News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) MAY 20 1988

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L,gislato1s Scale Back State Bar Dues, Discipline Plans; Key Vote Today

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attorney wrongdoing." He aimed particular criticism at the amend ment reqwnn notification of civil judgments mvolving , rather than ordinary, negli• gen . ''That doesn't happen," he said of gross negligence claims. ''That's why (bar officials) don't want the word 'gross' removed" One informed lcgislat.lve source who asked not to be identified said Presley agreed to the switch to gro negligence "to avoid a fight in committee" Presley aide Martin Pinon said the SB 1498 amendmen "pretty much ren~ (Hams's) desire . We took a lot of direction from him, and we did our best to satisfy hls concerns.'' Harns aid he made comments at one of the ions, but noted he has not seen the mended version of SB 1498. Hanis confirmed he will push to switch the authonty to ppoint the discipline monitor from the Attorney General's Office to the Leg- work

1Slature. Noting that the attorney general has no responsibility re'arding lawyer discipline, Harris said, "I don t know why the attorney general should be in there at all." One highly knowledgeable source who asked not to be identified said, "Elihu believes the monitor should be working for the Legislature He proposed that in the work session." According to the source, Presley disagrees with Harris' proposal, partly because the mon- itor already is required to report to the judicia- ry committees in the Assembly and Senate. Others skeptical of the idea note the change could politicize the monitor's position. Harris and Presley are negotiating to resolve their differences on the issue, said one in- formed source. Two possible alternative ap- pointing powers suggested by Presley, the source added, include the auditor general and the state Supreme Court. Harris said Presley has not communicated

those suggestions to him, but he left open the possibility of compromise. "It doesn't have to be the Legislature," he said. Steven Birdlebough, the lobbyist for the state Judicial Council, said he was unaware of any proposals to grant the high court the appoint- ing authority. He declined to comment on whether the council would support such a pro- posal, but noted the issue was discussed at the May 6 meeting of the council's Appellate Courts Committee. The Judicial Council declined to accept the appointing power when it was offered to them in 1986, the year the monitor's position was established under legislation authored by Presley. Said Fellmeth, "I don't care who appoints (the monitor) . I'm going to do the same job." Still, he expressed some concern about giv- ing the appointing power lo lawmakers. "I don't want to become a political football. It

(would give) them the power to remove me at will." And Birdlebough said, "There is some con- cern that it might not be appropriate for the Legislature lo do this." Special Assistant Attorney General Richard Jacobs said he has brought the issue to the attention of Attorney General John Van de Kamp, who appointed Fellmeth. Van de Kamp has taken no formal position, Jacobs noted. Several informed sources said Harris want- ed Van de Kamp to appoint former Santa Ana Democratic Assemblyman Richard Robinson to the monitor's position. Some speculated his move to strip the attorney general of the ap- pointing authority may be in retaliation for Van de Kamp's choosing Fellmeth, instead of Robinson. But Harris said, "My preference was not an issue" when Van de Kamp was ~g his decision because "I wasn't asked'

Graduation Education Student Assoclallon will hold a dinner and dance May 20, 6 p.m., at All Hallows parish hall, La Jolla. For more details, call 260-4538. Law School awards ceremony will be held May 20, 5 p.m., In the University Center. Call 260-4587. An art exhibit featuring water color artist EIieen Whitaker will continue through June 3 at Founder's Gallery. Whitaker Is one of three women members of the National Academy of Design. For details, call 260-4600, ext. 4261. School of Law commencement Is scheduled for May 21, 10:30 a.m., at the Torero Stadium. Reception follows In the University Center. Call 260-4527 for details. Baccalaureate Mass for undergraduates will be held May 21, 4 p.m., at the Torero Stadium. Graduate student commencement Is set for May 22, 10:30 a.m., Torero Stadium. Undergraduate commencement begins at 2:30 p.m. For further Information, call 260-4588 or 260-4800.

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

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Francisco. Faculty member Sue Lunbeck will deliver the final commencement address to 18 students receiving their juris doctorate degrees. Northrop University No spi!atet has -;-et been arranged for com- mencement ceremonies to be held Friday, June 24, at 7 p.m., at the Los Angeles Airport Marriott Hotel in Westchester. About four graduates will be given Jaw degrees. San Francisco Law School State Bar Association President P. Terry An- derlini, an alwnnus of San Francisco Law School, wiD. speak at the school's 75th com- mencement exercises on Sunday, May 22, at 4 p.m. The ceremony will be held at the Shera- ton-Palace Hotel and 37 students will receive law degrees. San Joaquin College of Law The school's 14th commencement ceremo- nies will be held May Tl at 7 p.m. at the Fresno Memorial Auditorium. The speaker and mas- ter of ceremonies will be Professor Oliver W. Wanger, also chairman of the college board. An estimated 26 students will receive their law degrees. Santa Barbara College or Law Santa Barbara County Bar Association Pres- ident Donald Boden delivered the 10th com- mencement address to 24 students on Saturday, May 14, at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse's mural room. University of La Verne College of Law, at San Fernando Attorney General John Van de Kamp will speak to about 50 graduates of the school on Saturday, May 21, at 4 p.m. at the University of Commencement ceremonies for 50 students receiving Jaw doctorates will be held Sunday, June 5, at 3 p.m. at the Wilshire Ebell Theater in Los Angeles. Delivering the address at the school's 20th commencement exercises will be law Professor Carin Clauss, with the Universi- ty of Wisconsin School of Law. Ventura College ol Law Carl Lowthorp, president of the Ventura County Bar Association, will speak to 39 gradu- ates on Saturday, May 21, at 1:30 p.m. at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Mandalay Bay in Ox- nard during the school's 16th annual com- mencement exercise. Western State Uoivecsit;y (~rton) Graduation ceremonies w· held Monday, May 30, at 2 p.m. at the Orange Cot1nty Per- forming Arts Center in Costa Mesa. An esti- mated 310 students will be graduated. A speaker has not yet been arranged, school offi- cials said. Western State University (San Diego) Commencement ceremonies will be held Sat- urday, May 28, at 10 a.m. at the Organ Pavilion in Balboa Park, San Diego. An estimated 120 students will be receiving their juris doctor degrees. A speaker has not yet been chosen. ./ La Verne Church of the Brethren. University of West Los Angeles

Go • iJkmejian will address 136 law school graduates on Saturday, May 21, at 2 p.m. at the school's 16th commencement exer- cises. The event will take place at the Odell McConnell Law Center parking lot, on the uni- versity's Malibu campus. &~nta Clara University School of Law ---U:S:-Rep. Ufflif>anetta, D-Monterey, deliv- ered the commencement address en Saturday, May 14, to about 240 students who received their law degrees in a ceremony in the Mission Gardens. Southwestern Univenlty School of Law Catifot xda Supreme Court Justice Edward A. Panelli will serve as the keynote speaker at the school's 73rd commencement ceremonies on Sunday, May 22, at 11 a.m. at the Pasadena Civic Auditoriwn. An estimated 204 students will receive their juris doctor degrees. Stanford University School of Law Commencement exercises will be held Sun- day, June 12, at 12:30 p.m. in Kresge Auditori- wn at Stanford. The speaker will be Patricia L. Bryan, chosen by the graduating class to r~ ceive the 1988 John Bingham Hurlbut Award for excellence in teaching. Bryan, professor of Jaw at the University of North Carolina, served as visiting professor in 1986-87. University ol California, Davis, School of Law Los Angeles attorney and feminist activist ylorja Alli:ed will deliver the school's 20th com- mencement address on Saturday, May 21, at t:30 p.m. in the school's Recreation Hall. There are 153 candidates slated to receive their juris doctorate degrees. UCLA School of Law California Supreme Court Justice John A. Arguelles will be the principal speaker at grad- uation ceremonies to be held May 22 at 4 p.m. in Dickson Court on the UCLA campus. The school will honor 303 students who will receive their juris doctor degrees and 12 the master of laws degree. University 0£ San Diego School of Law "John Hart Ely, ®an of St-&nford University's School of Law, will deliver the speech at the school's 31st commencement exercises to be held Saturday, May 21, at 10:30 a.m. in the campus football stadiwn. An estimated 290 stu- dents will receive juris doctor degrees; 18 their masters in comparative law and 51.their mas- ter of laws degrees. arcus Kaufman will de ·ver the commencement ad- dress on Sunday, May 22, at 6 p.m. at the Masonic Auditoriwn in San Francisco. About 165 students will receive their juris doctor degrees. USC Law Center Attorney Aulana Peters, a commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission, spoke to about 200 students who received their juris doctor degrees Friday, May 13, at the school's 105th commencement ceremony held at USC's Bovard Auditorium. Whittier College of Law Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Na- ~e a orrua Supr

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. / Mir~~r bass not accepted as record The Dep~ent of Fish and Game ------------ standout Lynn Kanuka Williams of has decided not to accept the "lead- LOCAL BRIEFS Canada will run in the 1,500 meters lined" 21-pound, 10-ounce Florida at the Michelob Invitational on June bass Sandy DeFresco caught at Lake start regenerating tissue ar~nd the 25 at Balboa Stadium. Miramar two months ago as a state lead lump. Williams was the 3 000-meter r~ord fo; the species . . - Rolla Williama bronze medalist in the 1984 Olympic There s nothmg official about our Games in Los Angeles and is also decision," said Almo Cordone, fisher- Women's tennis - San Diego world-class runner at 1,500 meters. ies management supervisor for the State's Julie Tullberg and Dorey There is a chance Williams will Department o!, Fish_and c,;ame i_n Brandt beat Daniele Jones and Mon- face America's Mary Decker Slaney Sacramento. We Just kicked 1t iek Margoli of Oklahoma State 4-6, 6- in the Michelob meet. Slaney has an- around, _five of us in the department, 4, 6-2 in the second round of the nounced she'll compete but has not and decided that because of that arti- NCAA Division I championships at decided if she'll run 800 or 1500 me- ficial substance (a 21 1 2-pound lead UCLA. ters. ' weight) inside the fish, it couldn't be Brandt and Tullberg earned All- considered (as a record). Without America status by advancing to the that weight, it was under the existing quarterfinals. They will play Flori- state mark of 21-3 1/5." da's Shaun Stafford and Holly Dan- The official arbiter for game-fish forth today The Gators twosome ad- records is the International Game vanced by upsetting fourth-seeded Fish Association in Fort Lauderdale, Tamaka Takagi and Sonia Hahn of Fla. The world record for Florida Kentucky 6-3, 6-2. bass is 22-4 set in 1932. "I phoned Mrs. DeFresco about our decision," Cordone said. USIU golf - Aztecs banquet - Chana Perry was honored as the most valuable player and Jessica Haynes was se- lected as the most improved player at the SDSU women's basketball ban- quet Monday night at the Old Town Ramada Inn.

The U.S. Internation• al women's team has received an in- vitation to the NCAA tournament, to be held May 25-28 at New Mexico State in Las Cruces. The Gulls are seeded 13th. Three USIU players are ranked in the top 65 in the nation: Allison Shap• cott, a Briton who won the USIU In- vitational (24th); Helen Alfredsson (55th); and Tupito Walker (65th). Shapcott's sister, Susan, was ranked 50th, but left the team last month and returned to play in Eu- rope.

Albacore lecture - Albacore mi- gration patterns will be discussed by biologist Michael Laurs tonight at the "San Diego and the Sea" seminar in Salomon Lecture Hall on the USD cam1ms. Laui's;"of the National Marine Fishery Service in La Jolla, operates a tuna forecasting service for the De- partment of Commerce. The 7 o'clock seminar, sponsored by the San Diego Oceans Foundation, is open to the public. There is no charge, but parking permits are re- quired and may be obtained at the campus security office. Details are available at 237-1221. _____ ,..d

"I'm just sorry that wasn't a 2½- pound fish it swallowed," said De- Fresco, who was at her job yesterday as concessionaire at the Miramar store. DeFresco caught the bass March 14 on a black plastic worm. Subse- quently, when the fish was being pr~ pared for mounting, a flat 2-pound, B- ounce diving-belt weight was found in its stomach. DFG biologist Larry Bottroff exa- mined the fish and discovered the weight had been inside the fish long enough for its natural processes to

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

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San Francisco, CA (San Francisco Co.) Chronicle (Cir. D. 630,954) (Cir. Sat. 508,500) MAY 1 : 1gp0 Jltt..', P. C, B

Tomorrow, Stumway, who recent- ly retired as chairman of the board and chief executiv officer of The Signal Companies, will peak to 252 graduate udents tn ceremonies be- ginnm at 10:30 a.m. Ten of the 252 tudents will receive doctoral de-

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All Oars Point to Sacramento 'ByJa~~~ Special to The Chronicle Sacramento The largest collegiate sport weight eights will have their trips funded , through private donations. The second- and third-place

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Qualifying begins at 7:30 a.m. Saturday. One women's division ti- tle will be decided Saturday after- noon, but the remaining classifica- tion winners will be determined be- ginning at 7:30 a.m. Sunday. All Pac-10 schools, except Arizo- na and Arizona State, will be repre- sented in a variety of four- and eight-member teams in freshmen, novice, lightweight and heavy- weight divisions. Among the small schools enter- ed are USF, Santa Clara, St. Mary's, Sacramento State, UC Davis, UC Ir- vine, UC San Diego, !Jniversity of San Di 6 go, San Diego State, UC San- ta Bar ara, Mills College, Cal Mari- time, Loyola Maramount, Pacific Lutheran, Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo and Humboldt State. The top three teams will quali- fy for the Intercollegiate National Championships next month in Cin- cinnati. But only the winning crew in the men's heavyweight and light-

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Filipino cardinal to bring message of unity to S.D. By Dan E. P itre football stadium in Linda Vista.

teams will be invited to the nation- als at their own expense. To defray costs, door-to-door solicitations, bake sales and car washes are not uncommon practices among crew members. Unbeaten UCLA, defending Pac-10 champion, is favored in the men's varsity eights, with Cal and Stanford expected to be in close pursuit. "At this point, I would predict that UCLA will win with open wa- ter," said Jacobus, referring to at least a boat-length victory for the Bruins. "But in this kind of event, you never know." The Cardinal and Golden Bears have beaten each other once during individual meets this season and al- so have exchanged finishing posi- tions during invitational regattas.

.with the smallest budget will be ho ~cased en masse this week• end at the Pacific Coast Rowing Championships at Lake Nato- ~a. la miles east of Saeramento. The seventh annual regatta, which combines the championships of the Pacific-IO Conference and Western Intercollegiate Rowing As- sociaton, will include more than 60 men's and women's teams. More than 1,400 rowers representing 30 schools will participate. None of the teams receives sub- stantial school funding, nor is the sport NCAA sanctioned or financial- ly supported. "At least half of the teams are on shoestring budgets," said Jay Ja- cobus, the regatta's racing director. "And most of the rest are struggling t o survive ."

PUSO Philippines, an organization assisting charitable projects through the church in that country. Reservations at $60 per person can be made by writing to PUSO Philippines, P.O. Box 881891, San Diego, CA 92108. Proceeds from the dinner will help fund charitable projects in the Philippines which PUSO helps support. In a message released in conjunction with his upcoming pastoral visit to San Diego, Cardinal Sin told Catholics ofthe diocese, "You have chosen the theme 'One Bread, One Body, One People' for this visit, aware of the great need for oneness among us.

"We are not simply individuals, only concerned for ourselves .... As God's people, however, we belong to one community, and we are bound to one another in the Lord. "The invisible unity of the believing community - Christ's body, the church - becomes visibly present each time we gather to celebrate the Eucharist,'' the cardinal wrote. "The Eucharist invites us (to be one) with Christ and one another. This is why the Eucharist is the perfect sign of unity .. Cardinal Sin said he hopes his viiit will "foster even more the spirit of unity Please turn to ge 5

ince the stadium can only hold 5,000 per ons for the outdoor liturgy, free tic et~ are being is ued through the 98 pan hes of the dioce~. So Filipino and non-Filipino perliOns mter st d m attending the Mass should contalt their parish. Following the Muss, "An Evening with His Eminence Jaime Cardinal Sin" f!"aturing dinner and dancing will begin at 7 p.m. ,It the San Diego M.,rriott Hotel and Manna, 333 West Harbor Drive Some 800 persons can be accommodated for the dinner, which is being ponsored by Bishop Maher and

with 81 hop Mah~r 111d rruny of th,: pr1e.uofth d,oce at4p m.Saturday, Junr, 18, al 1he University of an Diei,to

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