News Scrapbook 1986-1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. 0. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

1987

APR 4

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

i\PR 5 1987

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,,,.. .,, Public f~m series planned The Universi~ f'San Diego is de- business administration, education veloping a forums on and law.

q r;e, The Wa hlngtoo State Troopers crew celebrates its victory on Mission Bay over the San Diego Police Department.

ma· r community issues beginning ; fay 13 ith a debatP. on the question of Sa Diego areawu!.? growth man- agement. The forums will follow the format of the public television program "The Advocates" in which panels of . experts representmg both sides of an · are questioned on a 'witn stand" by USD law faculty. 'The forums have been developed by the ean of USD's schools of graduate and continuing education,

Verdict goes against SDPD in Police Eight final

Law school dean Sheldon Krantz, chairman of the organizing commit- tee, said, "At present, there are no continuing forums of high quality to debate and discuss the significar is- sues facing San Diego. This means that these issues often are addressed by policy-makers with limited infor- mation or are not addressed a all. According to USO President Au- thor E. Hughes, the forums are de- signed to fill that need and are planned for twice each year.

mg in the Crew Classic are, and they're not club rowers with lifetimes of crew experience. But in the competitiveness department, the patrolmen and investigators and sergeants don't miss a stroke. "We take it seriously," said Coach Michelle Petrick, a financial investigator in the narcot- ic task force who founded the SDPD club five years ago. "We don't have many races, but when we do race, we go after it. "The competitiveness comes from our work - it's a very competitive kind of work, it's a survival kind of thing. Cops have a lot of pride.

econd-annual event by a deck·and°two seats, fmi hmg econd to the Washington State Troopers. The race was one of the three finals and 20 rac taged on the 2,000•meter (1 v••mile) course between Sea World and Crown Point Shores on the Crew Cla s1c's opening day. The season' first big regatta concludes today, with heats begmmng al 6·45 a.m. and finals starting al 10. The Police Eight race features a different class1f1cation of competitors. They're not col- lege students, as most of the 2,300 participat-

It comes from wearing a badge." Perhaps Petrick's biggest task is just ar- ranging practices. Assembling 14 people with 14 completely different schedules 1S virtually impossible, so Petrick rotates the practice schedule every three months and requires that team members attend only two of three work- outs per week. In the weeks before a race, however, prac- tice is five days a week, and scheduling gets stickier. See CREW on P e C-6

Erme Herbert I a p trolman in the San Diego Polle partment's w tern d1V1sion H was In court y terday from 8 a.m to 2 pm "I hterally cam from court and Jumped into a boat," he said. Herbert, ix other oar men. an oarswoman and coxsw In powered the SDPD's shell in y t day's Police Eight race at the San Diego Lowenbrau Crew Cla ic on Mis.~ion Bay. They m cd ucc fully d fending their title in the

roopers edge SDPD

Wash·ngton State

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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times ISan Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573)

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The Whittier Cup is still more even. Wisconsin won it last year and went on to take the national title, but

(men), Whittier (women) and men's

times advance to the final at 3:15. The two Copley heats start at 9:40 a.m.; the final is at 3:15 p.m. Other finals today include: Derek Guelker Memorial Cup for men's freshmen eight (10:15 a.m.); Borthwick Cup for men's clubs (1:55 p.m.); women's Cal Cup (2:10); men's Cal Cup (2:25); Womens Club Eight (2:40); and Men's ELie E gbt (2:55).

c6ntinued from C-1

and women's Cal cups.

aid Herbert. "Bcmg a cop, work- mg all day long, ornetimes not knowing wh n you'll be finished and th n commg out to practice in the evening 1t cl!n be quite a nnd

Only four schools - Washington. Harvard. Pennsylvania and Cal - the Badgers graduated six rowers. have won the Copley Cup in the 13 Washington has captured the cup years it has been awarded, and all three times, but also watch for New

APR 5 1987

Hampshire, Stanford and Cal. The Copley and Whittier cups also inclu4e the University of San Die o, which qualified by virtue of its victo- ry in the men's and women's Cal cups

four are among the 12 entered today Most coaches consider Harvard the favorite, though it wouldn't be an up et if any of five other boats cro ed the line first: defending Cop- Jey champion Penn. Cal, seven-time

troop are ded1 ated.

But Petrick

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In Tranattlon-P~ic)i imn(n. r ~·hairman of the Political Sl"oftll~ "eJSan- ment at University of San Diego, will discuss the changes takmQ place in the Soviet poht1cal system and what it means to U.S. foreign policy at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Oaks Nonh Community Center. 12578 Oaks Nonh Drive, Rancho Bernardo. Admission is $1 for World Affairs Council membefS, $3 for non-members. /

at last year's Crew Classic. The two ' winner Washington, defending na- Whitter Cup heats begin at 9:20 a.m., tio .. n•a•I •ch • a • mlJlplliBIW • isliiic • on • s • in • o • r • N-av • y • . --• a • nd_t.he_t.ea•m•s-w•i•th-th • e-to • pm:se 3 v.,.e~n-

Th San Diego-Wa hmgton riv· lry began la t year m th inaugural Po- lice Eight, and heated up yesterday tn chilly wind-whipped waters. The Seattle-ha ed Washington State Troopers with a rev mped te avenged la t year's lo~ by er mg the fm1sh lrnc m 7 minute , 17.7 se . onds, less than two seconds ahead of their San Diego rival Only two other final yesterday th men by Columb:a, and the omen Elite Four (with coxswain, Lake Wa hmgton A tea Twenty-four finals are s h duled for today, m ludl th Copley

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

AF-~ 3 1987

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Special Jubilee Edition - Bishop Buddy's 'dream' college keeps growing By Pamela Haupert USO News Bureau The Univc~9;p-fn° Diego began as a dream, a head of the Religious of Sacred Heart in the United States (Sister Anne O'Neil) and her appointee (Sister Gertrude Patch) all serve as trustees.

Under the leadership of Hughes, USD has grown rapidly. Enrollment has almost doubled since 1974, from 2,845 to today 's total of 5,500 . USD's net assets have increased from $29 million in 1972 to $121.5 million in 1986. The total amount of revenue credited to gift income during the 1980-86 period is estimated at $25 million. Construction of $31. 2 million worth of new academic buildings and dormitories has been in progress since 1978, with an additional $13 .5 million in planned construction by 1990. Despite the many changes in the diocese and USO, their relationship has remained close. "Certainly, the university i an important part of the church in San Diego," Bishop Maher said recently. "Because it is known for its commitment to Christian values, the school has long since established itself as a moral leader in our community. And having a Catholic university with the status of USD gives the diocese a certain prestige that would be missing without it." When asked about diocesan influence in USD's affairs, Sister Maureen Cronin, Assistant Provost and Director of Institutional Research and a member of the Sacred Heart order, stated that "although the university and the diocese work together on many issues and USD is a Catholic university, it is independent in its actions and the diocese makes no efforts to control it.'' Irving Parker, an English professor at USD since 1954, says, "Bishop Buddy got us started, and President Hughes, in a sense, polished the raw materials. I think we have shown tremendous growth, definitely within the expectations and dreams of Bishop Buddy." At the 1949 College for Women groundbreaking ceremonies, Bishop Buddy made a statement that perhaps best illustrated his expectations, his vision for a private rnstitution of higher learning in San Diego. "We know that it takes 50 to 100 years to build an university but we had to make a start."

vision, a desire to establish a Catholic college that .... ould be dedicated to teaching, research and service. The dream first belonged to Bishop Charles Francis Huddy, and i_t long since has come true. Indeed, USD has taken its place among the most out. tanding private universiues in the western United Statt:s. Known for the excelkn ( of its students and the quality of its instruction, CSD has an enrollment of \ 500 The Alcala Park c-ampus mdudes a College of Art and 'oences and four professional chools: Law, Business Administration, Education and Nursing. Clearly , the University of San Diego now stands as a 11101111t11t•11t to the value of\ is10n, the power of praver. ,mcl the pt•rsi ·tent pursuit of exu•llencc. Thr vision belonged to Bishop Budd), who look command of the S,m Diego diocese on Feb. 7 1917 Later that year, he went to an Francisco to share lus dream with Mother Rosalie Hill, Vicar Superior of the Sm iety of the Sacred Heart 's Western Province . Twelve year later, Bishop Buddy broke ground for the 'an Diego College for Women, to be constructed, financul ,111d equipped by the Religious of the acred ~ft-art. A h11lc-known fatt about the college is that the ac-9u1sit10n of land was postponed by World War II, "hen thl' site was used as an anti-aircraft base i.;uarding the coast of San Diego County. Loc.ttt·d on a bluff owrlooking both San Diego and Mission b,1ys, the campus was named "Alcala Park," ,1f1.-1 tl11 unin·rsiry city of Akal,, in Spain. Akala was onn· rht home of ·, Didacus, the patron saint of San Diego. The ( ollcge Jor Women was completed m l!.152 and d,t> es began in February of tb,11 year. Bishop Buddy wasn ' t fimslwd . lie emisioned a 1111iv1·isil> th,u would h,•n,rm im rl'asingly important ,incl rntluenual rn edw at1011 , both for the diocese and the fOlllltlUllit> s a rl'sult, th<" Diocese of San Diego in 1954

HISTORIC MOMENT Former President Richard M. Nixon, at the time Vice President Nixon, stands with his wife Pat and Bishop Charles Buddy in front of marquee to USD's hall of science, which Nixon dedicated. The former president received an honorary degree from USO in 1959. decided to found and finance the San Diego College for Men. At the same time, the School of Law was established. In 1972, after four years of study and planning by administrators at all three schools, the San Diego College for Men, College for Women and School of Law merged to form the University of San Diego. USD was established as an independent corporauon, and Dr. Author E. Hughes was appointed as president. With the merger, USD became a co-educational, Catholic university governed by an independent Board of Trustees of priests, nuns, lay Catholics and membns of many other faiths. By mandate of the incorporation, the Bishop of San Diq~o (Bishop Leo T. Maher) and his appointee (the diocesan chancellor, Msgr. I. Bren! Eagen), and the -

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