News Scrapbook 1989
San Diego, CA (San O1cgo Co.I E vcning Tuhune (Ctr. D. 123,064)
San D iego , CA (San D,ego Co .) San Diego Un ion (Cir . D. 2 17 ,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)
San Diego, CA (San Diego C~.l Daily Transcript (Cir. o. 10,000)
JAN 2 7 1989
..Al'°''•
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F.11. 1888
USD looks for first WCAC win etrf
v- US]) prepared to commit fun 1 $20Million Already Raised USDCampaignWillAddNew Unive~ity, Legal Centers ,at 1at ,a- d oe \l re young people to "become leading cit- izens in tomorrow's world." To do that, Warren said, "Those with resources have a special obliga- tion to put back some of it into the community." In addition to the $12 million to endow student scholarships and aid programs, $16.5 million will go to hire more faculty members and pro- vide them with travel and other study opportunities, and $2.5 million will form an unrestricted endow- ment. The university currently has a total endowment of $10 million. The rest of the funds will be ap- plied to campus building projects - $6 million to expand the campus law library; $7.5 million toward the cost of the new University Center, which already is open; and $2.5 million to convert the main thoroughfare of the campus into a pedestrian mall. An- other $500,000 will be spent for a child development center serving up to 60 2½- to 5-year-old children of USD students and employees. The law library expansion, which is being supported by almost every major law firm in the city, will dou- ble the library size and electronical- ly tie the faculty and students into a multitude of other law libraries and information sources, said Josiah L. Neeper, managing partner of Gray, Cary, Ames and Frye, and attorney lo the'"''"'· r By Michael Scott-Blair Staff Writer By D~ID RYTELL To do that. said Hughes, the uni- versity will put $12 million o( the funds raised into investments that should generate about $1 million an- nually for student grants and loans. "We have not set aside any specific amount for minority enrollment, but if necessary we will commit all of it to that purpose," Hughes said. Supporting the drive to enroll more minority students, Hughes said that solutions to the problems beset- ting minority people in the United States "can be found by capable men and women whose minds have been well trained and whose hearts have been nourished with th spirit of ser- vice to their communities." An independent but strongly Cath- olic-oriented university, USO prides itself on offering students an educa- tion that goes beyond academics to imbue a sense of community respon- sibility, Hughes said. The university has 21,000 alumni. Developer Ernest Hahn, a USO trustee, told several hundred people attending yesterday's announcement event that $21 million of the targeted $47.5million has been raised private- ly. Members o( the university's 38- member board of trustees have con- tributed $9.3 million. Campaign committee chairwoman Joanne Warren described the drive as a "new age" campaign aimed at generating the resources to educate ren, a noted San Diego philan thropist and chair of thl• Capital Campaign Exl•cutive Committee. "This 1s truly an historic occa• sion for higher education in San Otego," said Hahn. "I am proud to he ,tssocwted with th<· d1st111guish ed men and women who make up the university's board and its capi• board have shown their commit mPnt to 'Education for a,'"" Ag,•' by contributing $9.:J million of the $21 million ruis,·d thu far "The lJruvcrs1ly of San DiL•go, with solid underptnnings in tlw ltb.. rnl .,rts, 1s 111 thi• ngltt posil!on to be the great private university for Anwnca's finest cit,.'' Wanen ,aid the campaign is among tlw largt•st to he undcrlak- t•n in the history ofSan Dil•go. "\lh· call ti the ':-Jew Age· cam pa,gn b<.-causP 1l nuns to put in plure lhl' necc~!--arv resourt.·(• · to edm·ate our stud,·ntH to I,,,eom" leadmg citizens of tomorrow·~ world.'. ~he s,1id. "In order for the Un1\'crn1ty of San Di,-go to m,1inta111 its levl'I of excellence and to move forward to new heights, .,._e have elec-!Pd tn launch this capital dnve. " Hugh<•s said studPnt · "would most b nt>fil d1rectl~· by fundinl{ for add1t10nal i:;cholarsh1ps" and ''m- dirt-ctl) tn attracting and kePping a gm,d faculty " 'High on our list of priorities," he :.aid "1s our cont1nu111g effort to internationalize USD's curnculum and pe1 ·pl•Ctl\·es of our faculty and students. "( 'tudents> will find \'ery high quality education here.·· Over th,• last 10 yl•,11·,s the ·chm,! has und rgone tremendous growth including <, $1.5 million school of nursing, $2.4 million execut1v1· confpn•nl·1• center, a $:J.7 million lihrary. and a. 4 5 million school of hu:-;1ncs. The uni\'crsity 1s an independent Catholic institution with :J.670 und.,.-g, acluate and 1.18!> !,'Taduate and professional ~tudents 1>nroll,•d last year. thP cerl'mony. youngsters from Carson E-:lcmt'll tary school relpased balloons and "The Classic Brass" played a fan fare composed fm the occasion h, Father Nicolas Reveles of the L 7 S1) department ofline arts. To \\rap up tal camp,11gn Mt•mher of tlw SanDwl(ull•1l_, l'run,,riptStaHWrit,r The Univcr_.,1ty of Sanllieg.o.yes- terday announced a $47.5 million University of San Diego officials yesterday said they are prepared to make as much as $1 million a year available in financial aid to give more minority students the opportu- nity to attend the private university. The commitment came as univer- sity trustees and administrators an- nounced a $47.5 million fund-raising drive to provide new buildings and a larger endowment for USO. "We want to enroll more minority students than we have been able to thus far. A diverse student body en- riches the educational mix," USO president Author E. Hughes said. "We're willing to devote a signifi- cant amount of our endowment - $12 million - to create an annual income that will let us do that," he said. Tuition and fees at USO presently are $8,550 a year, and more than 70 percent of the undergraduates receive financial aid from some source. Since 1984, a steady 12.5 percent of USO's graduate and undergraduate students (now totahng 5,660) have been from minority groups. Universi- ty officials would like to increase that level to about 20 percent within five to IO years, said Hughes and Bishop Leo T. Maher, chairman of the university's board of trustees. "Education for hy far its largest capital campaign - a New Age" ever and p<>ss1bly th, largest in the hi tory of l11ghcr education in San Th,· thrce-to-five•yl•ar campaign will bring $16.5 millton to support . 12 m·ll,on for student scholarships, $7 5 million to the Un1vcrs1ty Center, 6 million to a Lt'gal RPsParch Center to open 111 the f'all of 1990. $2.5 unrestricted and 500,000 lo II Child DPvelop- mt•nt Center to op<'n in &•pt1>mb1>r Thi, campaign committee re- ported th.it $20 65 mill um has al- ready \)(•en ra1 (•d. The fund, an• int<•1Hlt'd lo bnng and retain quality !acuity and stu- dent, including a more d, verse !,'Toup t•thn1cally, economically and soc1allv "hile 111c,c,1sing the numb rofcampusfacilitie•. The Legal R1• <'an·h C't'nll'r is an expan ton of the achool's law library nbout which USD Board of Tru,tee_. attorney Josiah L. Neeper sa,d "w,11 hl• thl• line.st legal re ·earch ccnler. outh of' Los Angeles. "LRC represents a major ad- ,·nnc(• not onlv for the la" school hul for the Jusllce system and legal community." "I he Child Developm<:nt Center will take 111 up to 60 young children of USIJ employee and tudent.s. DebbiP Gough, assistant provost and chair of th cent r's organizing comm,tte,• said, "We plan to offer a rtch, ,t1mul ting environment that I· warm and support Ive of enc h in d,vidual child' learntng pac :· I,; D Presi dent Author E Hughes expn•s: ed pride tn the cumpaign while addressing a crowd uf about 1.10 in\'ited guests and many onlookers under an arc of blu(• ,tnd whit,, h,,lloons al an outdoor ceremony nt>ar the en tnrnce of the school', University Centl'r Thl uruvers,ty must broaden its econom1c ba • m order to enhanct· - acros~ the hoard our l11gh 1, vel •Jf oxcell •nee and d1ver- s1ty,' he s,tid. Thn·l· umvers1ly trustees also thl• group· The Most HPvPn•n San Diego CA (San Dieg~ Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D, 10,000) Ii u ,. C B fu IIU • • • Tht- San Diego Law enter of- fl•r trainingJi~i& tomorrow for non-profit genc1es involved in isting in Pha. 2 of the 1m- m igration amnesty program That's 8:30 am to 3:30 p.m. at ~!etch r Classroom B • • • A public hearing 1s · heduled today at the U D to review legisla- tive proposals for st te corpora t 10 ns and l>Curitiea Jaw. The S<>n ,to Commission on Corporate Gov rnance hareholder Rights nd ecur1ties Transactions chair ·d by late Son. Dan McCor'. quodule, D- an Jo , will hear tes- timony from repr ntat1ves of the Chicugo Board of Options Ex, change and Drexel Burnham L mh •rt mong others. McCor- quodale •a • 1 former Chula Vista councilman. / 26 turnovers San Diego CA (San Diego Co .) San D1eg_o Union (Cir. D. 217,089) ,c,r. s. 341 ,840) JAN 2 7 1989 SJn Diego , CA (&in Diego Co .) SJn D1eqo Union I C1 r. D. 217 ,089) Cir . S . 341 ,840) JAN ! 8 1989 ,ontact lenses. . defully, without complaint, ust played on in the haze. It 'ta pretty sight, from bis ?fClive or that of spectators. was pretty much blind," Bell . "l could see the rim from the --throw line, but my dep t b ~eption was way off." ~aturally, so were his free rows. Finally, the coaches ieognized the problem and ordered ew contacts.. His vision restored, ' ~11 again has a clear view of whats n front of him. . Somewhere out there, we nught even see a day when Bell becomes /_/ the spectacle. l --~-~ r~oncos 1 slip past Tore os Second win in week is tougher, 67-66 By Chris Clarey Staff Writer Same teams. Different setting. Same result. But that's not saying it was easy for Santa Clara's basketball team to beat the _Universitv of San Diego for the second time in a week. The Bron- cos barely survived a furious come- b~ck, by the Toreros, winning last mgbt s West Coast Athletic Confer- ence game, 67-66, before 2,120 at the USO Sports Center. Th~ Toreros had a chance to shoot for victory when forward Craig Cot- trell rebounded a missed free throw hr Santa Clara's Melvin Chinn with etght_ seconds remainmg. But guard Kelvm Means was slow bringmg the hall upcourt. With two seconds left, Means passed to his brother Danny who was unable to get a shot off fore time expired. "~e're just fighting out there to get it done, fighting for our lives" said Coach Hank Egan, whos'e Toreros (5-12, 0-5) have lost seven straight entering tonight's game agamst USF (7:30 at the Sports Cen- ter). "But I told the kids I was really pr~ud of them. The ball just wouldn't go mat the right time, hut these kids compete. They really do. They stay after it." Egan's "kids" trailed, 53-37, with 6:38 to play and 56-41 with 5:28 re- maining. Then freshman guard Way- man Strickland and Cottrell went to work. Strickland made an 18-foot jump- er. On USD's next possession, Cot- trell scored after an offensive re- bound, was fouled and made a free throw. Then Strickland scored from 10 feet to make it 56-48 with 3:23 re- maining. The Toreros cut the Broncos lead to seven with 2:44 left after another three-point play by Cottrell. They cut it to four 20 seconds later on a three- point play by sophomore center Dondi Bell. They cut it to one with 23 seconds remaining on a three-point \-- • SID WCAC six rebounds. Bell and Danny Means each had 13 points, Strickland had 12. Burley scored 24 points and grab- bed six rebounds to lead Santa Clara (13-5, 2-3). Burley was five of six from three-point range and made all six of his free, throw attempts. "He's a solid player," said Santa Clara coach Carroll Williams. "He's also an excellent free throw shooter. We wanted to try to get the ball in his hands late." Williams didn't have kind words for the rest of his team. "I guess I can't complain too much," he Said. After all, we won but it's really frustrating when ev: erything doesn't go well. We played very well for 30 minutes - we were very effective, and then we just stopped executing on offense and de- fense. You have to give USO credit, though. They could easily have thrown in the towel, but they didn't. They're awfully scrappy." F rom the bottom, you have only t~ look up. When the f worst is behind you look orward to better days not, backward. Eyes front to' the f t And h ' u ure blah. ra ' rah, rah. And blah, blah: b Sorry, but when this forlorn f asketball season ends for USD th r oeus of !988-89 naturally will ' e emarn _fixed on one game. And ·t wasSa victory, oddly enough. I l@D 64. New Mexico 53. As of yesteraay,1t•s bee f II since the Toreros n u Y two months "The p·t" . upset the Lobos in basket~ 'll send!ng the spirits of USO altitude:f ~~rmg. From the high rest has be tuquerque, though, the " en ruly downhill ther!~ might've gotten lucky up be . , cen_ter Dondi Bell said. "It'd i?terestmg to see how we'd d agamst them now." 0 th _I suggested to Bell that, as these •IIJgs sometimes happen th victory th • e USD over e Lobos could've done more harm than ood of serving as an im g . • In_stead had the • petus, it m1ght've T opposite effect, giving the oreros ... a ... a "Al .. . said... s:nshe ~f assurance?" Bell w m t at s true. After that e thought we were a lot bett • than w er " e were. We got big-headed Coach (Hank) Egan tried to w. us. Every day he told us d arn San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) JAN 2 7 1989 ..All.nt'. '· C. 8 Est. 1888 San Diego, CA (Sll:n Diego Co,) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) FACE IN THE CROWD: In Washington at a ball sponsored by the state of Indiana, Steve Garvey puzzled over a familiar face. "Don't I know you?" he a~ked. Amanda Quayle, 17, the vice president's cousin, nodded: "I've waited on you for 18 months at the Baltimore Bagel in La Jolla." NOTEBOOK: Rosemary Stack (wife of actor Robert Stack) is working out at Cal-a-Vie spa. She brought along last week's mail - including a "We've Moved" note from new neighbors. It's signed Nancy and Ron Reagan. . .. Kudos to USO trustees for rais- ing nearly $21 rniiuon toward a $47.5 million capital campaign. Super kudos: The 45 trustees per- sonally put up $9.3 million. . .. Broadway play producer Eliza- beth McCann, a three-time Tony winner, will be at the Old Globe on Tuesday for the first read- through of "Up In Saratoga," the Terrence McNally romance which has its world premiere here on March 9. She holds Broadway rights. ...AJle. were all listening but b ' an we :itt~rnalfized it_. Th.at atti~u~~:t::~d . us or quite a while lt'k v1rusN 1 , ea . ow oak at our record " You have to look do . to find it. Heading inttn,_way own, weekend's West C thief Conference seri against Sa~t Clara and U Fat USD,.lh T are 5-11 and wiiiless in fou~ oreros conference games. USO h . st!aight, nine of 10 - ll o:s los_t six w1~nin2 the Lobo Invitation~1. smce \ F.,,. 1818 P C. B The USO Law S h firm Cruse, Duke c ool a?d law hold a workshop b &t Hultqu ist will e Ween atto and therapists involv d . d rneys d e 1n a opti an custody issues Feb 4 9 on 4 p.m. in USD' G - ' a.m. to s race Co rt Cost is $25 Pr u room · esenters ·11 b Patricia All wi e thia M -en, p ychologist Cyn. artin, lawyers A h Carsola, Harold Cob nt ony Hultquist and J d n and Allen Reed. Sheridan ,y, The San Diego Umon/John R. McCutchen • shot by Strickland. J See USO on } age C-3 SD s Woods had two rebounds but failed to =-========::::==:::::=~~;:_~ k ~~=~==~=:=:::::=:::=.a~=--~~::.:_:::.,~s:c~o~re:·____
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