News Scrapbook 1982-1984

SAN DIEGO ivlAGAZINE

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FEB 1983 Sun 'Yu Selects-Oriental lreasures from 1hc San Diego Museum or Art are on exhibi1 al Founders Gallery, Universi1y or San Diego. Feb. II-Mar. 4. Opening reception Feb. 10, 7-9. Mon .-Fri noon- 5, Wed. Iii 9. USD , Alcala Park. 291-6480.

EVENING TR IBUNE FEB 1 1983 Course on Mexican legal system set An 18-se s1on cou e on the Mexican legal system will be offered by the University of San Diego School of Law. Prof s or Alfonso DeLimon will open it with a discus- sion of "Introduction to the Study of Mexican Law and the Origin and Evoiution of Legal Education in Mexico" f:eb. 7 and 9 :it the school. In subsequent weeks, the Mexican federal civii code, mmrnal law, the penal code and other subjects will be di cu d

BLADE TRIBUNE FEB 3 1983 Works By Haydn, Telemann Slated For USO Concert SAN DIEGO - Haydn's

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2. 1983

SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT

UCS·D, USD Sponsor Forum On Constitution By Bll,LB~IS

Cultural Arts, is offered free to the public. For informa- tion call 291-6480. The selections of Haydn and Telemann will be performed by Donald Atlas, oboe; John Ottaiano, bassoon; Shirley Wea ver, violin; Caroline Las ker, piano; and Marjorie Hart, cello.

"Symphonia Concertante." and Telemann's "Quartet in D Minor" will be performed at the University of San •Diego on Feb. 9. The concert is set for 12 :15 p.m. in the French Parlor, Founders Hall. ' The concert, sponsored by the Associated Students

Scheiber , a leading economic and legal historian, is in the process of writing a major study of American federal1Sm. Moderator will be Dr. Bernard H. Siegan, a USD distinguished profe sor of law and director of law and economic studies at the USD School of Law. Feb. 16's forum session, also scheduled at the USO School of Law. will be on "The Justice System and the Constitution . . . Our Criminal J ustice System Gonsi tent with the Constitution?" Richard D. Huffman, San Diego County assistant district attorney and former state deyuty attorney general in charge of the Southern California Organized Crime Unit, and Alex Landon, executive director of Defenders Inc. in San Diego, will be speaking. Siegan will again be moderator. "Economics ~.nd the Constitution . . . Should the Constitution be I Amended to Require a Balanced Budget?" will be discussion pie or the final session Feb. 23 in room 2100 at UCSD School of Medicine. Dr. William Craig St bb ebine, chairman of the national oomw tee which drafted the proposed federal spending limitation amendment now before Congress and a professor of political economy at Claremont Graduate School, is to speak. Also speaking is to be Jonathan D. Varat, professor of law and associate dean of the UCLA School of Law, a specialist on American citizenship and interstate equality and a former clerk for Supreme Court Justice Bryon White. Parrish will moderate. No advanr.e registration is needed More information may be obtained by calling UCSD Ex- tension.

SANDIEGODAILY TRANSCRIPT SW! Writer A free public forum ori viability of the U.S. Constitution in the 1980s begins with a session from 8 to 10 p.m. today in room 2100 at the UCSD School of Medicine. The forum, which is to run for four Wednesday evenings, is being sponsored by UCSD Exte!15ion in conjunction with the USO School of Law and the UCSD Department of History. A White House staff member, experts on federalism and an author of the proposed balanced-budget amendment now before Congress are to be among speakers. "The Founding Fathers: Their l~tentions and Purposes . . . Do the Ideas of the 1780s Apply Today" will be the subject for this evening's opening session. Dr. Forrest McDonald, a University of Alabama professor who has written eight books on the founding fathers - five of which have been nominated for Pulitzer Prizes - will bf> guest peaker. Modera,t,ing will be Dr. Michael Parrish, a UCSD history professor who specializes in the U.S. Con- stitution and legal history. The 8 p.m. Feb. 9 session will shift to the courtroom of the USO School of Law and will cover "Federalism: New and Old . . . A Strong Federal Government or Decentralization?" Robert B. Carleson. special assistant for policy development to President Reagan. and Dr. Harry N. Scheiber, a member of the UC Berkeley law faculty, will be featured. Carleson serves as an advisor for federal policies and has served as executive secretary of the Cabinet Council on Human Resources.

EVENING TRIBUNE

1983

FEB 4

DAILY CALI FORNI AN FEB 5 1983 Wednesday

U D pre. ent: Haydn's " ymphonia Concertante" and Telemann's "Quar- tet in O Minor" at 12:15 p.m Wednesday in the French Parlor, Founders H 11, USO. Information 291-6480. --~---~-----~--~~

Classical concert - Haydn's " Symphonia. Con- oertante" and Telemann's "Quartett in D. Minor," will be performed at 12:15 p.m. in the French Parlor, Founders Hall at the of the University of San Diego, Alcala Park. Selections will be performed ·by Donald Atlea, oboe; John Ottaiano. bassoon; Shirley Weaver, violin; Caroline Lasker, piano, and Marjorie Hart, cello.

LOS ANGELES TIMES

1983

fEB 4

READER

UNIVE&'IITY OF SAN DIEGO (Founders Hall, French Parlor): H.iydn'1 "Symphonia Coneertante" and Telemann's Quartet in D Minor will be performed at 12,15 p.m. Wednesday.

198)

FEB 3

Chaml>cr Music Concert, katur• mg \\orb by HarJn ,inJ Tdcma, 111 .~·di be presented WcJn~,Jal', February 9, 12:15 p.m., 1',u,d1 Parlor, Founders Hall, USO. hec. 291-6480.

SAN DI EGO UNION rm 4 19aJ

TOM BLAIR A Soupcon Of Snippets_ N EWSPEAK: A brochure ballyhooing a new set of sound effects, suitable for film or video, came across Regina Morin's desk at the USO Media Cmter this week. Among the chilling sounds: "Stalking a vampire, throat and wrist cutting, . tabbings, pistol silencers, various tortures, imaginary and hideous scavenging." And the company producing thi audio mayhem? Films for the Humanities.

DAILY CALI FORNIAN FEB 4 1983

MICROCOMPUTERS/ The niversity of San Diego's school of education has scheduled a series

EVENING TRI BUNE FEB 4 198

~f microcomputer _courses beginning with Introduction to V1s1calc. 'from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturda_y, Feb. 5. in OeSales Ha ll. Alcala Park at the university. Other courses are scheduled through May. Fee 1s $50 per course. For add1t10nal information call 291-6480. '

Exiled Soviet writer to speak at USD Alexander Yanov, exiled Rus~ian political writ~~ and historian will lecture on "Russia After Brezhnev at 8 p.m. Feb. 15 in the University of San Diego's Salomon Lecture Hall. · Yanov left the Soviet Union in 1974 and came to th_e United States. Since that time, he _has held faculty po~1- tions at UC-Berkeley, the University of Texas m Austm and Columbia University in New York. , . The free, public lecture is sponsored by USO s Associat- ed Students and Cultural Arts Board.

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SENTINEL

FEB 6 1983 (___

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SAN DIEGO UNION FEB 5 1983

"NAGARE Wood-Block Prin~'~O~~TION of _t~e Japanese Uni versity of San 'Diego F be dexhibited at the F riday to Mar o~ ers Gallery from held from Thurcdh 17. _Ahn opening reception will be s ay rug t from 7-9 The exhibition , selected by S~g Yu of the San ~ usewn; exhibited srmultaneously a t the San Diego Museum of Art as ~ rt ?f a cooperative vent ure between the two in- stitutions. A:ccording to USD Gallery Director Therese Whitcomb, "Nagare" follows the development of the J ~p~nese_wood-block print from its beginning ass?c1atJon with Iwasa Ma tabei (1578-1650) through artists of the nineteenth century . kindred works will be Diego Museum of Art , is on loa n from that

-1 An Interfaith Seminar Series, "Women and Issues," will be presented on Thursdays from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at the DeSales Hall Boardroom, University of San Diego. The first program Feb. 17 is titled "Rags to RichPS: How Hebraic Women Los, Their Rights," ant! will bt given by Ita Sheres, professor of comparative literature t San Diego State University Future programs wiil be on psychotherapy. midlife, sexual harassment, language nd . ex1 m, and the gender of deity. The program is sponsored by the Contmuing Education olft~e at USO, the San Diego County Ecumenical Confer- " c n the National Conference of Christians and Jews. F o rnfonnation rail Sister Marleen Brasefield, 293-4586. ~---~--~~ ____l

DAILY CALIFORNIAN

HB 5 1983 Friday through March 17 wood Block prints -

"Nagare - Evolution . of the Japanese Wod-Block Print," will be on exh1b1t from noon to 5 p.m. weekdays and noon to 9 p.m. Wednes- days, at the University of San Dieg~ F~unders Gallery, Alcala Park. San Diego. The public 1s welcome.

SAN DIEGO UNION

SENTINEL

1983

FEB 8

Pro Bono Publico

f.EB 6 1983 USD schedules free classical music show

The San Diego Legal Aid Soci- ety, which assists the indigent to obtain attorney ser vices, now fmds itself in need of a ssistance. Austere times have reduced by nearly 50 percent the number ol persons the society can serve. To alleviate the impact of budget cuts on the society, the San Diego County Bar Associa- t10n a nd the La w Center of the University of San Diego want to recruit at least 400 attorneys who would be willing to represent in-

digents without compensation. If anything, the announced goal of this laudable effort is too low. Certa inly, more than 400 of the approximately 5,000 attorneys in San Diego County should volun- teer their talents to the needy. Indeed, the California Business and Professions Code states an attorney should never "reject for any consideration ... the cause of the defenseless, or the deprived." Properly linking the ethical ob- ligations of attorneys with an ex-

panding social requirement, U.S. Attorney Peter Nunez has en- couraged his staff to participate in the volunteer program. Other h~ads o~ government legal agen- cies, private law firms, and cor- porate legal departments should follow Nr. Nunez 's example. Pro bono publico is the Latin phrase used by attorneys to de- scribe legal work performed without a fee. It is precisely "for the public good" that every San Diego attorney should volunteer.

_Sc_·n_t_in_c_l __s_u_n_d_a_y,_F_e_b_ru_a_ry_6,_1_9_8_3__ ,\ II

in free forum The forum moderator is Bernard H. Sicgan, a USD distinguished pro- lessor of law and direct- or of law and economic studies at the USD School of Law. The for- um is sponsored by UCSD Extension, the

lor of USD's Founders Hall. The selections will be performed by Donald Atlas, oboe; John Ottai- ano, bassoon; Shirley Weaver, violin; Caro- line Lasker, piano and Marjorie Hart, cello.

Hayden's "Symph- onia Concertante" and Teleman's "Quartet in D Minor" will be per- formed in a concert at the University of San Diego Wednesday at 12: 15 p.m. The concert will be held in the French Par-

USO School of Law and . the UCSD Dept. of His- tory . Open free to the pub- lic, the forum does not require advance reser- vations. Information is available by calling 452- 3400.

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