part-time teaching position at a private institution such as the la'! school of tl:J..t Universitr_ of S[.n Diego:liut not at a public in- stitution such as UCLA. Prop. 94, which seeks to allow judges to accept teaching posi- tions at public law schools as well, is one of three propositions on the November ballot dealing t with judicial matters. s Prop. 94 would afford students at public schools the same P chance to benefit from this valu- 4, able source of knowledge and ex- I, pertise as those in private n< schools. Judges would be permitted to teach onJr if it did not interfere

~The '88 Vote Prop. 92 deals with the Com- mission on Judicial Performance, a nine-member body comprised with their judicial duties and only mainly of judges and attorneys, outside their normal working which investigates charges hours. against judges and recommends

turned indictments, at leaS t fou[ lei islators have been r~po~ted od -~

subjects of the inveshgat10n, a\ ~s ~40,_000 a year in December, with

hnuts on benefits and income from

d may be weeks or months before I

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concluded.

t Chairman Geoffrey Cowan of Cali- . • Restrictions on political activi- !"'ouae_ed "'' J,ei,d;og food-

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Is there a danger that part-

to the Su-

disciplinary action

interfere preme Court, including censure or removal from the bench. It

teaching might

time

witb a judge's regular duties? No, say supporters led by Assembly- man Peter R. Chacon. Judges are cy. regulated by the Canons of Judi- cial Conduct. They require that a

does its work in complete secre-

Passage of Prop. 92 would let a

little light into this critical area judge place primary emphasis on of government by enabling an his or her judicial position, or accused judge or 'the commission face removal from office. to request that the proceedings Another judicial measure, be opened to the public. Prop. 91, would raise the status of California's judges enjoy a rep- justice utation for integrity. Only five courts to that of a court of faced any formal charges in 1987. record. This means their deci- But all are ultimately account- sions would be fully respected able to the public. Prop. 92 would and enforced outside the state ensure that justice is not only and within the federal court sys- done, but is also seen to be done. tem, which is not the case at We urge YES votes on Props. present. 91, 92 and 94. .,,,.> At the same time, the qualifi- ,---~------..,./" each of California's 76

s1 i;i ernmental institutions. Se_rious con~ .

Preventing high-level public of- Is _from leaving their posts and .. ed1_ately going to work lobbying !eg1slative· and administrative bod- ies. Com!1Jon ~ause, which sponsored a campaign fmance reform initiative Proposition 68, on last June's ballot' also wants to study campaign reform measures of that initiative, which voters approved, but which was es- sential!,: scuttled by passage of Proposition 73 with more votes. An assessment of needed Jegislation in this area must wait until expected court action has concluded with re- gard to the rival initiatives.

sideration of and action on Please see ETHICS: A-17, r;'ol. 1

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cations for justice court judges would be raised to the level re- quired of municipal-court judges. Once again, this is such a logical and uncontroversial measure that it won unanimous approval in the Legislature.

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