News Scrapbook 1985

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Tran • crlpt (Cir. D. 7,415)

SEP 18198

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) SEP 191985

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able from Bill Josey, P.O. Box 7074, Fullerton, CA. 92631. • • • Western State University Col· lege of Law has named Steven Perkins its new librarian, to supervise operations at the cam· puses in San Diego and Fullerton. In New y ork, he developed the Joint International Law Program, a library shared by New York, Brooklyn and Queens College law schools. • * Universi f..BJui.-Diego Law legal assistance clinics have received a first installment of a $64,629 grant from the state bar's Legal Services Truat Fund, to aid the poor. The clinics are on campus at USD and San Diego State, in Linda Vista and San School's

Judith Copeland, who will be vice presidents n xt year. • • • "Healthy Employment Prac- tice for Lawye of the '809" will be the topic of a panel discus- sion p nted 9 a.m.-noon Sept . 30, at th Towne & Country Hotel, by tho State Bar Committee on

1/ USD Law School opens juvenile defense clinic

;:?q5£ ALCALA PARK - The Univccsity of San Diego Law School has begun a clinic whereby students defend juveniles in criminal cases, the first such program in California and most of the West. "We've tried to get into juvenile court fur years and this year the court has asked us to come in," said Rick Barron, who directs the clinic with Laura Berend. Both are USD law professors. THE TWO began the clinic the last week of August with eight law students and two cases, a burglary and an auto theft. The professors will advise the students throughout the process and appear in court with students and their defendants. This semester they expect to handle up to three dozen juvenile cases. Only indigent Juveniles are eligible for the

THE SAME eight students defending juveniles also work on adult cases. The law school runs clinics fo r adults in Linda Vista and San Ysidro and clinics for students at USD and San Diego State Univ.enity.

service.

JUVENILE COURT Supervising Judge Napolean Jones, whose consent made the clinic possible, said it will result in ''quality representation for the juveniles. The law school students are prepared well and will do a good job for their clients." ./ Jones was a USD student who took part in the law school's adult clinic when it was founded in 1971. Barron pointed out that clinic students have "unlimited time and resources" to devote to their clients. The move into juvenile court will "expose students to a field of law sorely lacking in interest d attorneys," he said. Many allorneys steer clear of court-appointed indigent juvenile ca es because they do not pay well, he added.

Law Briefs by Pauline Repard

Women in the Law. Committee m mbers will be available in the fternoon to hear suggestions about the ne ds ofwomen lawyers. ••• Form r corporate attorney to SDG&E Maya Sanchez has re- turn d to private practice at 1010 , ond Ave. Suite 1001 She will practice probate, e tate planning, family and busin BS law. minar for law- yer on "Dealln& With & Like Hollywood," aimed at attorneys with clients in the local and Hollywood entertainment in• dustry, including movies, televi• sion, commercials, music videos and industrial films. The Westgate Hotel seminar runs from 9:30 a.m -12:30 p.m. and 2-5 p.m. on both Sept. 21 and 22. More infor• mation and reservations are avail- • • • A w com ny, Entelex, is ho ding it.a first

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San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) SEP 191985 ..A llen's P. c. B

San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) EP 191985

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USD President's Club chairman receives award SAN DIEGO - The ch0Q~~ the-llu.iver..si,ty of San Diego President's ClJir,"° t~n R. Ward, was awardett'me 19tt5 •'Distinguished Eagle Scout Award" at a Sept. 11 luncheon at the Executive Hotel here. The award is given annually to an mdividual who has distinguished him or herself in a career and/or public life. WARD IS the vice president of Pacific Telephone in San Diego and the 1985 United Way campaign chairman. A graduate of Wayne University and Stanford University, Ward earned his Eagle Scout badge while a member of Troop 163 on Feb. 13, 1940, at Rockville Center (Long Island), N. Y. Ward is a member of the executive committee of the San Diego County Council of the Boy Scouts.

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Sammartino

USO Education ('.Professor Strunk dies

Gardn r h I I><' n appointed to the University of Culifornia Medical onter Community Advisory Bo rd • • Th San Diego County Bar Aeso- c1at1on board of directors has elected R ymond Feist, of Feist, Vetter, Kn uf & Loy, 1986 secre- tary and heryl Ruffier, of }I ms, ug n , wnh11m, Kan & 1.vetma, tre ur r. They will be installed during December bar cer monie!i. Ruffier r places Rich- ard Benes, while Feist replaces

_,, SA DIEGO - DeFore~a{~k, a University of San piegd""proTessor of educat~died ept. 8 of natural causes at UCSD Medical Center. He was 57. Strunk, a USD School of Education instructor for the past 15 years, was nationally recognized for his work with the handicapped. A MEMORIAL Mass will be

celebrated Sept. 27 at 5 p.m. in Founders Chapel at USO. Funeral services for Strunk were held in Jamestown, N.Y., his hometown. The education professor is survived by his mother, Mary Ann Beamis, of Jamestown. In lieu of flowers, she asks that contributions be made to the DeForest Strunk Scholarship Fund at USD. _/

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

SEP 191985

Champagne, fashions boost USD scholarships ~q?? d · I l" t· th Am . ' C T HE UNIVERSITY of San A eaten ar of soc1a events va supper mg e enc~ s up Vineyard in Escondido. Klee Wyk Society for the Muse- have a fund-raising fashion raiser Saturday. Set for the .To~n eon Sept. 26 in the Mission Room at Diego's President' ChJtnqfll u ra~es, will feature a black-tie fund- um of Man will have its fall lunch- show and champagne reception to- p and Country Hotel, the_ ™:ne!1t will Friends of the Symphony's annual Mission Valley Inn. Social hour is 11 rught at Bullocks Wilshire in La celebrate the comm1ssionmg of members' brunch will be held Sun- a.m. Lunch will be served at noon. Jolla Village Square. Tickets are • Stars & Stri~, the new 12-meter day from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in a pri- Alice Busse, manager of Bazaar del $25 for the show of French furs. The and coming y~cht that Will represent the San vate Kensington home. Tickets are Mundo's Guatemala Shop, will dis- event which benefits USD's Schol- Diego Yacht Club m the 1987 Amer- $4 each. For reservations or more cuss "Folk Arts of Central Ameri- arship Fund, begins at 6:30 p.m. ---------- ica's Cup races. Helmsman Dennis information, phone 436-4632. ca." For more information, phone

444-2426.

Conner and Malin Burnham, presi- dent of Sail America Foundation, will be special guests. Tickets are $125 each. For reservations or more information, phone 232-7181.

By Nancy Scott Anderson

The San Diego Museum of Art's Volunteer Council begins its 1985-86 season tomorrow with a 10:15 a.m. meeting in the board room. New board members, including presi- dent Alison Tibbitts, will be pre- sented. Virginia Lingren, co-pro- ducer of the Festival of India show in San Diego State University's art gallery, will discuss Indian prints during the meeting. For more infor- mation, phone 232-7931. The Commillee of 100, the 2,000-

The La Jolla Chapter of the Auxi- liary Council of the San Diego Sym- phony Orchestra Association will have its autumn membership lunch Tuesday in the Sea Lodge in La Jolla. Social hour begins at 11 a.m. followed by lunch at noon, and an address by Chuck Love, marketing director for the symphony. Mary Lee Koningsore will play the harp. Reservations are $12.50 each. For more information, phone 454-0231 or 454-9514.

member organization dedicated to preserving Balboa Park's Spanish Colonial buildings, will have its 18th annual membership tea tomorrow. President Pat DeMarce will wel- come guests to the Walter Barrett gardens on Cypress Way for the 2 to 4 p.m. tea. Tours of the gardens, originally part of the Wegeforth es- tate, are planned. For more infor- mation, phone 298-3140. The "Bring Home The Cup Festi-

Young Connoisseurs of the San Diego Museum of Art plan an "Art & Jest Fest" Sept. 26 from 5:30 to 8 p.m. in the museum's Sculpture Garden. Food, wine, an open bar and comedy by Frank King, Rusty Nails, Tom Steiner and Luis Velasquez will be featured. Tickets are $10 in advance, $12 at the door. For more information, phone 222- 3140.

Author Sherwood Wirt is guest speaker for the meeting tomorrow of the Palomar Branch of American Pen Women. The meeting will be held at 1 p.m. in the Community Room at Glendale Federal Savings & Loan Association's branch in the

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