News Scrapbook 1979

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SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 5 1979

SAYS CALIFORNIA CONSTITUTION NOT TAUGHT

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C · · ).\~ t, r1t1c1zes LOW citizens." He believes they will be- come constitut10nal act1V1sts 'onc-e the \1-0rds (of the Constitut.rnn) be- come kno\\n " To that encl, he reported, a group in '

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DAILY TRANSCRIPT

nia Constitution was more explicit and stronger in the protection of certain rights than the l S docu- ment. Newman said that, although law schools are the ''worst smners' in failing to teach the provisions of the state Constitution, graduate schools in political science "are to blame, too," and he called upon all legisla- tive bodies from city councils to the state Legislature to learn more about it. '\\tost important," he said, ''was to raise the consciousness of

Conshtut10n '·appl,es to everyone, inrluding private employers " These an> "remarkable clauses," he said, and other states look to CalJorrna tor le~dersh1p on this regard But, he as erti>d. California is still 'much too slow" on the rights or women and ethnic minorit es. 1\ewman used the analogy of a corrugated road that is hard on cars. Sometimes, he said, the motorist can prevent damage by driving fast rather than slowly. At present, he contended, it is ''too rough to go slow, we have to pick up speed."

Associate Justice Frank C. New- man of the California Supreme Court last night criticized the law schools m the state for what he said was their failure to instruct students on the state's Constitution. "We produce thousands of lawyers and not one of them has had a course on the California Constitution,·• he said. They are taught the U.S. Constitu- tion, he said. but when lawyers ap- pear before him and he raises a question involving the state instru- ment ''they say they are not aware or It . . This is a disgrace." Newman's criticism came during a talk that concluded a day-long Earl Warren Memorial Symposium at UCSD marking the 100th anniver- sary of the California Constitution. The symposium, organized by a fac- ulty committee headed by History Professor Harry N. Scheiber, was sponsored by UCSD's Warren Col- lege. Taking part were judges and legal scholars, some of whom, as did Newman, stressed that the Califor-

Gulls seek 7th straight

NOV7 1979 Bernstein To Talk Carl Bernstein, half the Washington Post's investigative team which was largely responsible for unmasking the Watergate cover-up, will speak at the University of San Diego's Camino Theater on Nov. 14 at 8 p.m. "The American Press After Watergate" will be the theme of Bernstein's speech. of

Wh n th hoot for t: S. IntPrna l 111vc1 1ty Gulls eventh tra1gllt football vlrtory aturday, tht>y will b trymg to equal a school record season or 8-2. Th, Gulls, having downed Umv •r ity ur San Diego 28- 8 Saturday for their sixth win m a ro1,1,, will take on Pugt'l Sound Saturday ar- ti·rnoon m Tacoma, Wash. Pu el Sound up •t Cal Poly or San Lui Obispo 28-21 Saturday to raise its record to USIU scored 22 of its points m thr . econd half a •am l L'SD, holding the Uonal th •tr

home un l the Ja; period USO gamed 4. ya~s on the ground and 107 t ough th air . Quirterback Bob Gagh• ano If USIU connected on 13 of24 passes for 211 yards and two touchdowns Th gamP. was marked by a large number or penalt1 , US!U being h!l for 185 yards and USD for 141. ,._,...,, ....... - am core!~

COPLEY PUBLISHER ON COURT CURBS II - 7 Fight for Rights, News Media Toi~

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SAN DIEGO UNION _NOV 6 197 SMALL COLLEGES

BY KATHRYN HARRIS

EVENING TRIBUNE

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-Inquiries about the state of mmd of the news gatherers who pubhsh matenal later contested m libel suits. An avowed Republican, Mrs. Copley quoted one of the more liberal members of the Supreme Court, retired Justice William 0. Douglas, who warned in 1972 that reporters might be reduced to passing on releases handed out by government press agents. But Mrs. Copley criticized the refusal last year of a New York Times reporter to surrender his notes in a New Jersey murder trial, saying, "In other words, why should a newsman's privilege outweigh considerations of a fair tnal for either a defendant or for society's representative, the prosecutor? "... Equally reprehensible is the press's l-dare- you attitude toward the government on the pubh- cal.lon of classified information," Mrs. Copley said, citing as an example the Progressive magazine's publication of details on how to build a hydrogen bomb. (The author of the Progressive article, free-lane writer Howard Morland, has contended that all of the mformat10n is available from unclassified sources.) After the speech, Mrs. Copley said she would not have published the Pentagon Papers in 1971. as did the New York Times and the Washington Post. When 1t comes to determming whether some documents should be stamped secret or clas ified, she said, "I still think we have responsible people in our government who can make this distinction." The Supreme Court upheld the nght of the New York Times and the Washington Post to publish in 1971 the articles based on a secret Pentagon study about the U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam war. . In 1973, Mrs. Copley inherited control of the pri- vately held Copley newspaper chain upon the death of her husband, James S. Copley. The cham is com- prises nine dailies, including the 88:Jl Diego Union and the Evening Tribune, 19 weekltes and one bi- weekly. In a brief interview after her speech, Mrs. Copley said that none of her newspapers has been the sub- JCCt of lawsuits based on the Supreme Court deci- sions she fmds objectionable. .. "

Helen Copley, chief executive of Copley Press Inc., said Tuesday that the news media should seek legislative relief from recent Supreme Court deci- sions which have curbed First Amendment rights of news gatherers. "The press should not be passive in hel~ing to elect legislators, congressmen and yes, even Judges, who are pledged to make whatever repairs to the First Amendment the courts make necessary," she told 74 persons attending a Biltmore luncheon sponsored by Town Hall. Mrs. Copley told a questioner in the audience that no legislative proposal has yet been formulated to countermand the effect of restrictive court rulings, which she identified as: -Rejection of the conftdentlality of news sources. -Court authorization of surprise search and sei- zure of newspaper records. -Barring of the press from courts, public institu- tions and records.

"Recruiting and Selecting ror Atrlrmatlve Action" is the topic of a University of San Diego Update Breakfast Seminar at 7:30 a.m. Friday in the south Garden Room at the Town and Country Hotel. The seminar is one of a series of eight being held through Dec. 7 and is designed to give San Diego business people an opportunity to interact with USD School of Business faculty. Fred Bahr, associate professor of management at USD, will conduct the seminar, which will examine effective affirmative action program development. Registration fee for the seminar is $15. For more information, call the USD Office of Continuing Educa-

Ex-Aztecs Bolster Gull Staff By AILENE \'OISIN 511«101 To TII• San Die

The USIU hockey team is no longer surprising people Toe 3-3-2 Gulls have estab- lished themselves as a fine, young hockey team. They had another good weekend, defeating powerful Ohio tate 7-3 last Saturday, then dropping a 4-2 contest Sunday. the victory, USIU four goals within seven minutes to break a 3- 3 tie. Don Davis scored twice, and Steve Flack. Mike Wehrman, Dale Ingram, Mark Dobson, and Marty Achtymichuk each added a goal Goalie Ken Bayles had 46 saves On Sunday, USIU fell be- hind 3-0 at the end of the first period and was score- less until the final period . The Gulls host Northern Arizona Saturday and Sun- day at the Mira Mesa House of Ice at 5:30. • • • Elsewhere on the small college scene : Pt. Loma- The men's cross country team, led by Chris Sadler, Dan Esqueda and Bill Tokar, captured a dual meet with UCSD, 15- 50, while the women's team beat the Tritons, 19-36. They compete in the NAlA Division III District Cham- pionships Saturday at La Mirada Park. The soccer team lost to USIU, 11-0, UC Riverside, 5- 0, and beat Southern Cali- fornia College, 3-2. Coach Leon Kugler's squad, 3-11, completes the season Thursday at Christian Heri- tage. The women's volleyball team defeated Southern California College, Cal Lutheran, then lost to UCSD to retain third place in the conference. In scored

fox I the defensive coord1- rator, Chumich the outside lmebacker coach and Solari the offensive line coach. "The fact that we went aftrr State people 1s a trib- ute to their program," Walsh said. "But there are a lot or s1mtlaritles between what they've done and what we·re trying to do, and they like to throw the football. That's the main reason we hired Solari . He was one of State's best offensive linemen and obviously knew pass blocking tech- niques. And Fox and Chum- 1ch were also highly-recom- mended. I would match them against anyone." So far, Walsh has few complaints with State or his three 24-year-old coaches. Fox and Chum1ch have turned USIU's secondary and linebacking corps mto two of the team's strongest areas. Of the three, though, Solari probably faced the greatest challenge. Ever since last spring, the offensive line has been Walsh's major concern. It lacked depth, experience, and Walsh thought, talent.But the linemen, par- ticularly Val Fogelberg, George Kreminger and freshman Rob Gilster have performed well for several weeks. • • • In the aftermath of USIU's 28-8 victory over the University of San Diego last Saturday, Walsh made a few less-than-complimen- tary coments about the offi- ciating. "We played very sloppy in the first half, but the penalties were unbe- lievable. And it wasn't any better for USD either. We were penalized 182 yards, USD 140." Walsh was particularly upset about a roughing-the- passer call that nullified - Vernon Dean's 95-yard in- terception return. (USD Coach Bill Williams had a few questions about that one himself). But overall, the Gulls'coach was pleased with the defense, and se- lected linebacker Tony Quirarte, Dean, and de- fense back Billy Harrison as the game's outstandmg defensive players. On offense, Walsh cited tailbacks Greg Holt and Marek Wright - two speed- sters he plans to start using m the same backfield. The Toreros, meanwhile, played an excellent first half and were in the game until the final period. When it was over, Williams ap- proached Walsh to c~m- miserate about the officiat- ing. He felt, of course, that most of the bad calls went against the Toreros. Defensively, freshman linebacker Don !';iklas led the Toreros with 17 tackles, 13 assists, two interceptions and a furn ble recovery. As for next year? "We'd like to play them again, no quest on," the CSD coach said. "You can tell how much this meant to our kids by the1r reaction after the game. Usually, they're talking or laughing about something. But not this time. They felt they had USIU and let tho::n o f."

Tom Walsh und rtook when he became United Stairs International Umvers1tv's head football coach was·to surround himself with young, competent assist- ants And he did it With a little help from San Die o State. John Fox, Lou Chumich and Mikr Solari, all fonner

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Helen Copley

Tlmea photo br Lany Sharky

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SAN DIEGUITO CITIZEN NOV7 797g

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Bernstein Is At USD

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 7 1979

USD- The women's vo1- leyball team downed Bakersfield and Azusa-Pa- cific to improve its record to 8-7.

Watergate won him and Woodward countless awards, including the 1973 Pulitzer Prize and the George Polk Memo- rial Award. Bernstein is 35 years old and married to NJra Ephron, author and associate editor of Es- quire Magazine. He is currently writing a book about the first witch hunts of the cold war. Tickets for Bernstein's speech at USD are $3 for the general public, $2 for USD law and graduate students, and free to USD students. Tickets are available by calling USD at 299-1040.

the theme of Bernstein's speech at USD. Bernstein's career began at the age of 16, when he took a job as a copy boy at the Washington Star. After advancing up the ranks at the Star, he moved to the Elizabeth Daily Journal in New Jersey as a staff reporter. His work there won three first-prizes in the 1965 New Jersey Press Association competition. In 1966, Bernstein landed a job on the metropolitan staff of the Washington Post. His work for the Post on

Carl Bernstein, one- half of the Washington Post's investigative team which was largely responsible for un- masking the Watergate cover-up, will speak at the University of San Diego's Camino Theatre on Wednesday, Nov. 14, at8p.m. Bernstein, along with colleague Bob Woodward, covered the Watergate events and subsequently wrote two related books, "All The President's Men," and "The Final Days." "The· American ·Press \. it.er Watergate" will be

There's rocky road ahead for the Gulls and Toreros

The six-game wmnmg streak of U.S. International University's football team could be in danger Saturday when the Gulls collide with University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Wash. The Loggers are 5-0 at home this season and have a winning streak or eight on their home gridiron. University of San Diego, which became the Gulls' sixth straight victim last week- end, also will be on the road for a tough game. The Toreros will face St. Mary's at Moraga for the 10th time in the series, which is led by the Gaels 5-4. The Loggers made Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo their fifth victim of the season last weekend by scoring a 28-21 upset victory. Running back Wyatt Baker and quarter- back Robert Iverson are the backbone of the Loggers' attack. Iverson has connected with 126 passes for 1,598 yards. Meanwhile, the Gulls' quarterback, Bob Gagliano, is fast closing in on the USIU record of 2,010 yards, hung up by Jeff Attebery in 1971. Gagliano has passed for 1,655 yards going into the season-ending games with Puget Sound and Portland State.

Gagliano could surpass the 1,775 yards Wayne Clark hit on in 1969, good for No. 3 on the all-time passing list, if he fares well al Tacoma. Clark passed for 14 touch- downs, one more than Gagliano has so far. The school record is 18. USIU must take both of its final two games to wind up at 9-2 for a school record. A win this week would tie the mark. SI. Mary's will be out for revenge when it entertains USO. The Gaels bowed to the Toreros 27-11 last season when they gave up two touchdowns within 38 seconds. "They will be aiming all barrels at us," USD Coach Bill Williams said. . Jim Goldstone, a corner back, is the only Torero who will miss the game. He suf- fered a badly sprained ankle in the USIU game. Marty Parker and Scott Getty will alternate as subs for him. USD Coach Bill Williams praised the efforts or Mike Carlson, an offensive tack- le, and Don Niklas, a freshman inside linebacker, against USIU. Niklas made 17 tackles and intercepted two passes. "He's only a baby," Williams said, "but what a fine prospect."

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