News Scrapbook 1986-1988
lfJequnJ !Wll!W JaWJOJ ll 'tmwsqll!H ozuo1v 't ·oN i1aq1 Ql!M Slf!lll JJO alfOJq SJa!!O aq1 1nq 'lfJ!d l]llJp do1 i1aq1 'Jamw S!JQ:) lfJll(jJalJllnb uollaio JawJoJ llu1ull,s 01 asora aie ..rain ,Magaq suo;ne..r aq.z. · ·• a1ur p UOlSDOff e ll? QlUOW e JOJ paieai1 SBA\ poe uoseas-no aq1 llupnp l!(!eq au1eaoJ S!Q JO asde{aJ e paianns somoo AUOJ. lfJllq llu1uunJ SlO!Jllld · · · lS!f ssaum 11eq1001-uou aq1 uo (S!l -,1edaq) !lfSA\OlfZJns: qos: pua aA!SUaJ -ap paae1d pue S!AllQ sawer A'.1a1es lluoJlS paul11s-aJ siap111H aq.z. · ·· allieqa llnJp Joueawaps1w e llu!Jl?J JO pea1su, w11Jl10Jd uone1mqeqaJ ·llnJp e OlU! pa1JaA!P aq !l!A\ anqM a!(JllQ:) lfJllQ SWlllf Jaq1aqM 91: 'PC ap1aap Il!M a8pnr euv lllUllS V · · sre8uaa: aq1 1su1elle A'.epuns A'.1np p, ·l!W!i JOJ ilJ(jll)!llAll aq Al?W (a8ewer iuawelln qwmn-na1) wooqalloH A.Ill!:) lfJllqJaJJenb s;100 ··· suMo.1a aq1 A(j 1na 'lf!OJIOO M QJlne: lfJll(j JOJ WOOJ illfl!W 01 ilJOOW U!A[V lfJllq 8U!D ·UOJ paA!llM uaqJ 'saJ!D ilJWWJf ptia lQll!l paus,s suon aq.1. ·· •lfJng: uose r ~J!d lJt?Jp punoJ•lSl!J Pilll!A!lJll uaq1 JilUMOJS: sso11 pua ilAJSUaJap Ul!JalaA paA!llM OSJI! srelluag aq.1. ·us 1s ll!M aq ansrwndo urewai A'.aq1 pres s1elluag aq1 }nq 'apeii 11 papueuiap pue sre -sodoid lJllJjUOJ srq MaJPl/lrM zoimw AUOtflUV ap1a111 aA!SUaJJO 1nop1oq
San Diego, Calif. South ern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500)
Los Angeles CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (Sd n Diego Ed ) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) SEP 4 1987
SE.
1981
4
JWeri ',
JI.lint~ ,. C I
•
"
'
1888
esh Start Doesn't Help at USD :Three Years After Big Freshman Class, Team's Still Young : .2C1s-t;' ; By fHR/s ELLO ' : SAN DIEGO-It could have b en th what-el -ts-newd partm nt. : Brian F'ogarty, th Univ raity of S DI go'_f1fth- ar lootb 11 can be sure. The Toreros should have been solid in the offensive line this season because all five starters were expected to return. Now, wide receiver/kick-returner who led the Toreros with eight touch- downs last season and was named a Division III Academic All- American.
because of two of the players are academic problems, he has only thre r turning starters up front. Eric Nasland. a 6-foot I-inch 245- pound tackle, told Fogarty that he has d cided to take off his senior season to concentrate on his stud- ies. Nasland wants to work on his studles, so he can attend medical school. Then, Pat DeBlase, a 6-1 210- pound offensive lineman, told Fo- garty that he was transfemng to UCLA because they had an aca- demic program more suited to his field of study. "The kids we get have to be the type that are going to worry more about their academics," Fogarty said. "They come here to get an education. All this does 1s make us a httle thinner. We have people who can come m and replace the guys who have left, but now our backups ar weaker." USD's starters, meanwhile, ap- pear to be sohd. All of Fogarty's running backs and receivers from a year ago return along w,th l~e three linemen. Also back are sue starters on defense. The best of the group is Jeff Mansukhani, a 5-10 175-pound
Mansukhani caught 49 passes for 811 yards and 7 touchdowns. re- turned 18 kickoffs for 140 yards and returned nme punts for 140 yards and 1 touchdown, a 59-yarder. This year, Mansukhani again will be one of the focal points of the offense. But Fogarty is hopmg the team will have more balance than last year. In one game, against La Verne, the team passed 57 times. "In the past, I've gone a whole season and barely passed that much," Fogarty said. 'Tm hoping to be more conservative this year; although with Jeff, I know we have to open it up some." The key to USD's offense will be how well its new quarterback, Braulio Castillo, a transfer from San Diego City College, plays. Castillo 1s replacing Pat Ducon, who passed for 1,7'1:7 yards and 15 touchdowns last year. "I think he gives us more options than last year," Fogarty said. "Pat was more of a drop-back passer whereas Braulio can move around and run better." Defensively, USO is led by senior linebacker John Gutsm1edl, the team's leading tackler a year ago. He is one of six starters returning/ defense. /.
cpacFi. ,mnounced arli r this week that c d mic prohlems hav hurt h1. team•~ chanc s thi season. I : But th1!l wa. about academic r,rohl 'm!l with diff rent twrnt. : L t F'ogarty explain, • "W w r hoping to be a httl d p r this y r than we're gomg ' to be," hes id. "A coup! of our kids dec1d d that a ca - d mies wer mor important than football. o they "'{On't b playing th1. y ar. l gu ss you c,10 say w h ve acad mic probl ms the oth r way," , Th1!l y ar. th season will start S pt. 12. wh n USO trav ts to Lo 1>ng Jes to play Occ1d ntal College. Th Tor ros' home op n r 1s Sept. 26 against La V me. : A y ar ago. U D's se . on start d wllh much promise. The team had a 3 I record but lo t 1t r maming suc gam • U D later got one more 's1ctory when Azu a Pac1f1c was fore d to forf 1t its game with U D for u ing an 1nehg1bl player. i;Jso·s fin I record was ~-6. • This year. Fogarty 1s hoping the t.c m will b better, but he never
Jll1UU/JU!:J JOJ iualle aq.r ·· · suoq !AUOJ unesse renxas aaillap-puo ,W lJflf'iftfu. l)J..ur>,ft 1 r,,:::v.r, l:>un ·b of your students to play a bu11ch of our students, and let's sec what happens. People such as Barry Switzer and the entire board of governors at MU do not believe this, of course, putting it down to some sort of epic myth on he order of Beowu/i Football played by students! Forget it. Everybody knows football is played by hired hands who work for a scholarship over the table and, too often, a httle something under it as well. You want students, go to the library. There exists, however, a kingdom where such idyllic circumstances actually may be found. It is called Division III of the NCAA, where athletic scholarships are unknown and football practice never takes precedence over physics labs. People at these institutions believe it is possible to play a perfectly acceptable brand of football with students and, by golly they do. The) may not turn out many NFL linebac:ters, but they turn out a lot of doctor and lawyers - which, by the time both groups turn 35, seems like not such a bad option. One such institution exists in our very midst, as it happens, right up there on the hill. The University of San Diego, although Division I in basketball, plays football at the Division III level, very nicely, too, thank you. 1Us91. . ,,,fl"
FOOTBALL FEVER - Head coach Brian Fogarty barks out orders to members of the University of San Photo by Veronica Garcia Diego's Toreros as they work on blocking sleds. The team is gearing up for the upcoming football season. USD awaits more students By John Nunes Sp«ial to Southern Cross
Undergraduate applications for this fall came to about 3,800, an increase of some 400 over 1986. Total graduate applications - for the nursing, business and education schools - was estimated at 970, an increa~e of about 175 from last fall. At the School of Law, where fall semester cla ~s began on Aug. 24, total enrollment is around 1,100, the same as last year. However, the number of fir~t-year daytime law students increased from 256 last fall to 318 this fall. Night students are expected to be up only slightly from the 82 first-year students enrolled last fall. A number of new academic programs will begin at USD this fall. The College of Ans and Sciences has added a Master of Fine Arts in Dramatic Arts. The program, equivalent to a doctoral degree, is a joint effort of the Old Globe Theatre whereby a small select group of students will take courses at USD and perform at the Old Globe. The School of Business will offer two new graduate programs this fall. They are: • A Master of Science in Taxation. A degree program designed to meet the demand for accountants with legal expenise. About one-1hird of the courses will be taken in the School of Law Students will concentrate on tax law, research and theory, and civil tax procedures. • Venture Management. This is actually a new elective emphasis within the Master of Business Administration. It is being offered in response to the demands of the rapid local growth of high tech and venture capital industries. The curriculum is designed to prepare students to manage organizations going through turbulent times, such as those with high-risk opportunities and companies with major shifts in production mix. /
ALCALA PARK - With fall classes set to resume Sept. 8, the University of San Diego undergraduate admissions office reports dramatic increases in the number of people applying to and inquiring about the private independent university. Undergraduate inquiries for the fall semester reached some 32,35Q, records show. USD has an estimated controlled graduate and undergraduate enrollment of 5,500. "Five or six years ago we had only about 8 ,000 inquiries," said Warren Muller, director of adm1ss1ons. This year's inquiries represent an increase of some 7,000 from 1986, he added. Substantially more inquiries and more applications are coming from students outside California, Muller noted. "We are gaining more of a national reputation." Enrollment of California residents at USD was down slightly last year, while out-of-state enrollment continued to climb, Muller said. He expects the trend to continue. Muller attributes this trend to USD's "increasing strength in quality academic programs and because more people are hearing about us through word-of-mouth ... hearing about what we have to offer and seeing what's here." "And I wouldn't ignQre the success of the basketball team," he added . Last year, the USD basketball team made it to the NCAA national champions~p tournament , the second time in the past four years. As of Aug. 21, freshmen applications for the fall 1987 semester totaled nearly 3,000. Last fall, about 2,600 freshmen applied to USD.
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S . 341 ,840) s p
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)
8
Pl O1987
-
.All,ri
p C B
IX8x
I
t
._Alll!n ' 1 , • lmmigratio w 'a pai ' fo colleg s By Joe Gandelman q Slaff 1'.rlt r Officials at some San Diego area univers1t1e and college say the new immigration Jaw requirin,g e~ploy- ers to verify their workers residency talus is at best extra work and at worst a bureaucratic mghtmare. In a dition to the u ual back-to- school paperwork. umvers1ty offi- cial sa) they now must verify the re idency of workers, work· tudy students, other student workers and new faculty members. "It's a real pam," Hilda Ransom, senior personnel assistant at Grossmont College m El CaJon, aid ye ·terda:, Quelda Wil on. assi tant vice chancellor of per onnel at UCSD, call the requirement a time-con,; suming "bureaucratic rngbtmare, while Stewart Westdal, student em- ployment coordinator at the..U~iver- ~ity of Sao Diego sees 1t as Just an- other form to be do but not mmd- boggli ng" or the San Diego rea wuversities, UCSD has the largest student work- force, with several thou and among its overall 13,()()().per on workforce There have be n no problems re- lated to the new 1mm1grat1on law at San Diego State University, a spokes- man said. No ma s firings were reported at area umvers1t1 ·. However, SD dlS- missed a sports camp coun elor this . ummer becaus~ she could not pro- duC'e the necessary documentation, according to Greg Andrev. s, records upervtsor a• USD's Human Re- sourc DepartmenL College off1c1als across the cou~- try are wrestling with the new res1- d ncy requirements UCSD's Yi 1lso_n 1d questions about the new 1mm1- grallon law were raised at a recent meeting of the College and Umvers1- ty Personnel AS! ociation in Bo ton. Under the law employees hired alter Nov. 6, 1986, must prove they are authorized to work m this coun- try They can show proof of U.S citi- zen hip documents su h as a dnv- er's license, p port or oclal Secur- 1 t y card or employment authorization documents i ued by the INS. 1':mployers could face fman• cial p nalties of up to $10,000 per em ployec p c. e , r
SDSU joitis campus list for fetes J
Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568) SfP 1 O 1987
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co_) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Reader (Cir. W. 100,000 f P1 0 1987
rh r
SI 1£1
Jl.[l~,. ••
.,,
E.u
I 886
P C. B
·•
1987
EP S
E,1. I Ill
, . C. B
<.A&Ufl
'Law called a 'nightmare' SAN DIEGO (~~me San Diego college offi8'a!J say the new immigration law requiring employ- ers to verify their workers' residen- cy status is a bureaucratic night- mare. "It's a real pain," Hilda Ransom, senior personnel assis- tant at Grossmont College in El Cajon, said Wednesday. Under the new immigration law, college offi- must now verify th,! esi
an
.Jlff,m's
hr. 1888
"Robert Bork and the Ramifications of His Nomination oi'!>~9ftstitutional Law," the ~'-,~ 1::lawyers Gutld uf th., ~y of San Diego sponsors a panel d1 c.m:Sibn on this contro\'ersial topic Included on the panel are Peter Irons, c1vil-nghts attorney and author of Jusrtc at \l."ar; Judy D1Gennaro, civil-rrghts anome1· and professor of con,munonal '3w; and Daniel 'X'ebtr artvme, and president of the local chapter of rhe, 'AACP. The di,cu,,,1.,n" scheduled for 'X'edne,dav, , Septtmber 16, 7·3C p.m., Fletcher Hall, USD, A kala Park, Linda Vista Ro6J, Lmda V1>ta. Free 26.:-88g8_
P C. B
--Toreros defeat Cal in Sj}~_ter, 1-0 ~~,i?m remained un- defeated yesterday, defeating visit- ing Cal, 1-0, in a non-conference match. Ju. ior defender Deamon Werner scored, off a corner kick by Trong Ngyuen. USD is 2-0, Cal 1-1. The Toreros host Pomona-Pitzer College on Wednesday at 3:30. LoeaJ Briefs USIU soccer - Hector Hernan- dez bad two goals and Jon Sisson two assists to lead the Gulls past vis- iting Fresno Pacific, 3-1. USIU (1-0) has won 22 straight at home, dating to October 1985. The Gulls host Cal State Dominguez Hills on Tuesday at 3. Miller to speak - San Diego State athletic director Fred Miller· will be the featured speaker at the Hall of Champions' "Sports at Lunch," Thursday at noon in Balboa Park. Miller will discuss the athletic de- partment's accomplishments during bis 21-month tenure and the future of the athletic program. The luncheon, open to the public, will be held in the executive board- room above the Hall of Champions. Tickets are $20; proceeds go to the non-profit sports museum. Reserva- tions (required) are available by call- ing 234-2544.
l
j
Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times {San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) E 1 1 87
JI.I~,.'•
P. c. e
Es ,. 1888
<~~~-SAN DlltGO FOUNDERS GALLERY (Desa.Jes Hall, USD), Hours are noon-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. ~
.---~-
Made with FlippingBook Annual report