News Scrapbook 1986

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

JUN 261986

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Measles hots to be required roof of i nization ordered starting in spring semester I ir

spring semester next year, said Carter At USD, Thomas F. Burke, vice president for student affairs, said that even though the university is not requiring vaccmation as a condition of enrollment, all students will receive a card recommending vacci- nation. "Any student who does not return the card or seeks exclusion for relig- ious or other reasons will be told that in the event of an outbreak of mea- sles on the campus, they will be sus- pended from attending until the out- break is over," Burke said. SDSU officials say there I no evi- d nee that any danger is connected with being immunized more than once, and students who are unsure of thc1r vaccination history are advised to have one as a precaution. Campus offlc1als said they will particularly target students from the que tionable 1957-67 decade, students living in halls of residence, those who attended school outside California and the nalton, and students enrolled m nur ing or doing field work in ele- mentary schools. The incubat10n period for red mea- sles 1· 10 to 12 days from the first exposure and the person is infectious from the first exposure until five days after any rash has gone. German measles usually is milder than red measles and the illness usu- ally lasts only three days, SOS medical officers said.

adc were given a vaccine that did not provide lifetime protection, or were vaccinated at too early an age (be- fore their first birthday) for it to be effective," ·aid Mattie Carter, nurse -~ciali t at the SDSU student health ervice center. Mor than one-third of all German m I ca e occur 10 college-age student , and tho_e 10fccted can ex- perience er10u · ·ide effects mclud- mg cverc ear infe lion·, encephali- tis (brain inflammation) and even defith, Carter said. Both rubcola and rubella are high- ly contagious, according to SDSU au- thor1t1e . La t year at lea t three stu- he U.. from m asles, th y aid In re pon c to the seriousness of th 10feclion, a late law 10 1981-82 required all students to be vaccinat- ed again t measles before being al- lowed to attend high school in Cali- fornia, accord10g to Judy Beck, su- pervisor of nursmg for the San Diego t.:mf1cd School District. Rut Beck 1111 advi. es all students to check their own medical records becau ·e some tudents might have ..fallen through the cracks." or been ucluded for religious or other rea- son· t the time of their high school attend nee, he aid. At San Diego Sta e, students will be allowed to attend classes in the fall without a vaccination, but no un- vacc10ated student will be allowed to attend etas ·es beginning with the

Los Angele s . CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Daily Journal (Cir. D. 20,433) UUN 2 61986

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Briefcase ~1--" Hidden Hills lawyer Kelly O'Brien will be installed as president of the San Fernando Valley Women Lawyers' Association on July 31. O'Brien said that she will try to coordinate monthly meetings and seminars that will not only he of interest to experienced women lawyers, but to new lawyers as well. "The programs will be something of educational value that they could take out of a meeting and use in their office or courts the following day," O'Brien said. O'Brien said that the association will try to meet the needs of everyone. "Some of our

at the Rio Grande Restaurant, 6:30 p.m. Norene Scott, a legal research lawyer for Ventura County, will speak to the group on changes in legal procedures which go into ef- rect on July 1. Reservations to Laurie Kuhn (805) 654-0911 or (805) 656-0055. The South Central Bar Association will present scholarships to five outstanding high school students from the Compton area to- day at the Carson Community Center, 801 E. Carson St., noon. Richard Butwell, president of California State University, Dominquez Hllls, will he the guest speaker. Award winners are: Latl• sha Mares and Flora Ruiz, of Dominguez High School; Carrol Kemp, of Compton High School; and Robert Lyles and Stephanie Gardner, of Lynwood High School. Nonna C. Reidder has been installed as the 47th president of the Long Beach Law Auxll• iary. Reidder was born In Shanghai, China, and has also lived in Germany and Canada. She has a bachelor's degree from the University of Toronto and has worked In management in the electronics and publishing fields. Her husband, William A. Reldder, Is a senior deputy city attorney in Long Beach. Reidder said that the Law Auxlllary is- going to expand Its involvement in the com- munity and will work with the YWCA shelter for abused women and Casa de Blevenldos, a shelter for youth in crisis. Other installed officers are: Grace Utecht, president elect; Anne Johnson, program chairwoman; Linda Shannon, membership chairwoman; Tricia Schooley and Nancy Lewis, ways and means committee chairwo- men; Victoria Sutton, secretary; G. Berna- dine Kepka, treasurer; Janelle Dunnum and Ann Cantrell, court tours chairwomen; Jane Wallace, newsletter editor; Barbara Proc- tor, social committee chairwoman; Hazel Francis and Leone Landis, phllanthrophy chairwomen; and Barbara Gebb, state rep- resentative. The Eastern Bar Association or Los An- geles County has installed Milton Hadley as president. He is a partner in the Baldwin Park law firm of Hadley & Hadley. Other of- ficers installed were: Harold Hoffman, vice president; Thomas L. Ingram, secretary, and Patrick J. Sampson, treasurer. New trustees include: Jack H. Burtbe, Lee A. Coleman, Leslie Mann Jr., Sandra R. o/ ley, and Harry Seese. /

members handle families and children and their time is llm- ited to after hours to come to these meet- ings. Because of their added responsi- bilities, we need to make things efficient ror them so they can glean inrormatlon that is going to be useful to them," she

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

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

Kelly O'Brien

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said. Some of the programs that will be offered in the future, O'Brien said, will deal with how to handle an adverse attorney in a chambers conference, and a seminar on women leaders In government. "I would also like to have a seminar with other women professionals to learn how they market their businesses and how they handle their clients and how we can learn from them," she said. Another project that O'Brien has started Is a judicial ev'.tluation committee to recruit and screen women lawyers who wish to be- come judges. "With this process we can pre- sent and promote the very best candidates to the governor for appointments to the judi- ciary," O'Brien said. O'Brien Is a graduate of San Fernando Valley College of Law and has studied inter- national law at Oxford University, The Hague and the University o!-SaA.Dlego Law School'. She Is a past president of the Irish· • American Bar Association and president of the Greater Los Angeles St. Patrick's Day Parade. She is a member of the Federal Bar Association, the ABA, California Women Lawyers, and the Los Angeles County Bar Association, and Is listed In Who's Who in America. She is a solo practitioner in Hidden . Hills. O'Brien said she was the first person to open a business In Hidden Hills.

JUN 29 1986

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Wilham Pie university r la 10 t e University of San Diego. ha been named presi- dent of St John Fisher College, Ro- chester, NY He will be the first president of the Eastern university who 1s not a member of he Congregation of St. Basil, a rchg1ous order that founded the chool m Hl48 Pickett, 45 has been an adm10is- trator at U D since 1979. At St John Ft he1 College, he ucceeds the Rev. Patrick Braden and will assume h1 · new duties in August. · 1dent for

speak on terro~is International ~PM · l Western countries wf I be the focus : of an address by USO professor John l S. Chambers to the Rancho Bernardo chapter of the San Diego World Af- fairs Councli July 15. Chambers is a former Marine Corps officer and a published author in international relations. / against

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. 0. 127,454)

The Ventura County Legal Secretaries will bold a dinner meeting on Wednesday, July 9,

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

JUN 30 1986

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30 1986

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/4wjl!e vari~f topic~! co_urses wi~!Serle at the Umvers1ty of the Third Age (U3A), a program for those 55 years old and over, at the UniY..£!:S~ of San Diego July 14-31. Every . onday through Thursday morning, after an hour of light physi- cal exercise conducted by a fitness profess1onal, students wtll attend two one-hour lectures at the Manchester Conference Center auditorium. The cost to attend U3A is $55. Partici- pant. must provide their own trans- portation. For more information. call John Nunes at 260-4682 or Jacqui Hone at 260-4585.

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