News Scrapbook 1980-1981
DAILY TRANSCRIPT
DAILY TRANSCRIPT o1rr 1 s ,gs, ------=v - U-SD Law Student 6l Wins Scholarship Carol Casillas, second-year student at the University of San Diego School of Law, recently became the seventh USD law student to win a. full•year Mexican-American scholarship funded by the Ralston Purina Corp. Casillas is a graduate ol the university of San Diego.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
EVENING TRIBUNE
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Honors At USDLaw Thr grndu, t
OCT· 6 1981
OCT 1 6 1981
A guitar recital wil~ be pfrUesSe0nt~ 1 %t noontime concert series o a · in the French Parlor' Founders Hall.
0 p~~~:;n!~!;
of th Univer ity
of an Di o Srhool of Law will be nnual lumni AwardN Banquet at 6 p. m. Ill the hcraton Harbor I~land HotE'l. Award will go to , istc-r Sally Ruray, RSC.I, 1972 graduate now d1•m1c vie pre idcnt and provo t t th· univer~1ty; , an Diego Mumcipal ,Ju.-1 c apol1•on . Jon, Jr., cla of 1971. aml Alex Landon, 1971 gradual ""ith private law pr ctic in Snn honor ti aturday at the
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San Diego, Saturday, October 17, 1981
THE TRIBUNE
B-5
DAILY CALIFORNIAN OCT 1 6 1981
Toreros (5-0) have good thing going
losk said pohc office ' wer taught how to lawful- ly enforce the Jaw" and judg were required to u th proper procedur and it 1ppcared a peaceful cooxi. tence was emerging, with the f d ral high court the final word on mo t 1 - SU But that 1s changing, Mosk aid . He urged lawy rs to look to the Cali- fornia Con titution when preparing bri f and urged Judg to consider tale law m tead of looking to the la- t t U.S Supreme Court rul• ing Mo k said the U S. Supreme Court may careen from side lo .1d of the pol- 11lcal pcctrum leaving the tales to decide whether to fall in lin with the latest tr nd or to respect the ln- d1V1duality of the stat · con htution The California Con t1tu t1on, written in 1849, was a bilingual document, Mosk said, written m Engltsh and Spanish. State con titution at one time were "the only hn of protection for ind · viduals from abu " Mosk cited a que hon ol conflicting constitutional rights to illustrate bow th state can have the final say. In the case of political petition bemg passed at a private hopping center, the U.S. Supreme Court first held in favor of the First Amendment right of free speech, but later reversed i If m favor of the proper• ty right of the shopping cent r owner to refuse to allow uch activities The state Supreme Court had a chance to review the.. matter and held in favor of free speech, Mosk said, a decision that was later re- cognized by the federal high court on appeal Three USO law school alumni, Sister Sally Furay, USO academic vice presi• dent; Municipal Court Judge Napoleon Jones, and attorney Alex Landon were honored
USO BASKETBALUThe University of Sa Diego basektball team opened practice Thursda with former Monte Vista High ace Rusty Wh1tmarsl and ex-Christian High standout Anthony Reuss a two of the players in attendance. The Toreros will play a tough schedule which includes UC Irvine California, San Diego State and Southeastern Louisi- ana as well as Pepperdine and the University of San Francisco in West Coast Athletic Conference matches. Whitmarsh. a 6-foot-3 guard. will be a senior on this year's team while Reuss is a 6-6 fre hman forward
The University of San Diego Toreros will be out to keep a streak going tonight - they have won five in a row - as they tackle LaVerne College at Alca- la Park Stadium at 7:30. The Toreros are currently ranked No. 8 in the NCAA's Division III and they lead the nation in punt returns and field goals. The field goal kicker is Emmitt Lozzi a freshman from Las Vegas, who has connected on eight of 12 attempts. He is 17 for 18 in points after touchdowns. Eric Sweet, who replaced injured Steve Loomis two weeks ago, will start again for the Toreros at quarterback. Last week, Sweet completed 21 of 40 passes for 313 yards and a pair of TDs.
SAN DIEGO UNION OCl 1 7 1981
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t do something tonight that LaVerne College wl~ h rdy oofar - defeat the University no team has accomp ts e 5 of San Diego's footb)alll teahmo~t to LaVerne (1-3) at 7:30 in The Toreros (5-0 P ay the Alcala ParkJtatumthe NCAA Division III (non-scho• l UShD,)rr:::sdthi·natfon in punt returns and field goalsd. ars 1p , . . 19 2 yards per return, an Emmitt Dodd 1s averagmg Las Ve as has connected Bobby Lozzi, a freshmttan fr:1He is 17 ~f ia in point-after 00 s of 12 field goal a emp • attempts. 1 ed the injured Steve Loomis Eric Sweet, who rep ac will again start at (dislocated shoulder) t~o ;::S~ ~iittier College, Sweet quarterback. Last tee a for 313 yards and two touch· cd·ompletHe: !!so:o~pi:t~:~6 percent of his passes. owns. • • • -----~~-~-
SENTINEL OCTl 8 1381 USD training for hoop season Men have improved depth In the shadow of an unbeaten football team that took a national ranking of eighth into last night's game, the University of San Diego men•~ basketball club opened practice Thursday as ~t prepares tor its third season at the NCAA Di· vision I level. The schedule the Toreros face is their toughest ever. It includes UC-Irvine and its All-American, Kevin McGee, the University of the Pacific, UC· Santa Barbara, UC-Berkeley, Southeastern Louisiana and San Diego State. And that's the non-conference games. In West Coast Athletic Conference play, they will meet the University of San Francisco and Pepperdine two teams that likely will be nation· ally ranked. USF returns its s~ing lineup intact one that includes All-American guard candidate Quintin Daily. Pepperdine also returns its starting team which means guard Boot Bond is back. Bond is a potential All· American. The Toreros have no All·Americans to speak of but return three all-conference candidates in seniors Rusty Whitmarsh, Gerald Jones and Dave Heppell. Whitmarsh is a 6-foot-3 guard who averaged 11.0 points a ame last year, while Jones, a 6-6 forward, averaged 11.2 points and 4.8 rebounds and Heppell, a6·8center, 10.1 and 5.2. "We have no doubt improved our depth and quickne . which will allow us to be. mor~ aggressive both offensively and defensively, said head coach Jim Brovelli. Nine lettermen give hope Kathy l\larpe, beginning her second season as head coach of the University of San Diego women's basketball program, is optimistic about the coming campaign. Her first year here is one she would rather forget. The Toreras lost 24 of 30 games. This time around they v.ill have nine veterans plus four impressive newcomers to face a tough schedule that includes 22 of their 32 games against Divi· sion I teams. USD is competing this year as an independent. "With nine experienced players returning who have been through the program, along with our added height and quickness, I look for our team to be very competitive," Marpe said. USD is led by 6-foot-2 senior center Sara Jane, an all-conference player who averaged 9.6 points and 8.5 rebounds a game last year while blocking 29 shots. Guard Michelle Grier, a 5-6 senior, is another important returnee. She averaged 14.7 points and 3.0 assists last season and contributed 45 steals. Senior Debbie Weinreis, a transfer from the University of New Mexico, joins the team with strong credentials. At 6-3, she should start either at center or a forward position. Other top returnees are junior guard Barbara Minear, last year's defensive standout, sopho- more forward Annette Everett and sophomore guard Lori Morris.
SAN DIEGO UNION OCT 18 1981 Mosk Sees New Trend In Laws By DAVE POLIS Stllff Wrller, TIit San Dievo UnJOn Associate State Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk said he sees a new body of constitutional law emerg- ing, based on the principle of states' rights. Mosk said he sees a "fair- ly descernible trend" in U.S. Supreme Court decisions o( late recognizing the indivi- duality of the state coastitu• lions. Speaking before t he University of San Diego Law Alumni yesterday, Mosk said he is not talking about "George Wallace standing in a University of Alabama doorway" block- ing admission to a black student. Rather, he spoke with the expectation that the federal high court appears willing to "accept the finality of state court decisions." The 10th Amendment, Mosk said, reserves to the states those powers not specifically delegated to the federal government. For a time, Mosk said. the t t high courts wer~ viewed as little more than "intermediate appellant wayside tribunals along the way to the U.S. Supreme Court." Prior to the liberated ap- proach of the Supreme Court under Earl Warren, Mosk said, the high court .too · benign acceptance of rac1 m, a rather Victorian view toward sexual matters and denied universal suf- frage. Then beginning in 1963, the high court was much more activist, abandoning these approaches and the states had to fall in line, he said.
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SAN DIEGO UNION OCT 18 1981
USD Remains Perfect With 23-15 Triumph By ARMEN KETEYIAN Special to the san Diego Union In the wake of San Diego State's 27-7 loss to Brigham Young University hours before, San Diego's oth_er hig~ly- regarded college football team decided to keep its nation- al ranking intact last night. It wasn't pretty, or perfect, but the University of San Diego outlasted LaVerne 23-15 at Alcala ~a~k, to rem~in unbeaten in 1981 (6-0) and undefeated m its last mne starts. Rated eighth in NCAA Divison III, the Toreros ov~r- came numerous self-inflicted fumbles, penalties and in- terceptions. The main reason's were quarterback Eric Sweet's two touchdown passes to wide receiver Michael Rish another 36-yarder to Rish which set up a three-yard scor~ by Joe Henry, and a dogged defense led by lineback- ers Don Niklas, John Noonan and noseguard Bruce Ogm- bene. The Toreros trailed 7-0 after one quarter when LaV- erne, now 1-4, struck on quarterback Gre~ Hopkins' 54· yard pass-run combination to wide rece1~er Maurice Harper, which ended a 85-yard, three play drive. . . USO then went ahead for good during an explosive five minute second period stretch. At 14:_22 junior Sweet _found classmate Rish on a 36-yard crossmg pattern to tie the score and cap an nine-play, 75-yard flurry. . On the next series, Sweet, who was 12-22 at halftime for 196 yards, took the Toreros on an 80-yard ma:ch. He mixed passes to Ronald Guzman (15 yards), Rish (10), Michael Ledbetter (9), before finding Rish for 36 more to : the LaVerne three yard line. On the next play, hard· I running Henry bulled over for a 13-7 lead. I Another USO touchdown, a six yard scramble b¥ Sweet, was nullified by a holding penalty, one of nine first half l infractions, two minutes later. The winner's settled for a 33-yard field goal from freshman Robert Lozzi, who had : hit the left upright with an earlier extra pomt try. USO moved out 23-7 in the fourth quarter when Sweet connected on a post pattern to Rish who.split two def~n- ders, sprinting 52 yards to a touchdown with 13:17 remam• ing. . . Laverne finally got back on the board with m~e minutes left. Sweet tried flat pass and connnected agam. Only this time it was to LaVerne defensive back Fred Gometztrejo who picked off the pass and rambled 55 yards for a touchdown. La Verne's final points came with just seconds left when, preserving a lead, USO punter Tom Reilly stepped out of his end zone for a safety.
SAN DIEGO UNION
OCT 18 1981 1
'BUS STOP' - W,lllam Inge"s romantic comedy produced by the Un1ver111y of San O,ego's Fine Arts Department.' w,11 conclude fol- towing a performance at 2 pm today In tne Camino Theater. USO.
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OCTl 9 1981
SAN DIEGO UNION
SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL
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OA 11 · (kt 21 I !Ml . 710-9 u.m. SI Ml. AR Mer •er and Ac4u1,itions: I In: R,1twnal • 1 o •1c and l'r.i c11cal lm- plicat1011,, I SD I pd,11e Breakfast C!lllllafS IO( 110 , · I )(ccut1\c Hot e l. doY.nto.,.,11 I I I 15
OCT 18 1981
JOHN LYONS_ The gu,tanst w,11 present a recital at 1_2:15 p.m. Wednesday in the French Parlor. Founders Hall. Un1ver11ty of San Diego. to continue the Noonttme Concert Series.
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