News Scrapbook 1982-1984

Chula VI ta , CA (S n Diego Co.) St r News (Cir. 2xW. 12,544) (Cir. S . 12,7391 F

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business News (Cir. 2xM. 3,500) EB 13

Escondido, CA Daily Times Advocate

LOS ANGELES ii MES

(Cir. D. 31 ,495) (Cir. S. 33,1 59)

FEB 1 Z

FEB 16 1984

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's P C. B. f. >1 . 1888 C9,.~ !.{t..scheduled in SD ~&Wal, international recording artist and member of l'Academie du Disque Francais, will per- form at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Hahn School of Nurs- ing, University of~n Diego. Mr. Kerval's program will include a selection of songs and anecdotes per- formed In French with guitar accompaniment. Alli- ance Francaise Is a non-profit organization dedicat- ed to the promotion of French language and culture. Annual membership is $15 a person or $20 a couple. Admission is free to members; $5 for non-members and $1 for students. For more information, call Jeanne Rigsby at 279-5158.

. om letion-Construction worker NfeaM""J ~old:n puts finishing touches ~n th~ or . . C ter at the Urnvers1- extenor of the Conf~~nc$ 1 e;_million. 17 ,600- tv of San D1eg?: e s desi ned by Tucker, square-foot facility wa \ 15th Century Sadler & Associates to reflect t e Spanish-style architecture of the campus.

Pacific Beach, CA (San Diego co.) North Shores Edition (2xM. 18,500)

FEB 5 1

, c11tiv~ i"onfo-r UJD's executive centeF1 is ·iTharing completion ll,,rt'tp, CB / ,tiSSX

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Con truction is nearing com- plct1on on the Sl.6 million Douglas F . .:\lanchestcr Ex- ecutive Conference Center at the Unhersity of San Diego. The .'.\I.II. Golden . is sen·- ing as general contractor for the two-story, multi-purpose building. Scheduled for com- pletion in February 1984, the center will include a 230-seat

auditorium, four large con- ference rooms and office space for the university. Plans call for the auditorium to QC used as a lecture hall. The conference rooms, intend- ed primarily as instruction areas, will also be available for business groups in the sum- mer months to generate fund · he university, according to Dr. Author Hughes, president of the universily. Architects Tucker, Sadler and Associates. designed the 17,600-square-foot building to reflect the existing 15th Cen- tury Spanish-style architec- ture of the campus. Special architectural details are being incorporated into the design of the building, in- cluding hand-crafted dE:corative moldings, arched windows and sculptured panels. The M.H. Golden Co. is also serving as general contractor for Olin Hall, a $2.7 million facility under construction for the University of San Diego's School of Business. and helping smalf businesses get started." Block's own firm specializes in adminis- trative law, which grew out of his experience as a deputy attorney general for the Califor- nia Coastal Commission. At one point, Block was representing almost 25 percent of the cases before the Coastal Commission he re- calls. Block is a graduate of Univez!stty of San Diego.ScQool of Law. He was appointed to the advisory board by Sen. David Roberti D-Hollywood, committee chatrman. ' The Marin County Bar Association re- cently selected its new president, Michael DD!ficy of San Rafael. Other newly installed officers are Marshall Krause, president- elec_t; Verna Adams, secretary; and David Freitas, treasurer. The 1984 directors In- clude Bram Bevis, Oak Dowling, Ken Mac- Donald, Mary Pougiales, and Charles Coyne. J. Ralph Thomas is the past presi- dent. A special one-day mini-trial seminar will be presented by the Los Angeles Trial Law- yers' Association March 3. Entltled "Ready for Plaintiff?" the all· day seminar will emphasize opening and closing statements, and direct and cross ex- minatlon. The mock trial format features 12 prominent Los Angeles plaintiff and defense attorneys in the adversarial roles they as- sume in the courtroom, according to event chairman and LA TLA Secretary Lawrence Grassinl. The LATLA's number is 487-1212. /

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'Trip to Vatican' comes to La Costa A major donation of91 Vatican paintings to the l'ni"Prsity of San Diego will touch both San Oi1 g;;ns and the rest of the country in a variety of ways "A Trip Thrnugh the Vatican" is a collection of watercolors and sepia drawings completed by Vernon Howe Bailey during a 1921-22 stay at the Vatican. He was the first artist ever to receive papal permis sion to paint the private quarters of the pontiff. After Bailey completed the series, it acquired a history of mystery and intrigue. Indi- viduals who sough t to profit from the paintings met sudden death. After repeated difficulties in promoting them, the paintings were fina lly per- manently stored ... until now. Plans for the collection include an exhibit a t the University; an "Invisible University" course . presented in homes throughout the country; a . nationally broadcast film; and a fo lio of high quality reproductions. The collection was donated by Mr. and Mrs. · Roy Edwards of Lomas Santa Fe, who acqu ired the paintings more than 20 years ago from one of Howe 's original underwr iters. The collection will first reach the public through a series of USD-sponsor ed "Invisible . University" courses . Georgie Sti llman , a nationally :-ecol" iwd aopraiser, ber.am.e an ex- pert on Bailey's career while assess ing the col- lection. She will present a lecture and slide show about the artist and collection in neighbor hoods throughout the county d uring February and March. Programs will be presented in La Costa • on Tuesday anct in Oceanside on March 14. • · Those interested in partic ipating should call Dr. Gil Brown at USD, 293-4523. An exhibit of selected p ieces from the collec- tion is scheduled at the un iversity in March, but exact dates have not ye t been set. Born in 1874, artist Ver non Howe Bailey was familiar to news pa per and magazine readers across the country in h is d ay. His indisputable forte was the illustration of great architecture; he was highly regarded for h is light hand in cap- turing the mood and feeling of famous build ings. Commissioned by the New York Sun to do 340 drawings entitled " I ntimate Sketches of New York," Bailey also worked fo r The Philade lph ia times, Boston Herald, Harper 's, Scribner's, and Collier's. In 1917, Bailey was the fi rst a rtist a u- thorized by the U.S. Navy to make d r awings of the navy yards and other war work centers. His works are now included in collections across the world , incl uding the Smithsonian Institution, t he National Library Museum in Madrid, the French War Museum in Paris, and the Vatican Library. When Georgie Stillman began her appraisal of th e collection, collectors' and curators' recollec- ti ons of the artist were hazy; little of his work had passed hands during recent years. But- partial- ly as a result of Stillmiin's sleuthi ng, partly as a result of the USD donation.and partly as a result ofthe collection of art from the Vatican now tour- ing the United States - interest in Bailey has surged . Some of that attention came from Algernon Valker, an award-winn ing filmmaker who has be~un a film on the Vati can and Bailey's work thc_,re that will be natwn ally broadcast when finished.

FEB 15 1984

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• ClydeGre~ "'J'S Greco a partner Clyde C. Greco Jr. has recently become a partner in the La Jolla law firm of Wiles, Circuit & Tremblay. He joined the firm as an associate in I 979 and currently practices general civil litigation and business law. Greco graduated magna cum laude from the University ~an DJ.ego SctiQol of Law. He attend- ed Duquesne University and graduated with honors from St. Vincent College.

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Art in the field of anthropology and archaeology m three up ommg clas s et for n xt week. n Hedg , cun1tor of ethnology and archaeol- ogy t th San Diego Mu eum ofMan, will di cuss cryptic rock art found a a legacy from the early lndian r id nts The cla · will meet Tuesday f<'eb 21 from 7 to 9 p.m. ' Dr , lana Cordy-Collins, ass1 tant professor in the U D department of anthropology and <·urator oft e .a tin-Am rican C:ollection of the u um ofMan will speak on "1'he Maya: A New Lo >k at n Ancient My tcry" on Wedne day, Feb. 22 from 7 to 9 p m. Dr Corday Collins will pre ent new theories regarding the antiquity of the Maya and their abrupt d chne in the tenth century Dr orr1e Ott, anthropology in tructor affili- at d with the Mu eum of Man, will talk on "Agri- cultur · and the Beginning of Civilization" on Thur day, 1-'cb 23 from 6.30 to 9·30 p.m. She will xamme the idea that civilization only becomes po Sible through the pre ·ence of intensive agri- cultur . F e for each program in the seri is $12. Call 481 8896 for information In larch, The Stratford Center will sponsor an archaelog1cal tour of Mayan Mexico and two Pl·ruv1 n Evening Part on ill concentrate on thl' Iamara Indian or P •ru and part two will deal with the Peruvian culture m the pre ent. in D I Mar will pre n speaker

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The San Diego County Bar Association and Barristers Club will present its annual Bar Sports Banquet and awards ceremony Feb. 21, featuring former UCLA basketball coach John Wooden as guest speaker. The Bar Sports Association sponsors intra- mural leagues in several sports for some 1 - 200 athletic San Diego .county lawyers, with the largest participal!on In the basketball and softball leagues. "There's a lot of tradi- tion here - some teams have been around for 10 or 15 years" says chairman Mark Ad- elman. "The competition gets pretty heated but It's fun ." ' Prior to the talk by coaching great Wooden, there will be an awards presenta- tion honoring the best teams. The Ernie Wideman Award, named for the San Diego lawye~ who died in a plane crash five years ago, will be presented to the participant who has exhibited significant "athletic skill and good sportsmanlike conduct." A number of local professional sports figures are ex- pected to attend, and a prize drawing will conclude the evening. Contact Leo Papas, for information at (619)231-3575. Century City lawyer Alan R. Block has been appointed to the advisory board of the Senate Select Committee on Small Business Enterprises. Mostly maldng "recommendations on va- rious legislative bills pending" for the state- wide organization, Block said he will provide "Input concerning loans and administration,

DAILY CALIFORNIAN FEB 1 7 1984

. USO o.allery - "The Indignant Artist," an exhibit that includes visual expression of artists· protest and social com- ment from the 17th to the 20th cenlurles in the form of prints will be on view from Thursdar, Feb. 23, through Tllffda,; March 27, et the University of Sen Diego Founders Gallery The gallery will be open weekdays from noon to 5 p.m: on Wednesdays the gallery will remain open until 7 p m Call 291-6480. .

DAILY TRANSCRIPT FEB 1 7 1J84 * "' * University of San Diego's School of Law, Graduate Tax Pro- gram, has a maJor two-day cor- porate tax conference planned April 26 and 27 in the Islandia Hyatt Hotel in San Diego. "A fundamental change in tax- ation of corporate income" will be the theme for the conference, which will feature 23 law school pro- fessors and tax attorneys from across the U.S. Fee Details are available through the university's contmu- ing education office.

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LOS ANGELES TIMES

FEB 1 7 1984

FOUNDERS GALLERY (Un1vers1ty of San Diego, Alcala Park), "The Indignant Artist," an exhibition of 45 pnnts by artists such as William Hogarth, Thomas Nast, Kathe Kollwitz, Reginald Marsh, John Sloan and Gabor Peterd1, will open with a reception from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday. The works, which express the artists' social and political protest and comment, will be on display through March 27. Gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and until 7 p.m. Wednesday.

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