News Scrapbook 1982-1984

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DAIL y TRANSCRIPT NOV 1 O 1982

Ernesto Grihalva, a second-year student at the University of San Diego School of Law, took top honors recently in the three-day Jessop International Law Moot Court Competiti,>n at the law school.

't ds Finally Lift Over USD Growth Plans By PAULA PARKER, Times Staff Writer Even the heavens cooperated Tuesday morning at ground-break- ing ceremonies for a $10-million construction project at the Umver- s1ty of San Diego, a school that was in the red only six years ago. Stormy skies gave way to sun- shine on the campus of the Catholic university long enough for USO Pre ident Author Hughes and other dignitanes to thrust silver shovels into the moist earth where a $3.8- milhon xpans1on will more than double the size of the campus Ji. brary. The library expansion, a $2-mil- lion executive conference center and a new 45,000-square-foot building to house uso·s School of Business Administration, estimated to cost about $5 m11lion, were made possible by a $15-million fund-ra1s- mg campaign begun three years ago. USO officials say the construction program Is vital in helping the cam- pus handle a student enrollment Please see LIBRARY, Pafe 4

Part II/Wednesday; November 10, 1982 J t BRARY: Funding Skies Clear Contlnaed from Fint Pase

report, USD has erased the last of a $1.8-million deficit accumulated during the late 1960s and early 1970s before it merged the once- separate College for Women, Col- lege for Men and School of Law. Laat of Deficit Eliminated The deficit accumulated after the Catholic Diocese of San Diego dis- continued funding for the former men's college in 1968. Hughes has been credited with instituting tight budget controls and other meas- ures, which moved USO into the black six years ago. USO now shows a surplus of $531,613 in its current annual operating budget of $26.7 million, according to its annual re- port. Hughes said there are plans to raise funds for a fourth construction project, a $6-million student center which would house dining halls and other student services. The univer- sity has distributed proposals to pri- vate donors seeking about $8 mil- lion, but has not yet received responses, he added.

project for academic programs there since the $1.5-mill!on School of Nursing was built in 1978, univer- sity spokeswoman Sara Finn said. Result of Steady Efforts The project also is probably the most tangible evidence of more than a decade of steady efforts by Hughes and USD's Board of Trust- ees to turn around the once finan- cially troubled institution, capping years of internal budgeting im- provemepts and aggressive fund- raising efforts. "To have talked about a $15-mll- lion (capital improvements) pro- gram in 1971 was so far.from any- thing that appeared to be remotely possible . . ." Hughes, president of USO for 11 years, observed during a break in the ceremonies. "It's been a personal as well as professional goal, to see this (uni- versity) evolve. to succeed, lo be a really important part of the higher education scene in San Diego," he said. According to its 1981-1982 annual

that, at 5,003, has grown 72% since 1977. Original projections did not call for an enrollment of that size until 1985. Classrooms and library facilities are now "badly cramped, badly overcrowded," said Sister Sally Furay, USO vice president. The university has an average cllll!S· room use rate of 87% - much higher than desirable. Funding for the projects, to be built over the next two years, came from corporate donors, private benefactors and foundations. Nearlv half of the $15 million amass"ed as generated directly by tru~tees, including a $1.5 million donation to the libr~y expansion fund from the James S. Copley Foundation. The completed library will be called the Helen K. and James S. Copley library in honor of the donation, USO officials said. But Tuesday's festivities marked more than just the expansion and addition of buildings at the 33-year- old USO. It is the largest building

.

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d • g shows plans for USO' s new Helen K. and James S. Copley_Library expansion.

Architect s ren enn Construction of library addition which will add 38,000 square feet to the present 24,000, will begin in January, with comple- tion expected in about a year. The architect for the project is Mosher, Drew, Watson and Ferguson, a San Diego firm. . The new building for the business the

school, where enrollment has tri- pied in five years, will be built by Tucker, Sadler & Associates of San Diego, and will house classrooms. faculty offices and instructional fa- cilities. Construction is set to begin The 15,000-square-foot confer- ence center will house the univers1 - in~~

ty's continuing education programs

and

serve

as

a place where

academic seminars, workshops and lectures can be held, USO officials said. It will be called the Manches- ter Executive Conference Center in recognition of a $500,000 gift rom USO trustee Douglas Manchester. f

@,an 1Bir9n matly IDrausrript Real Estate/Construction

861 SIXTH A VENUE -

(714-232-4381)

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1982

fering classrooms, offices, seminar rooms and lounge space.

The USD School of Business Administration Building will be a 45,000-square-hot building of-

DAILY CALIFORNIAN NOV 1 3 1982 I Through Dec. 9 .. USD display - The Uni- 1 varsity of San Diego will 1 have a display of its sculptun1d works begin- / ning Nov. -10 at the ; sc~ool's ~ounders ~allerr. An -ope;,mg reception· will , be held ~ from 7 to 9 p.m. · Tuesday, Nov: 9. The gal- lery is open Wednesday from noon to 9 p.m. and other weekdays from noon f to.5 p.m. Admlssion _is h:ee. ,

Reaches $15Million Construction Goal, USD Begins Construction On Three New Buildings Having reached its fund raising more than double what exists today. goal of $15 million, the University of Hughes described the plans as San Diego yesterday began a con- "our answer to a clear and pressing struction program that will add need." three new buildings to the campus He said USO has experienced a by the fall of 1984. 72% increase in enrollment since Ground was broken yesterday 1977. a tripled enrollment in the for the expansion of the James S. School of Business, and an average Copley Library at USO. classroom utilization of 87%. The approximately $3 million The new School of Business will addition will add 38,000 square feet be a 45,000 square foot building to the library. The expanded facility housing classrooms, faculty offices, will be designated the Helen K. and seminar and lounge space and James S. Copley Library upon its centers for student accounting, word projected completion in September processing, and computer science 1983. instruction. USO President Author E. The building will be located at Hughes said the university is also the west end of the campus, near the planning a new School of Business Philip Y. Hahn School of Nursing. Administration, and the Manchester While the local firm of Mosher, Executive Conference Center. Watson_ and Ferguson is the ar- USD Discovery chairman Helen chitect on the library expansion, San K. Copley said yesterday the $15 Diego-based Tucker Sadler & million goal was reached over a Associates has designed both the three-year period. School of Business Administration The major gift for the library and the Manchester Conference construction came from the James S. Center. Copley Foundation, which con- The two Tucker Sadler buildings tributed $1.5 million. are expected to be under con- Other major gifts were provided struction by next spring, with by: the W.M. Keck Foundation of completion slated for the fall of 1984. Los Angeles, $500,000; the National USD trustee. Douglas Man- Endowment for the Humanities, chester provided the school with a $400,000; the Edyth Bush Charitable $500,000 gift last December, which Foundation of Winter Park, Fla.. prompted USD to move ahead with $150,000; the Dan Murphy Foun- its plan for the conference center. dation, $100,000; Wells Fargo Bank, USO is an independent, Catholic $75,000; and other contributions institution with an enrollment of from the Ahmanson Foundation, 5.003 't'dergraduate and graduate Atlas Hotels, Robert Golden students. Foundation, and Home Federal Founded in 1949, it occupies a Savings. 180-acre area in historic Alcala Park The expansion of the library will overlooking Mission Bay. ~--- ----

facility will feature seminar and workshop rooms as well as classrooms.

The Manchester Executive Conference Center will be under construction by early spring next year. Designed by Tucker Sadler & Associates, the

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 3 0 1982 Ramirez named

Outstanding Jurist North County Municipal Court Judge Victor E. Ramirez has been named the Outstanding Jurist by the Law Alumm of the University of San Diego. Judge Ramirez, who graduated from the USD's College of Law in 1973, was appointed to the bench in 1980 and has served in the Vista Mu- nicipal Court since January. -------'

The 38,000-square-foot addition to the USD library should be completed by Sentember 1983.

,

TIMES-ADVOCATE NOV 1 G J.,t',

DAILY TRANSCRIPT NOV 1 8 1982

USO teachers, students in two one-act operas More one-act operas by college musi- cians are on tap. This time the University of San Di- ego Opera Workshop will offer Sey- mour Barab's "A Game of Chance" and Jacques Offenbach's "R.S.V.P." at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2:30 p.m. Sunday In Camino Theater at USD, on Linda Vista Road. Robert Austin is In charge of musi· cal and stage direction, and the cast is made up of faculty and students. Tick- ets are $3.50 at the door, and $2.50 for students and senior citizens. • --~

Real Estate Tax Seminar Set By USD Law School

A New Library Building By MICHAEL SCOTT-BLAIR Educot,on Wriltr, The Son o,ego Union

more than 10 percent to over 1 mil- hon square feet and more than dou- bling the size of the campus library. In the midst of yesterday's stormy weather, the sun made one brief ap· pearance a more than 200 specta- tors watched Copley, publisher of The San Diego Union and The Tri• bunc and vice chairwoman of the USD Board of Trustees, turn the first shovelful of soil for the new library bmlding. She was aided by the Most Rev Leo T. Maher, bishop of the San (Continued on B-2, Col. 1)

level

graduate

two-day

The

A $15 m1lhon expansion program at the Univer. ity of San Diego was kicked off yesterday with a ground· breaking for a new library building. The expan ion, which al o will in• elude a bu iness chool and confer- enc center, IS the re ult of the suc• c ful completion of a thre -year, $15 m1lhon fund-raising campaign - the university's first maJor public fund dnve campaign chairwoman Helen K Copley announced ye ter• day. The three buildings represent a massive expan. ,on of the campus, in- crea ing its pre ent floor space by

The second annual Real Estate the University of San Diego School of Law in cooperation with The State Bar of California, Taxation Section, will be held at the Hotel de! Coronado on Nov. 18 and 19. Registration for the 1982 Real Estate Tax Institute entitled, "State of the Art in Tax Planning for Real Estate." is $345. Tax Institute sponsored by

institute, of nationally recognized experts who will examine contemporary planning techniques and result-oriented solutions in four areas of real estate taxation. Of special interest to tax at- torneys, certified public ac- countants, trust officers, corporate real estate executves and investors, the Institute will explore the topics: "Planning the Real Estate Venture to Optimize Tax Benefits for the Service Partner;" "Tax Audit and Trial Techniques for Real Estate Ventures;" "Salvaging the Distressed Real Estate Venture;" and "Highlights of Major Recent Tax Cases Affecting Real Estate." Moderators for the Institute are Peter G. Aylward, of Aylward, Kintz, Stiska, Wassenaar & Shannahan; James 0. Hewitt, from the Law Offices of James O. Hewitt; Richard A. Shaw, of Shenas, Robbins, Shenas & Shaw; and Charles O. Thomas, Arthur Young & Company. Lecturers include par· ticipants from Chicago, San Fran· cisco, Beverly Hills, Houston, and Phoenix. Contact the University of San Diego for provisions for continuing legal education credit, California Department of Real Estate con- tinuing education credit and California State Board of Accounting continuing education credit. includes a panel

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

SAN DIEGO UNION NOV 1 8 1982

BLADE TRIBUNE

NOV 1 9 1982

The Son Diego Union/Joe Flynn Union, and Author E. Hughes, University of San Diego president, look at plans for a major expansion at the university.

The Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego, left, Helen K. Copley, publisher of The San Diego

Opera Group To Present Double Bill SAN DIEGO - The Un- iversity of San Diego Opera Workshop will present a double-bill production of two onn-act operas, "A Game of Chance" by Seymour Barab and "R.S.V.P ." by Jacques Offenbach on Friday and Saturday, Nov . 19 and 20, at 8p.m. and on Sunday Nov.21 at 2:30 p.m. in Camino Theatre. General admission tickets are $3.50; senior citizens and students, $2.50. Tickets may be purchased at the door, or call 291-6480, ext. 4427 for information. The cast of USD faculty and students includes: Anne Swanke, Lourdes Babauta . Teressa Delano and David Walling in "A Game of Chance," and Cathleen Hannasch, Dino Palazzi, Paul Horton, James Capers, Anita Kuykendall, David Jarboe, and Larry William'son in "R.S.V.P ."

The Son Diego Union/Roni Golgono USO Fund-Raiser: University of San Diego st~dents attend a swap. meet on campus to ra,se money to relieve hunger in the wo rld . The event was part of an international move- ·ment t~at originated with American students atte~dmg Oxford University. Checking out offerings at the meet were Bruce Pileggi and ~artin Benitez, above, and JoAnn Thornton , right. Students participating in the anti-hun- ger program attended a Mass at noon yes- terday and began a fast last night that will end at 11 p.m. today.

Ground Is Broken For USD Library New Building Will Be First Of Three In $ l 5•Million Expansion Program

lions, but the Copley Foundation will always give strong support to institu- tions which uphold the high personal values exemplified by this universi- ty," she said. Other major benefactors of the li- brary project include the W.M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles, $500,000; the Edyth Bush Charitable Founda- tion of Flonda, $150,000; the National Endowment for the Humanities. $400,000; the Dan Murphy Founda- tion, $100,000: and Wells Fargo Bank, $75,000. Work on thf new School of Bftsi- ness Administf-ation will begin in the spring, followed by the Manchester Executive Conference Center. He said that in 1976, the university estimated its enrollment would in- crease from slightly more than 3,000 students to approximately 5,000 by 1985, and these buildings were planned to meet that growth.

bemg educated, especially with the increasing pressure for academic specialization early in their campus life, Maher said "We offer an education that devel- ops the mind before it starts to spe- cialize the training," and library books are essential to that effort. he said. Hughes echoed Maher's thoughts, saying. "We believe that to hold a book is a far different thing from sit- ting at a computer terminal, and while the library offers and will con- tinue to seek the most contemporary (computerized) equipment, the print- ed word will never be considered outmoded at this ·ampus." Later Copley said it was this kind of philosophy that led her .,and the James S Copley Foundation to con- tribute more than $1.5 million to the new library, tn addition to spear- heading the $15 million fund drive. 'I can't speak or other corpora-

(Continued from B-1) Diego Roman Catholic Diocese and board president. and Dr Author E. Hughes, president of the university. new 38,000-square-foot library buil~ing will be immediately west of Camino Hall, which houses the pres- ent 24,000-square-foot Jame S. Cop- leY, Library When the new building is complet- ea next fall, the entire ltbrary com- plex will be renamed the Helen K. ~nd James S Copley l.ibrary, Hughes said While library expansion has been given a low prionty on other major campuses in the nation. Maher said, l!SD's move to more than double its library space is consistent with its commitment to a style of education that involves all aspects of student ltfe. ~1any young peop!P are being put hrru h univ n ie t but •hat d not n

DAILY CALIFORNIAN

EVEN ING TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO UNION

NOV 2 0 1982

NOV 2 1. 1982

San Diego, Saturday Civil rights talk Monday at USD Clarence Pendleton Jr., chairman of the U.S. Com- mission of Civil Rights, will speak on civil rights at 12: p.m. Monday at the Univer-. sity of San Diego, School of. Law. 1 The topic of the speech,. to be given in the Joseph P' Grace Courtroom, is "Civif Rights Under Assault: Is There a Basis for Criti- cism?"

SAN DIEGO UNION llOV 1 9 198l

', California D Tuesday, November 23, 1982

USO OPERAS - The University of San Diego Opera Workshop will present Seymour Barab's "A Game of Chance" and Jacques Offen- bach's "R.S.V.P." at 2:30 p.m. today in the Camino Theater, USO. Robert Austin is music and stage director with choreography by Marilyn Green.

Success Story

Pendleton says recession spawns a new underclass

Enrollment at USD this fall topped 5,000 - a figure not ex- pected to be reached until 1985. There has been a parallel growth in the university's academic stat• ure. President Author Hughes. the Board of Trustees, and the USD faculty can take pride in their impressive achievements during a period when many institut10ns of higher learning, both public and private, were struggling to hold their own.

The $15 rrnllion expansion pro- gram getting under way at the University ot San Diego caps an unusual succes~ story m higher cducat10n Only six years ago. USD was operating at a deficit in a diffi- cult transition to independent statu after years of being subsi- dized by the Catholic Diocese of San Diego. Today the universi- ty's budget is in the black and work 1s beginning on a new il- brary business school, and con- ference center

SAN DIEGO (AP) - The nation's re- cess1on~ry economy is thwarting minorit g:oups m. their pursuit of jobs and finaJ. f~al security! according to the chairman of e U.S. Civil Rights Commission. "We're in danger of creating a per- mar:ient underclass in this country if we don t turn the economy around " said Clar~nce Pendleton, chairman ~f com- m1ss1on. Nevertheless, Pendleton, who made his remarks Monday night at a news con- ferenc~ following a speech to University of San Diego l~w students, said that the Reagan admm1_stration's economic poli- cies are a step m the right direction. "~ea~anomics makes a lot of sense to me, said_ Pendleton, who was appointed to the post by President Reagan last

spring. " He said that Reagan 's policies would get the government out of people's lives fl and _get th~ free enterprise system to ounsh agam." Pendleton said that the nation•s schools and colleges should emphasize training in high technology fields to prepare future generations for new jobs in computer- onented fields . In additi~n to the economy, Pendleton ~aid the nation must deal with the "whol issue of hate." e, "Orov_ille is just about wrecked, .. Pend- leton said, referr(ng to the case in that Nor~hern Cahforma city in which a neo- . Nazi lea_der and two youths have been accused m connection with the killing of a young follower and police informant.

SAN DIEGO UNION

NOV 2 l 7982

Founder • Gallery: "A Passion for Detail: Sculpture From the Grand Tour," through Dec. 9. Uni- versity of San Diego. Monday-Fri- day, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Wednes- days to 9 p.m.

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 2 0 1982

Gene Klein tabbed for university board Chargers President Gene Klein has been elected to the University of San Diego's board of trustees. "We are most fortunate in having Gene Klein on the university's board," USD President Author Hughes said of the appointment. "His business acumen, his insights and his interest in the development of young men and women will be of enormous value to the university."

DAILV CALIFORNIAN NOV 1 9 1983

Animal art - "Beasts," an exhibit of animals In art form. will be on view from noon to 5 p.m. weekdays through Wednesday, Nov. 30, at the Founders Gallery, Founders Hall at the University of San Diego. Admission Is free.

I

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 2 3 198'-

Civil rights appointee defends Reagan record

THE TRIBUNE

D-2

San Diego, Wednesda)

NOV! 4 1982 ~ZEL crow TRIBUNE SOCIETY EpiTOR Y OUNG CONNOISSEURS OF THE SAN DIEGO Museum of Art have chosen a nostalgic look at Hollywood in the '50s as the theme for a New Year's Eve party at the museum. Planners have borrowed the title of "Some Like It Hot" from the Marilyn Monroe film for the party's name and promise a Hollywood extravaganza to match film premieres of the era. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Huff are the chairmen and Leslie Simon is supervising the decor. Dress sugges- tion is black-tie optional or prom fashion. Among those assisting with arrangements are Mr. and Mrs. John Adams, Dr. and Mr. John Wil- liams, Janis Butcher, Bob Gallagher, Chris Hatch, Lucy Huddel, Michael McGreevy, Martha Moore and Chris Wallner. Party information is available from the museum office. Marion Ross, star of TV's "Happy Days," joined local planners of a Jan. 29 gala at a progress meet- ing Monday evening at the Mission Hills home of Dr. Noel Meadows. The gala, "Stairway to the Stars," will honor Miss Ross and inaugurate a Marion Ross Scholarship for the drama department at San Diego State University. The scholarship program is an outgrowth of Miss Ross's work with the drama department in bringing professionals to the university to work with stu- dents. She is an alumna of SDSU and has been asso- ciated with the Old Globe Theatre here. Her co-workers on "Happy Days," Henry Winkler and Tom Bosley, head the list of film and television personalities who will participate in the gala. Win- kler is dinner chairman and Bosley will be the mas- ter of ceremonies. They weren't able to attend Monday's session but members of the honorary committee who did were Rep. Clair Burgener, Mrs. Lynn G. Fayman, De- borah Szekely and Ed Self, as well as Miss Ross's business manager, Barbara Best. Dr. Thomas Day, SDSU president, was there and so were Dean Jerry E. Mandel of the College of Professional Studies and Fine Arts and Merrill Lesslev. chairman of the drama department. Loca1 memoers ot tne corporate commmee re- porting on sales of tables (at $1,000 each) were Everitt A. Carter and John McKenna Case. Los An- geles members of this committee are entertain- ment executives Gary Nardino and Anthony Thomo- poulos. Glenn and Jan Broadus donated the Christian Brothers wine for the party, and Julie Poole ar- ranged the hors d'oeuvre table. Tickets for the gala ($100 per person) at Town and Country Convention Center may be reserved through the drama department or Alumni and Asso- ciates at SDSU. Comedian Lily Tomlin was a surprise guest at a party given Sunday evening at Fat City to honor volunteers in the COMBO campaigns to raise funds for the arts in San Diego County. Miss Tomlin, who is appearing at the Old Globe Theatre, was escorted by Jack O'Brien, artistic director of the theater which is one of the beneficiaries of the COMBO drive. Sheila Guebert arranged the party attended by some 200 volunteers and members of the media. Many of the guests will be active in the Dec. 4 COMBO television auction of goods and services. Coordinator of this auction is Al Dillon. Tom Fat provided hors d'oeuvres for the party and Simon Levi Co. of San Diego and Ferrara Win- ery of Escondido brought the wines. . Mr~. Thomas Carlson heads the committee put- ting fmal touches on peparations for the 53rd annual ~andlelight Ball Dec. 4 at Vacation Village Conven- tion Center. The black-tie dinner dance is sponsored by the Auxiliary to Scripps Memorial Hospital, La Jolla, and proceeds will be used to purchase equip- ment for the hospital. The Greater San Diego Chapter of Children's Vil- lag~, USA, will celebrate the holiday season with a Christmas luncheon and boutique Dec. 6 at the Sheraton Harbor Island Hotel. Mrs. Lionel P. Hernholm is chairman of the event which will in- clude an auction of hand-crafted ornaments, plants and home-baked goods. ~rs. Albert Jaco~s is president of the chapter which supports Children's Village at Beaumont Calif., a non-profit residence for the care and reha'. bilitation of abused children. The University of San Diego Auxili~ry will wel- come 77 new members at a luncheon next Wednes- ~ay at Cafe del Rey Moro in Balboa Park. Follow- mg the luncheon, the group will tour the "Celebrate the Holidays" display at nearby Casa de Balboa prese~ted by the San Diego Historical Society. During the luncheon Mrs. William Edwards will p~ese~t a check for $13,500 to USD for student finan- cial aid. T~e money was raised by the auxiliary's recent fash10n show which Mrs. Edwards chaired. ~rs. Jonathan Tibbitts is taking luncheon reser- vat~ons.. ~uest~ are asked to bring small gifts for senior citizens m convalescent homes.

By Bob Corbett Tribune Staff Writer

Pre ident Reagan's administration is trying to make a. fun.d~m~ntal change in the nations CIVll-nghts program, says Clarence E. Pendleton Jr The administration is trying to substitute opportunity for prefer- ence. Pendleton, Reagan's appointee a chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Comm1s ion, said yesterday in San Diego Pendleton, former president of the San Diego Urban League, defende? the administration's record on c1v1l rights in a lecture and press co~fer- ence at the University of San Diego Law School. He said "there is no basis for criti· ci~m" of the administration as being deaf to the civil-rights movement. "This 1s the only time in history that an admimstration a Republi· can admini tration - has placed the government leadership of the civil- rights mandate in the hands of blacks," he said. referring to himself and three other top civil-rights offi- cials The admimstration is shifting the focus of the civil-nghts effort back to its original meaning, opening of op- portunities for blacks and other m1• mm ics, rat r than a suring them of "preferential treatment.'' Pendle- ton aid. C1v1l rights, he said. had become "a zero sum game " "All policy solutions about eco- nomic growth and productivity in- volve some degree of redistribution of income and wealth," he said, "to the ever increasing number of mi- norities who comprise the protected classes. "We now have 15 protected classes of Americans. More than 75 percent of our population 1s eligible for pref- erential treatment. "I believe that civil rights are at the crossroads again and we must boldly strike the path of racial ne~- trality toward achievement of a soc1• etv free from discrimination. ··rncreasingthe number of protect- ed classe · supposedly increases the number of opportunities for minofl• ties to enter the mainstream, but un- less the economy 1s expanding pro- portionately to the number of pro- tected classes there will just be more people fighting for less opportunity. "For this reason, the focus of the civil-fights movement should .be on expanding the economy. which 1s now stagnant. rather than attempt· ing to increase the number of pro- tected classes or boycotting indus- tnes that are hard hit by the current state of the economy or lobbying government for make-work_ job,~that provide no permanent solut10n. Pendleton has been under attack by many black civil-rights. grou~s since his appointment earlier this year He dismissed their charges yes- terday. "I don't care if they like me or

Clarence Pendleton: 'This is the only time in history that an administration - a Republican administration - has placed the government leadership of the civil- rights mandate in the hands of blacks'

The Son Diego Union/Peter Koelemon Clarence Pendleton calls for end to criticism of President. Recession Hurting Civil Rights, Pendleton Says By ROBERT P. LAURENCE Stpff Writer, The Son Diego Union

not," he said. "I'm not chairman of the black commission on civil rights; I'm chairman of the Civil Rights Commission of the United States." Under the Reagan administration, Pendleton said, civil-rights spending will increase from $511 million in 1980 to $531 million in fiscal 1983. Funds for civil-rights enforcement will double under current adminis- tration proposals, he said. "Wnat we have aone as 01acKs, Pendleton said, "was to believe that government was our salvation." Parents of black and white chil- dren should play a larger part in the education of their children, he said. "Parents must tell their kids that discipline. preparation and competi- tion are the true roads to freedom," he said. The "administration has continued the effort to require school districts which classify and assign students or teachers on the basis of race to adopt effective desegregation plans," he said. "To maximize effectiveness," he said, "the Department of Justice .no longer seeks a mandatory busmg plan to achieve racial balance but tries to emphasize quality education- al opportunities through use of mag- net schools and other techniques.'' Pendleton said Americans should "insist on the kind of preparation and training that will allow our young- sters to take advantage of the new opportunities in the information- based society of tomorrow."

Economic conditions are playing a major role in denying civil rights to mmority groups, U.S. Civil Rights Commission Chairman Clarence M. Pendleton Jr. told a press confer- ence yesterday. "We're in danger of creating a permanent underclass in this coun- try if we don't turn the economy around," he said to reporters follow- ing a speech to law students at the University of San Diego. "Reaganomics makes a lot of sense to me," added the former chief of the San Diego Urban League, who last spring was appointed by Presi- dent Reagan to his part-time, non- paying position. He remarked that Mr. Reagan's economic policies would "get gov- ernment out of people's lives and get the free enterprise system to flourish again, which is what made this country great in the first place. . . . If you don't broaden the econo- my, what do you do?" Saying that "the safety net is in place" for the poorest people, Pen- dleton questioned the need for pro- grams aimed at the middle class. "People think the more govern- ment there is, the more civil rights you have, and I don't believe that at all," Pendleton said. Fresh focus should be placed, he said, on "linkage" between the schools and technological industries, making sure school administrators and students inquire "what does it take to go into hi-tech? .. Discipline and education are the two roads to freedom." Besides the economy, the nation must also deal with "the whole issue of hate," Pendleton said in his press conference. "Oroville is just about wrecked," he added, referring to the case in that Northern California city in which a neo-Nazi leader and two

@ THE SAN DIEGO UNION Tues:ioy, November 23, 1982

youths have been accused of killing a young follower and police inform- ant. Pendleton's speech defended the Reagan administration's record in defending civil fights for minorities and reiterated his stand in opposi- tion to race quotas in education and hiring and to busing for school inte- gration. "We must stop criticizing Presi- dent Reagan," he said. "It is not pro- ductive. Things were getting bad long before January 20, 1981 (when Mr. Reagan took office). "Too much government: its spending and regu- lation excesses occurred before President Reagan took office." Pendleton said he had told the President that he agreed with "a policy of color-blind racial neutrali- ty. But that a firm administration civil rights policy (should) be estab- lished so that non-white Americans would not perish on the route from color consciousness to color blind- ness." Busing has resulted in "the de- struction of public education" in many cities, Pendleton declared, and affirmative action programs have "led to the creation of a kind of racial spoils system in America.''

READER

READER

NOV 2 5 1982 "A Comparison of U.S. and Japanese Corporate Performance Throul!h Financial Statement .------ Analysis" will k the ,uf-iect ot a le{ tun.· hy Japa1H:-..c pr1.if\!~M)f H1roiuk1 lc.,m,. M ,nday N, vcmbcr 29. 7: 30 p. m., Philip Y. ll.1hn School of Nursing, USD. 291-6480 x4296.

NOV 2 5 1982

Piano Recital by Nicolas Re,·eles, featuring works by Liszt, Beetho- ven, and Prokofiev. will be held Tue,Jar, 'ovcmber JO, 8 p. m.. Camino Theatre, USO. 291-6480 x4296. ·

DAILY CALIFORNIAN NOV 2 7 1982 Nicolas Revele - The pianist wi perform at 8 p.m. in the University of Sa Diego Camino Theatre. General ad mission is $3, students are $1. Ticket may be purchased at the door. Cal 291-6480, Ext. 4296, for more informa- ion. -~)

LA JOLLA LIGHT

READER NOV 2 5 198Z

NOV 2 5 198Z

USD Founders Gallery _ "A Passion for Detail," an exhibition featuring sculpture from the Grand Tour will be displayed through De~. 9. De Sales Hall, Alcala Park, S.D. 291-6480.

"A Passion for Detail," an exhibi- t1,,n ,f sculpture from the Un1ver- "t\ ofSan Diego collection, will be on view through Dcccmher 9 Fo1111dcr,G.11lcry, USD. 291-6840.'

SAN DIEGO UNION NOY 7 1982

fj/RDS, PLANTS, ANl;x;MrJATLTll/F.~E~--~-~--~~-~ Prized Paintings Of Mexican Botanist Jose Mocino Studied (Continued from B-1) 'Engstrand is now studying them.

Joseph," said Engstrand. But when the Spanish people rose and threw the French out, Mocino's willingness to work under Joseph Bo- naparte was seen as collaboration witlj the enemy, and he was put in chains with other scientists and led off to prison. It was a French general that came upon the group and set them free. Mocino fled quickly to Madrid to col- lect a few treasured possessions, in- cluding his drawings and paintings, which he threw in a handcart and pushed it towards the French border. But another French officer seized the cart, leaving Mocino clutching only the paintings, which he ulti- mately carried to Geneva. It was 1817 before Mocino was in- vited back to Spain on the journey he never completed. He died in Barcelona and was bur- ied in the parish church cemetery of St James. But what happened to his personal effects and paintings, no- body knew. In the 1880s, an unrecognized col- lection of books, writings and paint- ings passed into the hands of the Torner family of Barcelona. It passed to a brother, and ulti- mately to Jaime and Luis Torner Pannochia, the brothers who late in life, remembered the pretty pictures thay bad frequently leafed through in their grandfather's library, and the invaluable treasure came back to the light. But the Spaniards of Barcelona and the Spaniards of Madrid have a long-standing feud, and the Barcelo- na family was not anxious to see the collection go to Madrid. Thus, it found its way to Pittsburgh and the scrutiny of Engstrand. The USD historian already has written seven books of the Spanish scientific explorations of the New World in addition to many popular and respected history books on San Diego and California. other historians have paid scant attention to what she calls the "truly remarkable scientific work of the Spaniards in the late 18th and early 19th centuries," this newly-found col- lection of paintings, "a sts to the brilliance of their work,' she said.

scientific ventures in space, Britain's Captain Cook observed the I769 transit of Venus from Tahiti, while the French and Spanish watched it from Baja California. Scientists ranged from Peru to Alaska in one of the world's greatest studies of nafural life, and Mocino was in the forefront. But while he trekked the moun- tains and deserts, Europe was in tur- moil. As the new century dawned, Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Spain and put his brother Joseph on the throne, and Joseph encouraged scien- tific discovery. "Not unlike today, scientists often transcend politics, and work togeth- er, even with unfriendly govern- ments, and so it was with Mocino who was appointed director of the Royal Museum of Natural History by

"We expect to find drawings of birds, animals, fish and flowers that may well now be extinct," said Eng- strand. Expert botanists and biologists say the drawings are detailed down to the last fish spine and bird feather, and are of almost photographic qual- ity, she said. Mocino was born in Temascal- tepec, Mexico, and was in the class of '89 - that is 1789 - at the university in Mexico City, ultimately becoming a doctor and professor of theology. It was a time when the nalions of Europe were cooperating in scientif- ic ventures while their armies fought wars and their politicians waged bit- ter conflicts between themselves. Like a forerunner of today's joint

•'

Works of Mexican botanist Jose Mariano Mocino show painstaking devotion to detail. Prized Mocino Paintings Studied By MICHAEL SCO'IT-BLAIR Education Writer, The Son Diego Union

more than 2,000 meticulously drawn color art works dropped from sight. More than 100 years later, two small boys came upon some old books in their grandfather's library and the first seed of rediscovery was sown. But it was almost another 60 years before those two boys, now grand- parents themselves, remembered those books of color pictures and re- alized they might be of value. Mocino's old paintings had been rediscovered, and Engstrand calls it a "magnificent collection." She first learned about the missing paintings during a year's research in Madnd and Geneva in 1960, but found the Spanish authorities to be "surprisingly uninterested in them." They were ultimately acquired by , the Hunt Institute of Botanical Docu- mentation at Carnegie Mellon Uni- versity in Pittsburgh, Pa., where (Continued on B-2, Col. I)

one of the few historians in the world with a special interest in the exten- sive scientific expeditions sent out by Spain to the Americas in the late 1700s. They were remarkable expedi- tions, ranging from Peru to Alaska, but much of the work was ignored as Spain of the 18th and 19th centuries erupted in political turmoil. Mocino was a victim of that tur- moil. After years of painstaking work in the emerging New World, he returned to Spain, not to acclaim, but to social upheaval which ultimately drove him from the country. But he always kept his beloved pictures with him. He had pushed his prized paintings halfway across Spain on a handcart, protected them from ungrateful Spanish rulers, and saved them from an angered Spanish people who sent him to work on a chain gang. But when he died in Barcelona, the

In 1820, Mexican botanist Jose Manano Mocino had been forgiven by the Spanish king for allegedly col- laborating with the French, and was making his way slowly back from Geneva to Madrid. But he never made it. Mocino - one of the greatest chroniclers of plants, bird and animal life m early Mexico and California - died in Bar- celona and never reached Madnd. And that would probably have been the end of that, except for a large box of over 2,000 paintings that Mocino had painstakingly collected, illustrating his studies of the won- ders in the New World of the late l700s, and the determin11tion of a University of San Diego history pro- fessor that his efforts should not lan- guish in obscurity. Dr. Iris H.W. Engstrand of USO is

The Sm Diego U n/Tooy Doubek

. Iris H. W. Engstrand examines photographic slides.

SAN DI EGO UNION NOV 2 8 1912

Spinoffs

NOV 2 8 1982

County Choral Concerts Herald the Holidays

University of San Diego Auxiliary will wel- come 77 new members at a luncheon Wednes- day at Cafe del Rey Moro, Balboa Park. The social hour will begin at 11 a.m. Patty Edwards will present a check for $13,500 - proceeds from the recent fashion show - for student financial aid at USO. Following lunch, they will go to the "Celebrate the Holidays" exhibit at Casa de Balboa.

By KENNETH HERMAN From a massive Messiah singalong at the San Diego Civic Theatre to an evening of medieval carols and Renaissance motets, San Diegans have a surfeit of Christmas choral concerts from which to choose. No season is more hospitable to the medium. This year, San Diegans not only have the opportunity to hear fine performances, but two "Messiah" singa- longs will let them drop in-score in hand-and participate in the music-making. For sheer size, nothing equals the San Diego Master Chorale's "Messiah" singalong next Sunday at the Civic Theatre. With orchestra and the Master Chorale, as well as the 3,000 voices assembled in the theater, conductor Charles Ketcham is bound to raise the roof with the mighty Handelian choruses. Solo arias will be sung by soprano Anna Djarnson- Carson, alto Paula Chastain, tenor James Flynn and bass Cleve Genzlinger. The program begins at 7 p.m. Doors will open an hour earlier since there is no reserved seating. The following Saturday, Dec. 11, a more modest Messiah singalong will be held at St. James-by-the-Sea Epsicopal Church in La Jolla, under the auspices of the La Jolla Civic University Symphony Orchestra. UC San Diego music professor Thomas Nee will conduct the orchestQ, chorus and audience in this 3 p.m. perfor- mance. Bach Cantatas For a more traditional music program, the complete "Christmas Oratorio" by J.S. Bach will be presented as the final offering of the San Diego Bach Festival at the First United Methodist Church at 6 p.m. in Mission Valley next Sunday. Music Director Robert Cooper will conduct both the church's Chancel Choir and the Masterwork Chorale, about 120 voices, as well as orchestra and soloists in this performance. The Christmas Oratorio is actually a composite of six ind1v1dual cantatas Bach composed for all of the festivals from Christ.-nas Day through New Year's Day and Epiphany. Although less frequently performed than the "Messi

ah," the "Christmas Oratorio" is by far the most grandiose Baroque Christmas offering, not only in scope, but in its brilliant and colorful orchestration. The Early Music Ensemble, San Diego's premiere performers of early music, will give its Christmas program twice, first at St. Brigid's Roman Catholic Church in Pacific Beach at 7,30 p.m. next Sunday and again at 8 p.m. Dec. 15 at the La Jolla Congregational Church. Medieval English carols, motets by Sweelinck and Dufay, as well as early Baroque works by Schein and Marenzio will be sung by this five-voice virtuoso ensemble. College Programs Although university campuses are the scenes of frantic end-of-semester activity, they still find time for musical celebration. San Diego State University Prof. Frank Almond will lead the Aztec Concert Choir and Chamber Singers at 8 p.m. Dec. 10 in a program featuring Dame! Pinkham's contemporary Christmas Cantata for chorus and brass choirs. In addition to the PinkhaM, traditional Spanish carols and American spirituals, Almond will conduct San Diego composer Keith Heldman's "Lo, the Newborn King of Glory" in a premiere performance. This program, art of the university's Friday Night Concert Series, will be given in the Smith Recital Hall of the Music Building. At the University of San Diego, the USD Choir under the direction of Father Nicolas Reveles will present its Christmas offering Dec. 10, 11 at 8 p.m. in the school's Camino Theatre. Michael Haydn's "Run Ye Shepherds" and Dietrich Buxtehude's "In Dulci Jubilo" will be among the anthems and carol settings on the program. Another J. S. Bach work, the Advent cantata MUSIC

"Wachet Auf," will be performed in German by the First Unitarian Chorus at 4:30 p.m. Dec. 12 in that church's auditorium. Soloists Ruth Dixon, Vicki Ratelle and John .Stephen Hubbard, as well as a chamber orchestra, will be conducted by choral director Dan Ratelle. Williams' Work Ralph Vaughan Williams' Romantic tapestry "Hodie" will be presented at 7 p.m. Dec. 12 in the Sacred Music series of the La Jolla Presbyterian Church. Minister of Music L. Robert Slusser will direct his 00-voice Chancel Choir with orchestra and soloists in this traditional musical melange of carols and narration. A program that is actually a service based on 19th-Century English cathedral tradition is "Christmas Lessons and Carols," to be sung at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in San Diego, at 5 p.m. Dec. 19. That unique English sound of men and boy's voices renders with ethereal serenity the medieval carols and Renaissance motets that intersperse the readings of the service. The St. Paul Choristers are directed by organist-choirmaster Edgar Billups. For the musical purist, St. Paul's Parish Choir and Orchestra will give the complete Handel's "Messiah" with original instrumentation at 7 p.m. on Jan. 2. Director Billups chose not to present the favorite oratorio before Christmas, but during the traditional season from Christmas Day to Epiphany, those 12 days of Christmas celebrated in the work. Original Score :Sillups will _use what musicians call the Urtext, or original score, including many of the variant versions of arias _and choruses left out by 19-Century Handelian traditions of performance. In addition to the usual complement of soloists, Billup's Messiah will feature countertenor Tom Hodge in many of the arias sung by an alto m modern performance. Vocalists joining Hodge in this performance will be soprano Marge Osgood, alto Katherine Bjornson, tenor John Peeling and bass Philipp Larson. Anthony Porto of the Gtossmont College music faculty is Billups' concert- master.

--~

SENTINEL NOV 2 8 1982

+++ FR. NICOLAS Reveles will play in concert Tuesday, at 8 p.m. in the University of San Diego's Camino Theater. Reveles, a USD fine arts department faculty member, will play "Partita No. 5 in G major," by J.S. Bach; "Sonata in B minor," by Liszt; "Sonata Opus 110 in A flat major," by, Beethoven, and "Sonata No. 8 in B flat major," by Prokofiev.

SAN DIEGO UNION

NOV 2 8 '1982

Founders Gallery. "A Passion for Detail; Sculpture From the Grand Tour throug~ Dec. 9. Unl•.-ersity cf San Diego. Weekdays. noon tc 5 p.m., Wedn€sday8 10 9 pm.

VISTA PRESS NOV 2 9 198Z Vista Judge Ramirez honored by alumni VISTA - Municipal Judge Victor Ramirez has been ~a~ed "outsta~ding jurist" by the Law Alumni Associa_hon of the Um~ersity of San Diego. Ramirez was _appomted to the bench in August, 1980 and was assigned to the North County Municipal Court in Vista. He will sit in the Escondido court- house next year. He graduated from the University of San Diego College of Law in 1973 and practiced law in Escon- dido. Ramirez received his honor Nov . 19 at the 1982 distinguished alumni banquet in San Diego. Three ~utstanding_alumni are honored each year in the fields of busmess/educator, practitioner and jurist. Ramirez lives in Escondido with his wife Linda and children, Barbara and Christopher. ' '

THE TRIBlJNE

DAILY TRANSCRIPT ,--_e,:NO,,_,V 2 9 1982 A comparison of U.S. and Japanese corporate performance, through financial analysis, will be presented by Prof. Hiroyuki Itami, distinguished international visiting professor of the American Ac- counting Assn., at the University of San Diego, Nov. 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the Hahn School of Nursing at USD. The program is scheduled because of the high interest in Japanese management style, which sup- posedly is more effective than traditional American management technique. Itami compared three companies from each country to find out. ·

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 2 9 1982

DAILY TRANSCRIPT NOV 2 9 1982. • • • Judge Victor E. Ramirez of North C.ounty Municipal C,ourt was honored as "outstanding jurist" by the Law Alumni Assn. of the University of San Diego at its 1982 distinguished alumni banquet in the Kona Kai Club. Ramirez, a 1973 graduate of the USD C.ollege of Law, was appointed to the bench in 1980 and has been assigned to Division Two of the North C,ounty court in Vista since last January. He will be assigned to the court's Escondido facility from January through June next year. Also honored were Robert F. Adelizzi, who received the outstanding business/educator award and Thomas H. Ault, named outstanding practitioner of the year. • • •

'Third Age' program scheduled Jan. 6-20 University of the Third Age, a special educational pro- gram designed for people older than 55, will be Jan. 6-20 at the University of San Diego. The curriculum for the fourth annual event will cover a range of topics, said Mal Rafferty, director of continuing education at USD. Subjects will include "Young and Old Together: A New Curriculum," discussed by Rita King of the San Diego County Schools; "What's in a Handwriting?," with gra- phologist Jean McGuinness; "Karl Marx and Leo XIII," with USD political science professor John Chambers; and ·'Television and Politics: Who Is Kidding Whom?," with James Hottoiss, USD associate professor of political sci- ence. Among the religious topics to be discussed are "Women in the Pulpit! What's This World Coming To?," with Rabbi Lenore Bohm of Temple Beth Israel; "Preserving Relig- ious Freedom," with Dr. Charles Ballinger of the Ameri- cans for Separation of Church and State; and "Religion: A Changing Face in San Diego," with the Rev. James Mishler of the San Diego Ecumenical Conference. Classes will be Monday through Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to ll:3e a.m. Each day will begin with an hour of physical exercise at the USO Sports Center, Rafferty said. Tuition is $35. Participants must be able to provide their own trans- portation to the campus daily, Rafferty said.

NOV 3 0 1982

1'eil ~n BASIC LIB: Dr. Ir is Engstrand is chaJrman of the University of San Diego history department; the seven other professors are ma le. She's been reappointed for each of the past five yea rs, ex- cept for her sabba tical last year dur ing which she wrote and pub- hshed her history of San Diego. '·I guess since I'm the only woman," she expla ins, "I'm the easiest to agr ee on."

SD BUSINESS JOURNAL NOV 2 9 19i2 SEMINAR: Micrncomputer Use TIME: 9 a .m. to 6 p.m. LOCATION : USD FEE: $50 SPONSOR: USD School of Continu- ing Education in Library Applications DATE: Dec. 4

BLADE TRIBUNE

NOV :J o l98Z

Oriental Art Exhibit, Sale Set

SAN DIEGO - An Or- pieces of original art from iental art.exhibition and sale J apan, China, India, Tibet will ~e held at the Un- and Thailand. iversity o£ San Diego Wed- The works of 18th and 19th nesday ffom 10 a.m. to 5p.m. century artists such as in the Founders Hall foyer. · Hiroshige, Kuniyoshi and The exliibition and sale, Kunisada are included in the presented by Marson, Ltd. of collection of J apanese Baltimoi;.i:., Md. includes 800 woodcuts, Indian miniature

paintings and manuscripts. Modern pieces by world-renowned contem- poraries Saito, Azechi, Mori Katsuda and Maki compri e a group of original wood cuts, etchings, lithographs, serigraphs and messotints.

CONTACT: 293-4585

SAN DIEGO UNION 'i l 3 1982 USD Winds Up '82 Slate Here Today The University of San Diego closes out its football season today when the Toreros meet St. Mary's at I p.m. at USD. The home team will be trying to avenge its only loss of the 1981 season, in the first round of the NCAA Division III playoffs. The visiting Gaels, 5-2-1, hold a 7-4 series advantage over USD but have never beaten the Toreros in San Diego. USD, which dropped a 20- 17 decision last week to the USC junior varsity squad, is 4-5 on the year including that game. The Torero offense will go up against a rugged St. Mary's defen se that has yielded just 91.4 yards per game on the ground. USD Quarterback Eric Sweet has passed for 1,657 yards and eight touchdowns this season, completing 122 of 224 attempts. His favorite receivers have been Mike Rish (36 for 573 yards and six TDs) and Jim Reilly (22 for 336). On the ground, USD has counted on fullback Jimmy Smith {91-426) and halfback Jerome McA!pin (95-381). Running the ball has been the strength of the St. Mary's offense. Tailbacks Bryan White and Andre Hardy have totaled 796 and 601 yards, respectively, in eight games, with White av- eraging 6 yards a carry and Hardy 5.6.

SAN DIEGO UNION

1982

NOV•

Jackson-Led USC JV Nips USD 20-17 Freshman tailback An- drew Jackson rushed 48 times for 219 yards and srored two touchdowns in USD Stadium last night as the USC Jayvees stopped the Toreros 20-17 The 5-11, 185-pound Jack- son, who has made cameo appearances for the Trojan varsity. escorted his side through a 16-play, 60-yard fourth-period drive to the winning pomts. On this as- sault, Jackson accumulated 52 yards on 12 thrusts and scored on a 2-yard run. Quarterback Eric Sweet completed half of 30 passes for 158 yards and two touch- downs and Bob Lozzi kicked his 11 lh field goal for USD. But the Toreros rushed for just 6 yards. The USC team gained 277 yards rushing. Since games against jun- ior varsities do not count. uso·s record remains 4-4.

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 6 198Z

LEMON GR VE REVI EW

SAN DIEGO UNION

1982

NOV 5

198Z

NOV 4

An~~~w LOSES TO JAYVEES scored tw!a~kson rushed 48 tim-;;, ~~eshman tailback la Park as ~chdi;ns against VSD 1:s/19 rrds and C Trojan Jayvees nd1g tat Alea- Toreros 20-17 e

Brovelli Named To Hall of Fame Di"fl'O H<>ad BasYl'tball Coach .Jim n rovelli will join such greats a~ Rill Rus~ell and K.C. jones with his induction to the Uni- versity of San Fra ncisco Hall of Fame. Brovelli played guard for the Dons' from 1960-G1 and was instrumental in leading USF to two West Coast Ath - letic Con ference Titles in 1963 an rl 1964. He will be inducted into the Hall of Fame Friday at the Father Flynn Hall of Fame Banquet. Uni\'~rsity of San

Toreros To Host Tro jan Jayvee The University of San Diego, which snapped a four-game losing treak last weekend, will be trying to scale the .500 mark when it enter- tains the USC junior varsity football team tonight in USD Stadium. Kickoff is scheduled for 7:30. USD took full advantage of eight turnovers last Saturday and flat- tened Cal Poly-Pomona 24-7. The vic- tory snapped a four-game losing streak and squared the Toreros' record at 4-4. "I was really happy for our play- ers and coaching staff," USD coach Bill Williams said. "Looking into tlleir eyes after the game, I could see all of the disappointment from the past four weeks simply disappear."

efeated the

.

SENTINEL

1982

NOV 7

UNIV~RSITY OF San Diego basketball head coach J im Brovelli joined such greats as Bill Russell ~nd K. C. Jones when he was inducted recently mto the University of San F rancisco Hall of Fame. Brovelli played guar d for the Dons from 1960-64 and was i~strumental in leading USF to •West Coast Athletic Conference titles in 1963 and 1964.

EVENING TR IBUNE

NOV 5 1982 _USD FACES USC JAYVEES - The University of San Po:g~ Toreros have gone in spurts of four. First they won wilr :° ror Then they lost four in a row. Tonight they , s Ip over the .500 mark when they play host to USC: s JUm?r varsity football team at Alcala Park Kickoff is at 7:30. ____ · SO - FG Loni 19 .SC - Robbins 10 pass from Halv= (kid< fa led) so - Hamilton )l POSS from Sweet (Loni 1d() SC - Jocksoo 2run (Demir;im kick) SO - R,sh 16 POIS from Sweet (Lozzi kick) SC - Jockson 2run (Demirjian kid<) Comets host Grossmont's USCJayvees o 6 7 7 - 20 17 USO O 10 0 7 -

_!IMES-A~VO~TE,!scondido, Ca., Tuesday, Nov.9, 1982 D5

By George Cordry The T1mes- Ar1vocate

Cross country will take over the spotlight this week at Palomar College as the Comets host the first Pacific Coast Conference championships. The new conference' s championship will be contested at Vista's Guajome Park on Thursday. The men will open the action at 2 p.m. , followed by the women at 2:45 and a special novice division at 3:30. Don't look for the Comets to fare well in either the men's or women's team competition, but several individuals could place high. Palomar's top three entries in the men's division will be Dan Stupar, Dan Escher and Chris Jones. Stupar was a prep star at Mission Bay, Escher ran at San Pasqual and Jones Is a former Vista ace. In the women's event, ex-Orange Glen runners Martha Baez and Sheila Green will carry the Palomar hopes along with Trudy Schmutzler, a former Kentucky prep distance star. Grossmont, which dominated regular-season competition, will be heavily favored in both divisions. The Griffins were 6- 0 in men's and women's conference action. Palomar•• South Central Conference wrestling match at Santa Ana on Wednesday night figures to be anoth- er laugher for Coach John Woods gifted squad, which is unbeaten in three conference starts and six season outings. Santa Ana already has lost to Golden West, 30-18, and Palomar destroyed the Rustlers by a 51-3 score last week. The Comets will receive perhaps their toughest test of the season Saturday when they compete in the Cal Poly Tourna- ment at San Luis Obispo. The tourney annually attracts the best JC teams in the state. Although Palomar's water polo squad has been struggling in the Paclllc Coast Conference, the Comets have two players among the top five scorers in the conference - Chet Johnson (18 goals and 12 assists for 28 points) and Scott John (9 goals and 14 assists for 22 points). Saddleback's Nick Slmovlch already has clinched the indi- vidual scoring title, however. The Comets also have had their problems in men's soccer, but boast three players - John Barbosa (10 points), Victor Tapia (9) and Roy Oftedal (8) among the confer- ence's scoring leaders. I Palomar goalie Tim Rosia also rates among the top goal- ies, allowing just over two goals per contest. With four games remaining on the schedule, the Comet women's volleyball team is still in the thick of the title picture. Coach Duncan McFarland's Comets are 7-3 In the confer- ence standings, trailing San Diego Mesa (9-1) by two games and Southwestern {8·2) by one. Palomar will close out its home slate at 7:30 p.m. Friday

against San Diego City at Dome Gym. The Palomar football team will celebrate its Home- coming on Saturday as the Comets bid for their first Mission Conference victory of the season. Palomar hopes to attain that victory at the expense of another winless club, San Diego City. Kickoff is set for 1:30 p.m. at Vista High School. San Diego City dropped a 24-8 decision to Riverside last Saturday evening, tumbling to 0-4 in conference play and 2-6 overall. The Knights at least managed to score their second touchdown in four games. Palomar, racked by injuries, benefitted from a bye last weekend. Coach Marlo Mendez' Comets will take 0-3 and 2-1:i marks Into a game that undoubtedly will determine last place In the final conference order of finish. Greg Lynda, the ex-Palomar running back, earned his first start of the year at Fresno State on Saturday against Fullerton State. It was a memorable weekend for the hard-running juntor. He fractured his left hand on the fourth series of the game and probably will be lost to the team for a couple of weeks. Fresno won the contest, 31-14. Two players from the 1981 Palomar baseball squad - right-hander Russ Applegate and left-hander Mike Cordry - have clinched spots on their respective pitching staffs at four-year colleges. Applegate, a prep star at San Pasqual, ranks among the top pitchers on Coach John Cunningham's USD roster. He was an All-Mission Conference selection at Pa lomar last spring and was the Comets' most valuable player. Cordry, who played his prep ball at Escondido, has made the University of Nevada (Reno) staff as a long reliever. Applegate has two years of ellglb111ty at USD and Cordry has three years left at Reno. Another member of the '81 Palomar club, second baseman Tommy Davis, had earned a starting berth at Reno, but had to drop out of school during the weekend and returned home because of an illness in his family . A fourth member of Coach Bob Vetter's '81 squad, out- fielder Mike Snyder, was scheduled to play at Reno, but the ex-Comet captain opted for Nevada (Las Vegas) at the last minute. He's battling for a starting berth in the outfield, pending his release from the National Letter of Intent he signed at Reno. At San Diego State, lack of depth finally caught up with

EVENING TRIBUNE

NOV 1 2 1982

Russ Applegate Making bid at USO

USD VS. ST. MARY'S - University of San Diego close1 out its football season tomorrow with a homecoming game against St. Mary's at 1 p.m. at USD. USD has won four and lost four in games this season.

I

Mike Cordry Reno long reliever

SAN DIEGO UNION

NOV 1 3 1982 e COLLEGE FOOTBALL - The USD Toreros close out the season when they host St. Mary's College at USD Stadium, 1 p.m. In community college action, San Diego City battles Palomar at \list.a 'Ith ·30 n m

Jim Dietz i1Lh.ost . ......_'"""""'"-----~-.J

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