News Scrapbook 1980-1981

SAN DIEGO UNION

LOS ANGELES TIMES

MAR 2 3 1!il1:

Dr. Gary Whitney, assist- ant professor of manage- ment at USO, will discuss labor negotiation strategies at the university's sixth Up- date breakfast meeting, at 7:30 a.m. Friday at the Ex- ecutive Hotel.

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RAY BRADBL'RY (C'am,no Theater. Un,vers,ty of SD), Noted science flct,on author ma 3,:JO p.m. lecture Thursday.

SAN DIEGO UNION

MAR 2 2

EVENING TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO UNION

At the St, P,trick's D,1y /().Kilometer Run were: 1. famonn Cogh/,ln ,nd his d,1ughter 1 SuLJJ1ne,- 1. MJ,ge ,nd Dr. Author Hughes; 3. Dr. Jim Ber- glund; 4. J,1ck Viinder- Knyss.

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USO continues its program of noontime concerts each Wednesday in March in the French Parlor, Founders Hall, al 12:15 p.m. Next week Lorin Getline will direct the Brass Ensemble.

Founders' Gallery: University of San Diego. Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. lo 4 p.m Wednesday 10 a.m. • 10 9 p.m. 291-6480.

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illiv n was on of 3,000 who th 1''1rst Annual t. Patnck's

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0 y 10-Kilom ter Run the other morrung H may hav been th only on who ran It by m1st11k . The San Diego attorn y said afterward he though h wa up d to run two miles, not 62 But e fmIShcd, and so did a surpri ed Tom Spragu who admitted that 'the walk from my car to the starting lme was th longest I'd w lked in y ars" Tom added: ''Ma be racqu tball has kept me in shape." Marge Hugh , wife of the president of the Umv r y of an Di o, f1mshcd the 10 kilomet rs m 51 mmu , 30 onds, and looked fresh a hamrock at a post-race luncheon on the USD campus The race benefited USO s athletic programs. (Pr 1d1mt Author Hughes t this one out; m fact, he 1d, Marge tak . care of all the unmng m the family) It was taged by Ireland's Industrial Development Authority (IDA), and 1t attracted 3,000 runners to Mission Bay Park for the IO. kilometer run, another 2,000 for a two-mile "fun run" Stac y ulhvan and Tom Sprague turned up at the post-race luncheon, too, along with others who competed in the "Executive" d1v1Sion Troph1 were awarded in two exccuhve bdtvll 10ns: "Pr idents" and "Budding Presidents." The gu t of honor wa Gerard Collins, Ireland's m1n1 ter for justic , but he and is wife shared the . potlight with Eamonn Coghlan. thr. lnsh miler who set a world's indoor record here last month. Eamonn and his wife and daughter proved to be every bit as pink-cheeked and bright-eyed and dimpled a you'd hope the Irish would be. He fmi hed third in the lOK - behind San Diegans Kirk Pfeffer and Ed Mendoza - but, then. he had predicted som thmg of the sort. It's not," he explained, '·my distance" Before lunch, gu ts sampled Hibernian peclalties like Gumnc:;s Stout and Jameson's Iri h Whiskey, and admired the Waterford crystal trophies that shimmered m the fitful unshme (Coghlan playfully suggested that the day's overcast intervals represented Ireland's '\\eath r; the sunny ones, California's.) A cut-cry~tal bowl went to Jack VanderKnyss (Varian Electrical Compor.cnts)

Tue,day, March 24, 198 l

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

C-3

COLLEGES/By Ailene Voisin

'Round A d 'Round Goes USD Lineup As USObaseball Coach John Cunningham ap- 5.73, Tom Tereschuk 6.47, and Godwin 6.55. proacbes home plate with his lineup before "McDonald and Godwin have not been effec- games, the umpires must be amused, thinking tive," said Cunningham, "but no one else has to themselves. "What will it be today?" come on to fill the void. We're doing it all on a Will it be John Mullen at second, or third, or wing and a prayer." maybe the outfield? Is Andy Asaro penciled in The Toreros, members of the Southern Cali- at first, rather than second or third? What about fornia Baseball Association (SCBA), trail Bruce Tomlinson? Isn't it his turn at shortstop? Fullerton State, Pepperdine, UC Irvine, Cal Then there's right field, where "We're playing State L.A. and Loyola-Marymount in overall everybody but the kitchen sink," says Cunning- standings. They travel to Long Beach State ham. today for a 2:30 league contest. Injuries, he says, have given him little choice. • • • The Tritons travel to St. Mary's today and Cal State Hayward tomorrow. • • • The USIU track team, which fields only dis- tance runners, will send track Coach Hugh Stephenson and Rune Larsson to the Boston Marathon April 20th. Stephenson, who has run the Marathon six times, says his best finish - 200th - would be the equivalent of 1,000th today. Larsson, a native of Trollh\ttan, Sweden, has competed in 10 marathons. "And," laughs Stephenson, "Rtme's better than his coach."

To compensate for the loss of starting second baseman Martin Harris, out with a broken leg, the infielders have been moved around. To compensate for injuries to starting pitch- ers Jamie McDonald and Glenn Godwin, the remainde of the lineup has been moved around. T e theory being that if you can't stop the other teams - (t:SD's team earned run av- erage is 6.16) - you have to outscore them. Bigger bats, of course, frequently result in more errors. "It's like a merry-go-round here;· concedes Cunningham "We're just trying to plug one hole after another." USD dido t plug too many holes the first weeks of the season, averaging about five er- rors a game. But with the exception of Sunday's 18-7 loss to Portland State, in which the Toreros again commit ed five mistakes, their defense has improved co~iderably. They won three of four weekend games against Portland State and raised their record to 13-13-1. The difference has beeu the defense of Tom- linson, and the offense provided by Mullen (.333), Tom Wilson (.360), Dan Kosic (.380) and catcher Bill Pinkham (.380). Pitching, however, remains a problem. Jamie McDonald, who has been bothered with a sore arm, leads the staff with a 4.64 ERA. He is followed by Al Brehm at 5.10, Kevin Cammall

Point Loma College, 13-8 going into last night's Sun-Lite Classic meeting with San Diego State, appears on its way to another fine season.

B U R L

I F F

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The Gulls will compete this weekend in the Martin Luther King Invitational at Stanford • • Elsewhere: USD's Mary Lightfoot won All-America hon- ors in the 50, 100 and 200-backstroke events last week in the AIAW Division II national cham- pionships in Marquette, Mich. She finished 9th, 11th and 15th, respectively. Newcomers to USD's football program in- clude quarterbacks Eric Sweet, Laney Junior College, and Tracy Gallagher, Antelope Valley; wide receiver Bill Vinovich, Santa Ana JC· run- ning back Mike McAllister; guard Bill Haley, · Fullerto~ JC; defensive backs Gerald Biggers, ~l Camino JC, and Don Garcia, Gr-0ssmont; lme?ackers J.C. Mellberg, Citrus JC, and Tracy Davis, Southwestern; and tackle Kevin Fish, Rio Hondo JC. Point Lorna's Rene Tuchscher was named to the AIAWDivision III All-Region team. The 5- foot-8 forward averaged 18.5 points and 11.0 re- bounds. USIU is searching for a women's basketball coach to replace Rudy Lanham. Athletic Direc- tor Al Palmiotto is expected to make a decision within two weeks ... The Gulls are also seeking a sports information director.

Offensively, the Crusad- ers have been led by a pair of sophomore infield- ers, third baseman Kerry Everett (.400) and first

baseman Keith Wilson, (.387) and junior second baseman Bill Anderson (.318). Left-hander Robbie W~L---~.:;;;J Phillips has the best ERA records, 4-1 and 2-1, respectively. "Page is a bit of a surprise," said assistant coach Bill Olin. "He hardly pitched at all last year for us." . Last year's ace, right-hander Marty Decker, 1s at the Philadelphia Phillies' training camp in Florida, while catcher John McGaffey is with the California Angels in Palm Springs. UC San Diego, struggling with a 3-13 mark, bas received its best performances from center fielder Bret Sandstrom (.370), third baseman Dean Scarafoni (.298) and pitcher John Kosic who is 1-2 with a 2.25 ERA. ' Ailene Voisin at 1.85, but Gary Page and Tim Meinert have the best

as winner of the "Presidents" division. He is, he claimed, a Dutchman, but be looked Irish enough, and he wore a Kelly-green T-shirt and orange-striped running shoes. AWaterford decanter was attorney Murphy Reinschreiber's prize in the "Budding Presidents" division. There were embroidered shamrocks for every lapel, Irish and American flags on the tables and something green on nearly .everybody's back. Dennis Curran, West Coast vice president of the IDA, came down from Santa Monica to oversee the event. He watched as the uninitiated took cautious sips of Guinness Stout, and murmured: "It's an acquired taste." . He sighed, and added: "In bottles, it doesn't travel."

VISTA PRESS

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SENTINEL

MAR 2 5 1981

SENTINt:L

Sci-fi author in production America's dean of

2 5

:.+= THE UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO presents its sixth "Wine Forum" on six Thursday evenings, April 2 through May 7, in the Board Room of De Sale Hall, 7:30p.m. Thursdays. Enro t is limited to 40 persons (age 21 or older) and pre-registration is required. Tuition is $75 ~r person. For information, phone USD's Office of Continuing Education at 293-4585. --~---~+ +

+++ t Get "NEGOTIATION STRATEtopG~E!: u!~:'l(thoof the What You Want" will be the ic . .. ~iversity of Sari Diego's UPDATE b_reakfast seminars 7: 30-9 a.m. Friday at the Exe~ubve Hotel in downtown San Diego. The speak.er is Dr. Gary Whitney, USD Assistant Professor fManagement. For information, phone 293-4585. +++ ~----

and April 1-4, on the Main Stage of the dramatic arts

science fiction writers, Ray

building.

award-

and

Bradbury, winning

theater director Terrance Shank both will be engaged in the Universi- ty Theatre's production of Bradbury's "Farenheit 451" at San Diego State University. Performances will be at p.m. March 27, 28, 31

Bradbury, who has writ- ten short stories, plays, screenplays and more than a dozen nove s., 'nduding "The Martian Chronicles," "The lllustrated Man" and "Dandelion Wine," will conduct a forum after e, h evening's performanct:.

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