News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

INDEX

A

p

E

K

-

-

F

u

I•

-

-

,_

L

-

B

V

I

I

w

I• ·-

I •

Q

1-

-

G

-

R

-

-

-,-

.

>- -

M

I•

·-

·-

----

-

--i-

s

>-

- ,___

C

H

-

.

,_

,

-

,._

_.,._

,,_

Mc

-

XYZ

N

-

• D

I

MISCELLANEOUS

J

0

T

..

-

-

-

-

.

Another Styled-by-HANSON feature -

this alphabetic index for your convenience

I i 7 7

er

aid t USDtea Diego Auxiliary will be chaired by Mrs. James A. Kassner and Mrs. John M. Riley of La Jolla. La Jollans on the tea committee are Mrs. Thomas W. Keehn , Mrs. Carlos J . Tavares, Mrs. John J. Wells, Mrs. Richard Woltman and Mrs . Catherine Barber .

Mrs . Harry A. Collins, hospitality chairman for the Presid~nt's Tea nesday afternoon fr om ....._ 1 :30-3 :30 at the campus , home of Dr. Author l Hughes and Mrs. · Hughes has listed her Toe annual member- ship event sponsored by the University of San for Wed- ..,

\

,~ K scheduled

"'Ibe Ascent of Man" mm series featuring the late Dr. Jacob Bronowski will be shown at 7:30 p.m. on 13 consecutive Thursda,Y. ,at Salomon lecture hall, Universi- ty of San Diego. The rle'> will start nm day Two edits or cont uing education may be earned, and advanced registration can be made at the USD Conference ter, Founders Hall. The course 11 co ·t $30 per person, or single sessions at $3 each. --('~

\f' committee members .

Tl'il>«.a"'e/ I

For th Univ ty of San D! go Torero football team, there' nothmg like starting out lh n against the o. 1 ma!! coll ge NAIA team In th nation And, then, for a ma- sochl.stlc ncore, take on the o. 2 team in the lion then t w luck of the dr w on U D's schedule as th Tor ro o In Thou- alts tomoITOw al 2: o p.m. against Cal Luth ran, th top r ted pre a n team Th n, th following tur- day on th Ir home field, USO entertains th second- rat team, Redlands Uni- v ·r lty USD coach Bill Williams announced a surprise start- Ing quart rback in sci ctlng Jim Val nzuela over three- y ar veteran Andy Slimak Valenzu la, who complet- ed elght or 17 pa for 274 yards and two touchdowns in USO's final crtmmage l~t ·aturday, red hirted last year aiter transfering from al Poly of Pomona Va!enzu la has thre ex- cellent rccelv rs to spot m Pat Iaccino, Bru Jans and tight end Tim Howard Cal Luth ran ls led on offen e by quarterback John Kmdr d and two small but durable running backs. lien ta! (5-9, 200 pounds) and Terry Hold n (5-9, 186 poun ), C I Luth ran compiled a II- record last year and beat the Toreros 47-0. t' th

,,;. 77

Incoming cla s sets USD record

Son Diego, Friday, Septem~r 2, 1977

Witt pays little heed to challenger Jones in city attorney race

By BILL CALLAHAN As City Atty. John Witt sat munching a salad before a County Bar Assn. luncheon a nearby television light slipped from Its stand and fell on him. Momentarily stunned, Witt quickly regained his com- posure, restatloned the light and made a light-hearted remark to his dining companion. It may have been th most telling blow against Witt so far in the campaign for his office 't'"' His challenger, Rod Jones, a University of San pjegg law prore spr. has been flghting11ie classic uplilll battle l!I' an unknown, under!inanced novice challenging an entrenched incumbent. Because or Jones· lack of name recognition, political power base and money, he admits he has to be as "aggresive and offenSlve" as he can. "That's the only way I'll be able to get my name before the people and that's the only way I'll be able to get Witt to respond,' said Jones. "I've got to raisf! a big stink." Despite entering the race at the last minute, only because no one else chose to challenge Witt, Jones has been one of the most active candidates in an otherwise quiet municipal primary election campaign. In the short time he's been In the race Jones has charged Wilt with: - Waffling in his advice to the City Council on the proposed trade or Naval Hospital land for an adjoining area in Balboa Park's Florida Canyon. "Three different councilmen asked for an opinion on the subject and they got three diiferent answers from Witt," ,a,d Jones. "By the lime they were ready to vote they were shaking their heads." - Political favoritism in prosecuting tne Pardee Construction Co. with a civil suit for false advertising through a civil action rather than a criminal one. "The incumbent refuses to prosecute vested interests through the criminal division of his office because they are his biggest campaign contributors," said Jones. - Squelchmg prosecution of Jim Bates, now a county supervisor, in 1970 for fraudulently collecting unemploy- ment insurance while Bates was being paid by a political campaign committee. "John Witt personally made the decision not to prose- cute Bates because of the political implicat1ons," Jones said. He said state officials who Investigated the Incident were "shocked to learn that the case was rejected for cnmmal prosecution."

Th:s is permitted by state law In lieu of prosecution, said Witt. \ 1tt is supported in this explanation by both Bates and Stuart Swett, chief of the city attorney's criminal divi• sion. Bates said he met with state Investigators, agreed that he owed money and paid it. "I was never charged with an} t ·ng," he said Swett said the case was never brought by state inv~!tigators to his office for prosecution. He was asked if he concurred with the settlment, however, and he did, Swett said. "I did not feel the evidence was sufficient to file a crimmal complaint and we didn't," said Swett. "I informed John or my decision and he concurred also." Wtile Jones has been pounding on doors and speaking to anyone who will listen, Witt's campaign has been nooccXistent. "'l'hat's right," said Jones. "I've never run into him one" durtng the campaign except during the debate. And nob,xly seems to know who he is or what the city atu rney's office does." \I 1tt counters that he doesn't have to campaign. " f nobody knows my name how come a candidate with the same name as me won 30% of the vote in a school board primary without ever once campaigning?" asked Wilt He referred to the John Witt who won election to the San Diego school board in 1975. "I don't think there's that much of a need to cal'lpaign," said Witt. "I have a record, I think it's a da1nn fine one, anq he doesn't. I'll stand on my record." he last-minute entry of Jones kept Witt from winning ti~ office unopposed, which would have meant an auwmatic seven-year extension to the nonpartisan post he as held since 1969. rhat's because San Diego voters approved a proposi- tl in 1975 to have the mayor and city attorney run in pt JSidenlial election years. lecause the next tenn for city attorney will end In 1981, it vill automatically be extended to 1984. '\nd, because Witt and Jones are the only two candi· da es, the winner of the Sept. 20 primary will be elected. temples and comfortable in the presence of the community's power st 1cture with whom he deals regularly as the independ- en legal adviser for the city. Jones is short, balding, and admits to having few cc 1tacts among the civic leaders in the community. In he two men are a study In contrasts. itt is tall, urbane, graying at the-

ract, 11e counts that a blessing. "Witt's too tied to special, vested interests," he said. "I don't owe anyone anything. It's time for those people to be treated like the average citizen." "Complete nonsense," replies Witt. "For a professor of law he has an alarming lack of knowledge about the judicial system." The gap between the two widens when it comes to money. Wilt has a campaign chest of about $11,000. His biggest fund raiser , 'An Evening Under the Stars with John Wilt and His Other Friends" at the Bali Hai restaurant, raised about $9,000. Jones has about $1,000 in funds to campaign with. His biggest fund raiser, a barbecue in his back yard, brought in about $600. Several of Witt's supporters have ontributed the maximum $250 allowed by law. No one has contributed $250 to Jones' <:ampaign. Witt supports the police sweeeps in ~an Beach and downtown. His office has provided to pollre legal advice in the operations. "There has been an overabundance of crime in these areas and they should be places in which it's safe f01 the people or San Diego to go," he said Jones says the sweeps are flooding an already overbur- dened office with more cases. Ahigher priority should be given improving the efficiency of the office, he said. "Instead of sweepmg up everything in sight in those areas they should work to improve the lighting and boost the police profile," he said. The attitudes of the two candidates were epitomized during their debate. When offered a chance· to ask each other whate9er question they wanted, Jones ('Ontinued his theme of hammering away at "political fa\oritlsm" in the office. He asked why Witt opened his doors only to special interests at the expense of the public at large. When asked what he would like to question Jones on, Witt thought for a few seconds, then replied: "No, I don't have one. He has no record, there's nothing to ask him a question about."

There will be close to 4,000 undergraduate and graduate division students on campu when chool be- gin Thursday. Since 1972, there has been a 51 % ln- crea · in the enrollment, the .·poke ·man added. Onentalion for freshmen will begin tomorrow morn- ing on campus, when 22 students arrive from Hawall. There will be get- acquainted sessio during the day. Sports events are planned ror Sunday Testing ror rla placem nt will be held Monday

JOHN WITI JONES Witt has remained unruffled by the charges, all or which he denies. But he has not called any press conferences or called reporters to present his case. He did make public demals of the charges at yesterday's bar association li;ncheon in which the two candidates debated face-to-race for the first time Witt said Jones "obviously doesn·t know what he's talking about'' on the Naval Hospital land exchange and maintains he has provided the council with all the alternatives in the matter. He said the council sets policy Ior the community and it is their responsibility, not his, to arrive at a decision in the matter In the Pardee case, Witt said a civil action was taken because "you can't put a corporation in jail and that was the most eifective way to go." Witt also produced a letter from Superior Court Judge George Lazar in which Lazar said the city attorney's office had reached the bes\ settlement possible in the case under the circumstances. Pardee was ordered to pay a $1.000 fine and halt the conduct that Jed to the complaint. Witt also dismissed the political favonlism charge involving Bates. Witt said Bates was not prosecuted because he paid $325 back to the state for overpaid benefits.

EVENING TRIBUNE· Soc, ty Edilor

77

The University of n Diego Auxi11ary's annual memb rship tea is planned for Sept. 14 In the garden and patio of the campus home of Dr. u or E. Hughes, university president, and Mrs. Hu h 1rs James A. Kassner and Mrs. John M. R1I y cochairmen of the 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. event. I vitat1on have been IS.Sued to mothers of new u ents, faculty wives and other prospective new mbers ofth auxtl1ary.

USO football to host Boys Clubs

Boys Club members with esdoy September 7 1977 adult s erv ion will be ' ' . adm1tt d f c to t'ie University t San D1ego-

Dr. Hughes will wel- come guests and give a review of the university's program and Mrs Charles W. Melville Jr., auxiliary president, will acquaint prospective members with the pro- grams or that group. The committee in- clude Joan Bowes and the Mmes. Harold E. Roth, John A. Senneff, George A. Kiligas, Ger- ald McNulty, Martm F. Barrett, Robert E. How- ard and \\ alter Wilkins. Mr . Harry A. Collins,

Az u sa P c1f1c College football game at 7 30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 22 at USO stadium on Linda Vista Road As many as 1,000 to 1,500 boys could be in attendance on Boys Clubs Nights as guests of the USO football program, said Paul Mendes.sports information director Boys Club members and supervisors are aslied to be at the stadium before 7 p.m.

SELLER'S MARKET: Builder Neal Hooberman, house-shopping in Rancho Santa Fe, found a neat, four-acre parcel among the trees with an old, r un-down house square in the middle. The realtor said the owners wanted $275,000. But Hooberman had a counter- offer that was declined : "I tell you what," he said. "I'll give you $200,000 as is, or $250,000 if you'll bulldoze the house. " NOTEPAD: The San Diego Chamber of Commerce will send a three-man team to the Export Fair In Red China next month. It's an unprecedented third invi- tation to the Cant.on r2de fair for the local chamber. . . . Jerry Mathers is first up in USD's fall speakers series (Sept. 23). Mathers, who's found anonymity as a 30-year-old Orange County real estate salesman, was the child star of TV' "Leave It To Beaver." Following Mathers : (Nov. 14), and sexperts Masters and Johnson (Dec. 3). . . . The Big Brothers sold OU their annual banquet tonight ar. Town & Country. Four hundred tickets went for $200 each. But some ticket bolder will realize a 25-1 return on his investinent. Top door prize: $5,000 cash. ... Dinah Shore, who comes in on Sept. 18 for lour days or tiq>lng around town , Is bringing compos- er Paul Williams, McLean Ste- venson and 1960s heartthrob Frankie Avalon. Ronald Reagan (Oct. 1), Bob Hope

hospitality chairman, will be ass1 ted at the tea tables by Cathen ne Barber nd the 1Ines. Philip Y. Hahn, Jo r thaid , Fran s J. Bums, Henry G. Jo nton, I ay D. GQOdnch, Thomas w. Keelin nd James i ulvaney. 0th r a 1stmg are the Mmes. LaY.Tence Oliver, Carlos J . Tavares, Ross G. Tharp, Paul A. Vesco, J hn J Wells and Richard Woltman.

'GOOSPELL' CAST-" By Popular Demand Players". a newly formed touring company from San Diego appears in costume for their production of 'Godspell", musical rendition of St. Matthew's gospel, at 8 p.m . Saturday, Oct. 8 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9, Camino Theater, University of San Diego. General admission is $2. The players are from left, top row, Lisa Doria. Marty Johnson, Betty Bourus, Eric Smith and Ron Elliott: bottom row. Kristi Durbin. Irene Rogers, Sue Flilhive, Chuck Ma,tinez and Colin McColl.-Dave Green photo

'TIS THE SEASON - again, and at the University of San Diego the It's regi'"t.r~r11or1 lime

paperwork is piling up. -Tribune Photo by Ted

Winfield -----~~ '-=------

D A $ 1 500 I S.v. , ,

..Ut-ll°'~

IO,\( 9 .. y..77

At

nvestment

cr-1-11

T oreros, USI

EVENING TltllUNE

San Diego, Friday, September 9, 1977

h Art Of Fund-Raisi g

Set or Openers ) II . K 'ES If

ad ment In tuition, if a student is already well versed In them. The program recently was approved for federally insured student loans, said Goor. The students are not undergradu• ates, or postgraduates. They are more like Helen Marquardt, the San Diego actress and patron of the arts who already knew, through her work for COMBO and other organizations, much about fund·raising. B she wanted to Increase her "In order to enter a larger career arena, I also need to crack the areas of corporate giving, grantsmanship, estate planning, and the others," she said. "Coordination or these fields with the knowledge 1 already have should extend my effectiveness and professionalism." The summer faculty was large - 18 instructors - and drew from all of the profession's various facets. Among them were Robert Krejci, western regional director of Curner• ford Corp., fund•raising consultants; Donald L. Morgan, executive direc- tor of United Way in San Diego; Howard P. Hill, director of develop- ment at SCJipps Clime and Research

Foundation, and Alfred King of .Bur- bank and William Miller, Sharp Hos- pital director of public affairs who, together, recently brought Sharp a sum, through deferred giving, in excess of $1 million. This "deferred giving" Is a good example of the technicalities the course encounters. As a text, the instructor, King, employs a 60-page volume, published by the Lutheran Hospital Society of Southern Califor• nia, entitled," "An Overview of Deferred Gifts." Its preface states, in part: "The material deals with the basic legal requirements, tax consequenc• es, technical details. promotion, in• vestment and accounting of such deferred gifts . . . his manual can• not, and does not, include all the law, regulations and rulL'!gs, both federal and state, that apply to the subject "

~·und•r l g Is at I ast as old an art as chart y a vtrtu , and it has becom compl x a subJect as the law. Yet. until two year ago, th re was no pla n th educational system one could to learn to court ph1lan• thropy, no matter that It had evolved mto a mammoth industry, bnngmg mUlion or dollars annually to non• profit organ1zatlons - cultural, medical, academ1 - that regarded Uus money a li!e's blood. It was all being solicited by people who learned their skills on the job. Th n a course, "Fund•Raising Management," was written by the i atlonal Center for Development 1'ratmng, a New York firm that pec1al1zcs in the creation of educa• tlonal programs of a professional nature m the development area. "Development," in this context, is a ynonym for fund•raising. Most nonprofit organizations have "de- partment of development," rather than '· departments or fund•ra1smg." The management course first was taught at Adelphi Univer ity, m ew York It now~ offered on a second campus: the University of San Diego. The first USD session was rompleted last w ek, with the certi• ficatlon of eight students by the 'at10nal Society of Fund Raisers. "There are many, many two-day workshop and seminars, and some organizations have io•house train· m ," said Stephanie Goor, admini trator of the course at USD. "But th re has never been a rom course directed at fund•ralsing for nonprofit organizations " In its 200 classroom hours, the course presents students lnfonna• t10n on such fiscal esoterica as "grantsman hip," "voluntaryism," foundation re ar h, proposal draft· mg arid deferred giving These studies, dealing as they do with the parting of people and money, also seek insights in the motivational fields of psychology and sociology. Communications also taught, since that lS the name of the game. (Generally, development and public relations departm ts work hand-In-hand.) "The course glv the students the equivalent of two years of experl• ence in the field," said Goor, who once wa.-; a ·istant to the gener manager of the San Diego Ballet, and a fund-raiser for the Unit Jew! h Welfare fund . The course will be offered again this fall, at USD (beginning Oct. 4) and possibly, depending on demand, at Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles (also administered by USD). Tuition Is $1, for the full 200 hours. Parts of the course may be deleted, however, with subsequent

Adeferred gift is defined as "a gift which is legally provided for during the donor's lifetime but whose bene• fits do not accrue to the tax-exempt organization until some future time, generally the death of the donor or income beneflciary(ies)." There is, then, much to learn. (Continued OD A·l7, Col. l) At USD, A $1,500 Inve tment

SA.ME STYLE - Work on the new nursing school building at the University of San Diego 1s expect-

ed to begin this month. Spanish Renaissance architecture follows the theme o! other buildings.

Nursing school building slated

Spanish Renaissance architecture, compatible with the existing structures at the cala Park campus of the University of San Diego, will be followed rn the new Philip Y, Hahn School of Nursing building. Construction work on the $l.4•million building is ex• pected to begin this month, with completion scheduled for mid-1978. The two-story, 18,000•Sq • fl building will open with a class of 50 to 60 students. The gx:oun floor will have one large room for group mstruction, plus iwo classrooms and fo r semi• nar rooms. An Independent learning room will accom- modate 10 lo 12 learning stations equipped with audio-visual equipment. The second floor will have

elevator service to the ad• ministration offices, confer• ence rooms, a lounge and open•air patio. Hal Sadler of Tucker, Sadler and Associates, de, signers of the building, said extensive landscaping is planned by landscape archi· tects Kawasaki and Theilacker. Wyle Construe• lion Co. of San Diego will be general contractor, having subm1tted the lowest of nine bids. A federal grant in excess of $1 million has been awarded the nursing school by the Health, Education and Welfare Department (HEW), according to USO president Dr. Author E. Hughes. A portion of the project funds has also been provided by the Philip Y. Hahn Foundation.

In The Art Of Fund-

(Continued from Page A·l3) "The course put in concrete terms something that I had been grasping for," said Waltona Manion, director of public relations and financial development for the San Diego chapter of the American Red Cross. In two years on the job, Manion became expert at conducting dlrect•mail campaigns, on which the Red Cross traditionally has relied. But, she said, "I wouldn't ave known a thing about trusts a year ago." ow she does, and it could bring about a fundamental change in the way the San Diego chapter makes its way. "Direct mail is the kind of campaign that brings in the money now, and helps an organization with its ongoing operating budget," she said. "Deferred giving and trusts enable.the organization to do long•range plailning." Mamon has developed an organizational chart which incorporates the infonnation she brought back from the co On this chart, direct mail is only one of nine ways to raise money. For instance, Manion said, the Red Cross, though barred from soliciting large corporations (the t:nited Way does that), may approach businesses with 11 employes or les.s. Special events such as benefits or sports promotions are also very beneficial, for more than one reason she said. ' "First, they attract new volunteers," she said. "Sec• ond, they focus public attention on our needs. And third, they raise money." Deferred giving, about which Manion is enthusiastic, should appeal to families of means who see such pt,ilanthropy as a worthwhile alternative to paying estate taxes. Manion already has begun developing her new know!• ed of foundations and grantsml!nship. Much money is available from foundations (the largest and best•known being. th~ Ford Foundation), and the government, to orgamzat1ons that can show a need for it. The course teaches its students where to find available money by "researching" the foundations and govern- ment, and then how to approach the sources via a written grant proposal. "Writing a grant proposal is an art unto itself," said Goor. In /\ddition to the approaches to sources of money, the court;e also deals with responsibilities of the solicitor. Through feasibility studies, for example, the fund- Iser may C".lmpare resources to goals and thus determine U ,:I

his organization's solicitation quotas are realistic. There are also sections on automat.ed systems (of consider able value to a blanket campaign approach, such as direct mail) and standards and ethics (a fund- raiser always works for a flat salary, never a percent- age). Most course graduates, Goor said, will qualify for positions in the "middle levels" of various departments of development. "The graduates wouldn't go in at the entry level, or at the top," said Goor. Most rould expect a starting salary ranging frolllJ12,000 to $15,000. The jobs are there, Goor said, leafing through an tional periodical for emphasis. Its classified were dott.ed with iil?ble ·elo ental positions. "We were going to call the course 'development management,' but we found t people didn't know what 'development' ." she.-.. 1il d. ~v.. CIUJf..S • 'Ascent of Man senes at USO "The Ascent of Man" film series by the late Jacob Bronowski will be presented by the University of San The fee is $JO for

the complete series for which participants may earn two continued education credits. Advance registration is re- quired through the Confer• ence Center office in Founders Hall. Single tickets a $3 each mav be reserved by calling the' Conference Center 291- b480 x221 he fee may be paid at the door of Salamon Lecture Hall. DeSales Hall.

Oiego Conference Center 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Sept. 8-Dec. 8. in Salamon Lecture Hall. Facultv members from the departm~ots of Religious Studies, Art and Science will participate in an imerdisci• plinary approach to each film.

Kingsmen Conquer Toreros

SCIENCE, ETHICS PARLEY San Diegans Assigned Key Roles At Meeting Several noted San Diegans tion explosion. \\ill participate in a conf~r- San Dlegans making pres• ence on s.c1ence and ethics en~ations at the meeting will Oct. 10·12 mDenver. include the Rev. Dr. William tabbi Martin M. Wei~z. a L. Shipley of the University teacher at • auonal Umver• of San Diego; Dr. William D. sitv here and director of 11:; McElroy, UCSD chancellor; 'campus-on-campus tours Kenneth Nuss of National program, Is the originator University, and Weitz. A 1 and organizer of the confe~· paper by Dr. Jonas Salle oq nee, to be held at the Um- the Salle Institute will be versity of D~nver._ . delivered at the meeting and 1 .The ~eetmg will_ include Dennis Hart, regional direc- discu 10ns on such issues as tor of the National Confer- abortion, evolution, recombi• ence of Christians and Jews ~ant DNA research, behav- in San Diego, will moderate ,or control and the popula- one session of the meeting. r;

John Kindred completed 11 of 17 passes for 149 yards and two touchdowns yester• day sparking the Cal-Lut~er• an Kingsmen to a 25-17 Victo- ry over the University of San Diego. In late action last night, Los Angeles State drubbed USIU, 2H. Kindred teamed with wide receiver Harry Hedrick for touchdown tosses of nine and 28 yards and set up a two- yard TD run by Marty Cher• rie as the NAIA's top-rated Kingsmen took an early lead and were never caught. Jim Valenzuela, a junior quarterback for the Toreros, completed 16 of 29 passes for 171 yards in defeat and di• vided the quarterback chores in the se.:ond half with George Calandri who scored the final touchdown for USO. Nils Ericson scored the first touchdown for the Toreros with a two.yard plunge and Tim Rowan added a field goal and two extra points. The USD staff was encoµr• aged, despite the loss, by the strong play of the Toreros in the second half when they lirnit.ed the Kingsmen to 50 yards rushing and by the two•way performance of KeVin McGarry. McGarry, a wide receiver on offense and a defensive back as well, caught three passes for 73 yards on attack and intercepted one Hedrick erial on defense. USO will play its home opener next week entertain• ing Redlands. uso ...;............. o 10, 1-11 cot Lutheran ..... 12 o 11 3 - 25 . CL - Hedrick 1 POSS from Kindred !kick foiled) CL..., Cherrfe 2 run (run failed) USO~ Erlc,on 2 run ('Fjowon kick) g[o -t~r~f'~" ,::,, tronl Kindred (Hotfmon kick) CL - FG Hoffman~ USO Calandrl 3 run (Rowan ldck CL - FG Hoffman 18

-

Friday, September 9, 19n

NEW FACES AT USIU· IMPROVED OFFENSE AT USD Area mall C II ge Teams Look To Improve In _1977 just over 50 per cent (102 of tion of Intercollegiate Athlet• The offensive line features • Wrirer, Tt,uan Di.to union 202). He threw for 350 yards ics (NAIA) teams in the junior guard Lou Elisara, a Progress will be the most in one game. nation. Surviving those two 6-1, 270-pounder, and overall important product for San Slimak Injured an ankle games, the Toreros could the line will average be- DJ go' two small college Just prior to the start of ,?'i:.:~- improve on last year's win tween 230-240 pounds per football squad In 1977. trainning camp, however, total. man, figures with whici' And It won't take a great and isn't expected to be able USIU, with its raft of new Deniston feels comfortable.· d al for that progress to be to contribute in the early faces, will remain a bit of an The defensive line will be measurable. season games. IJ!lknown quantity for the nearly as hefty, and Denis- Both the Umver ·Uy of San In Slimak s absence, first few. games of the sea• ~n feels has a solid group of Diego and United States In• transfer Jim Valenzuela and son. Deniston figures to start linebackers that includes t rnatlonal University are returning letterman George as many as eight freshmen Scott Holland (6-0 195 ) Paul coming off pnor seasons m Calandri have waged a bat• and their ability to assimi• Berg (5-11, 195) 'and' Brad which their victory total was tie for the starting spot with late and_ execu11:. the veer Shoen (6-2, 215). Shoen is one one Each school also Valenzuela getting the early offense will be cntical. of three incoming players notched a ti , that coming m edge. Valenzuela is the bet• Freshman Jimbo Harris, th lntra•city contest be• ter passer of the two, Calan• who led Kearny High to the w n the two. dri an accomplished runner. county's prep championship USO head coach Bill Wil• For running experience, finals last season, figures to Hams, who enters his second the Toreros can look to Steve start at quarterback. Harris sea n as the Torero leader, -·---- ~ Goodbody (5-9, 169) who has (5-10, 175) 1s a fiery competi• and USlll' first year coach BILL WILLIAMS led the team in rushing two SHAN DE. 'JSTON tor who throws adequately Shan .•• Torero. leader of the last three seasons. . .. new mil\ at USJU and is a hard•nosed runner. Cty pons small college Last year he netted 313 Another Kearny grad, Roy for football tinn l•l·l· William. has 22 lettermen yards, and has a career total that Williams feels the most Blakeway, Is contesting Demstbn both speak opt1mis- b ck off last year's 1•7•1 in• of 774 yards on 220 carries. improvement is .eeded for a Harris for the starting spot. tic lly of showing Improve- eluding hi starting quarter• Last year's leadmg receiv• successful Torero campaign. With those quarterbacks QI tit this a n. But the back, I admg rush .r and er, Pat Iacclno, and the No. Defensively, l11eman Jim and a group of wide optimism I ting d with c U· thr top receivers. He feels 2 man in receptions, Bruce Wolborn (6·1, !25), ends receivers that Deniston has lion h bol tcred a weak point of .Jans are also back. Iacclno Greg Perkins (SI, 195) and been impressed with in D nl ton has acquired la. t season with a couple (5·10, 160) averaged 13.8 Rill Enquist (S.!, 200).and preseason drills, the West- only x I tterm n from last ortensiv liel!ne recruits,. yards per catch on 38 recep- linebackers Baney Rumps erpers figure to be a good year's 1-9-1 team Rut the "We have Improved tre• tions last season. Jans (5-10, (6-1, 210), Jim Gonzales (5- passmg team. Toe receivers n w ·o eh and h first.year mendously offensively," 165), caught 18 passes for 162 10, 175) and seaior safety Include freshmen Walter staff r cru t d enough to say Williams "Our prob- yards. Both lacclno and John Manson (fl.;l, 170) are Huff (S-0, 170), and Ken Har• haves~ playel' on th roster lem, Jikl' any small college, Jans have looked impressive the key perfonne·s. vey (6-2, 185), junior college for th ason opener. Und• w1ll be if some of our front m Intra. quad scrimmages, "We will be a letter team transfers Sam Williamson erstandably, they'll be rely• line people get hurt. If that as have tight ends Pat Mein• this year," sayf Williams, (6-2, 185) and Allan Rhoades n' h vfly on In xperl n ·cd happens we could be In tyre (6-3½, 220) and Tim "but we're going to have to (6-4, 235) and senior Jeff play r trouble ·• lloward(6-0, 210)a pair of be. Every tean on the .Morrow (5-11, 160). "W •'r very happy with Top among USD's rctur• • mors. schedule is a torgh one for The running game will be th players we have but tt nee Is quarterback Andy The offensive line has a u ." based around returning sen• wtll t r. time, urn w 're 1mak a 6-3, 190-pounder new look about it due to an ln their first o games !or Greg Mills (11-2, 205) and v ry lu ky and thing rall who pa d for 1,194 yards Infusion of junior college, the Toreros will face Cal jumor Len nklin (6-0 nto pt . to build a good In t ason and ha a USD transfers and high school Lutheran and Retlands, two 180) a transfer from Sa~ t m ' y Denilstelill, canx'r completion ratf' of recruit , and it Is In th!s area of the top a o I Associa• Diego City Coll ge. from Las Vegas who have been solid perfonners in preseason workouts.

Six diploma program courses set lo update religion teachers

j IJ r1~ 9-/3-11

Tuesday, September 13, I

BRIGHT SPOTS APPEAR IN SEASON OPENERS

Courses to help teachers of religion and other adults to deepen their understanding of Vatican II theology and modern catechetics arc being offered in the diocesan diploma program in religious education beginning the first week in October. Sister Josephine Breen of the diocesan educational ministry department has an- nounced the program of six courses: '"Psychology and Moral Development" will be 7-10 p.m. Mondays, Oct. 3 through No, , 28 at St. Mary school. Escondido. ..Ministry of the Word.· 7-10 p.m. Wednesdays, Oct. 5, through Dec. 7 at St. Vincent de Paul school, San Diego. ..Psychology and Moral Development," 7-10 p.m. Wednesdays, Oct. 5, through Dec. at St. Therese school,

San Diego. The other three courses will be given in Camino Hall, Universitv of San Diego. "Fundamental Theology" will be Tuesdays, Sept. 27. through Dec. 6, "Ministry of the Word," Thursdays, Oct. 6 through Dec. 8. Both are from 7-10 p.m. The final cou sc, .. Under- standing Scripture: New Testament, .. will be 4-6:J0 p.m. Wednesda\s, Oct. 5 through Dec. 21. Instructors include Father Michael Higgins, officialis of the diocesan tribunal; Father Gary Rye, OSA: Mrs. Marian Drops, John Hardy. and Sister Breen. Sister Breen said each course carries two units of credit. and that registration takes place at the first

//

USD, USIU Hopeful Despite Losses

By H NK WESCH faff Wrlttr, TM SO• o,_ VnfOII

sessions. Tuition is $70 for credit, and $50 for audit. (Tel: 297-7110 for details.) SocJ'fl(Eell Ca-osJ' 9 .... ,r,,n

PAT I CCI 'O . . . uff rs lajury

all," 1d Williams. "I'm happy with lh way our guy

USD NURSING CHOOL-Groundbreaklng ceremonies last week for the Philip Y. Hahn School of ·urs g on be Unlven.it of San Diego campus started the SI .4-mllllon, two-story building. It Is scheduled for completion in 1978 In the Spanish style of tbe original bu ldln • Bishop Leo T. Maher; Dr. Irene Palmer, nursing school dean; USO president Author :E. Hughes; and Mrs. Philip Y. Hahn, widow of the school's benefactor, share the gilt shovel. It I~ the Orsi addition to the campus since 1963.-SC S ov 1'11£/tN C ,eC".S ?--1.r., n t ~~,~~:,~~!!YMr?~~!l!a!;( £~~!. this week by the both of La Jol a, are in Jolla area are Mrs . ...._ University of San Diego charge of invitations to Harry A. Collins, Mrs. Auxiliary at the home of be forwarded to the John A. Senneff and Mrs. James A. Kassner mothers of new Mrs. James F. to address invitations students, faculty wives Mulvaney. Mrs. Martin for the President's Tea and prospective new Barrett is membership ,:'c on Wednesday, Sept. 14 members. chairman. from 1-3 p.m. Dr. Hughes will give a Mrs. Serio Anton, :t Th I brief preview of the h · f th annua . mem- university's programs. c airman o e bership event 1_s. spon- Music will be provided auxiliary 's fashion show sored by the aux1hary at by the university's to be presented Oct. 3 at -~ Casa de Alcala, the Music Department the Hilton Hotel, at- home of Dr.. Author E. during the tea hours. tended. d Hu_ghes,_president of th e Mrs . Kassner and Mrs. Charle A. '-J umverSity, and Mrs. Mrs. John M. Riley are Melville Jr. is president Hughes. cochairmen of the event. of the auxiliary. Ms. Joan Bowes and Other members of the

excu "Our pl y rs knew we had a chan ·e the whole ball

NEW SE:\UNARY CHAPEL-Bishop Leo T. Maher concelebrates mass with the faculty of the diocesan St. Francis Seminary In the new center across from the seminary apartments on Santa Paula Drive adjacent to USO. The center Includes catering, library, office and worship facilities. Dedication Is Dec. 16.-SC p:~ •

foy, September 17, 1977 USD Takes On Redlands Here Tonight The University of San DtegQ stages lls home foot- ball opener tonight with the University of Redlands pro- viding lhe opposillon. Kickoff lS al 7:30 at the USD Stadmm. Umted States Internation- al University, meanwhile, will face its second straight road game, travelling to Oc- cidental University in Los Angeles for a game sched- uled to begin at 8. USD comes Into tonight's contest off an opening game loss to Cal Lutheran, 25-17. It will be the season opener for Redlands' Bulldogs. Redland i the o. 2 ranked DtVISJOn II affiliate of the 1 'ational A ociation of Intercollegiate Athletics (. 'AIA), having d a 0-2 record last season and turning 33 letterm n from that club. Runnmg back Dave D'Ar· cangelo and wide receiver Brian de Roo (6-3, 190) are the key men in the Redlands attack.

q --1 j-~ 77

tJ., ;;2-n

rt World Speci I Faculty Exhibit Planned

q, f g~11

Members of the art facul- ty at Palomar College are presenting their works in a ·pec1al exhibit through Oct. 4 in the Boehm Gallery on the San Marcos campus. A few of the instructors whose paintings and sculp- ture will be shown include Russell Baldwin, Frank Jones, Mickey McMahon, Barry Reed, Val Sanders, Joyce Shaw and Rita White. through Oct. 8 at the Grossmont Gallery, m the Grossmont Shopping Center ... The La Jolla Art Association, 7917 Girard Ave., Wednesday through Sept. 30 will show works by 1bor Hval. Two acrylic paintings by - Marcia A. Durrant, "Succu- ) lent Symphony" and s "Rhythmic Network," have won first prize for her, $200 and a one-artist show, in the first annual all-media ex- hibit of the Graduate School for Urban Resources and Social Policy, Inc. Second prize was Shared , are being feat

by Raul Trejo and Carol Lebeck. They were each awarded $100 and will both take part in a two-person exhibit. Continuing eulblts In- clude works from the Li- brary Collection of the Uni• verslty of San Diego, at USD's Founder's Gallery through Oct. 15. - -Robert P. Laurence

Redlands' 40-Yard FG Beat USO

ato .----

USD Women Tip Aztecs, 3-1 The University of San Diego's women's volleyball team upset San Diego State, 1 3-1, in a match played last night at Peterson Gym. : Game scores: 15-11.._ll·j~ 15-13, 15-7 ~7 •/,#" ! ... I"'•• Fair In Red China next month. It's an unprecedented third invi- tation to the Canton trade fair for the local chamber. . . . Jerry Mathers is first up In USD's fall speakers series (Sept. 23) . Mathers, who's found anonymity Ronald Reagan (Oct. 1), Bob Hope (Nov. 14), and sexperts Masters and Johnson (Dec. 3). . . . The Big Brothers sold out their annual banquet tonight al Town & Country. Four hundred tickets went for $200 each. But some ticket bolder will realize a 25-1 return on his investment. Top door prize: $5, cash.... Dinah Shore, who comes in on Sept. 18 for four days of taping around town, Is bringing compos- er Paul Williams, McLean Ste- venson and 1960s heartthrob Frankie Avalon. a three-man team to ine

,..

-

--;::,-

-Stall Photos BY Rick McCarthy Albeck keep a cloc;e watch on the drills, and Ernie DiGregorio, drives in for a layup.

..:"' 4 1 f

At their training camp at USD the Los Angeles Lakers prepare for the National Basketball Associa-

tion season. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, left, goes up for a dunk, head coach Jerry West and assistant Stan

as a 30-year-old Orange County real estate salesman, was the lit child star of TV's "Leave It To - ---:------..~=... ........ ..o Beaver." Following Mathers:

SOUTHERN CROSS, September 1S 1977-11

i

Sepe 22. ('enter p 2U. Our Lad

(

De • -1') 11,atherlae, .JO p.m Thursday for Chnsttan M,mstf) San Bernardino Deaner) gathering ., · p.m r i.lt..sda of Perpetual Help. R de

Around the diocese

USO Wins; Santa Clara RipsUSIU GSD, spai'lted by more quarte.rt,a ed the ho opener for Pomona-Pitzer 3-MI, as 'l1 ' tlie1r first m tl:ree out• USIU, 111 an afternoon game Ill santa Clara &Uf. lered Its third stral""1. de- feat as Santa Clara blanked the \\ esterners 35-0 ~SD's victory 1

rd.J

Chuismalic leader,hlp d•~ 10 a m. 4 p m 3

'onal Orangt:

pc;.1hr

.S n 811.:rnardmo

H h: Rosan chu ..h Annu.J bazaar, Ho!) rmal He,g~ts area, ~oon• 2 S1 . ,11chul chun:b annual fe Knight> of Columbu Hail on H me p m

Sh " Rt: taurant at ria, Sept a m mass Dmce Pas to1t.. (ounC1I. ~t Cat cr•ne of Ale andrta chl!•,h, R1nr 1de ~unda, \cpl I F m nass, dJCM;C an mmtstry da ~1stl.'rs of Sr J seph (' n delet Ou Lad, of Pea c Academ, S ·1 Otego. I at her Daniel Dillabough Se<·r<>tar) I 9

BeneRI dlnn r--• D,ego-lmpcna \ all._ p n, Saturda coup e Inform· It o 223

ngels Buanun" par h groun.:is.

. Details

ept

Oct. I Ro)al Inn at the Wharf

2 Palm Sprln~ Dean«), (.ounctl of (.athuh regisuauon 10 am., mas at 11. lum.heon 12 l Tuesdav. Sept 20. ~t. Om topher of the De el't Joshua I rec R er.auons· 3(>6..6236. San Diego Deanen C uncd of CatholK' \\\)man. b) luncheon R scnauons. 202-1552 . aim for ""ldo"ed men and "omen... pm. Sunda 1,, Our Ladv I Refuge hureh Pacific Beach. Km chi., h

I dai dinner ~ept 25

an Diego

,enue

Detai s 4 '5-487 Sister Carmel Gregg

Bi,hop

ex s m

\\ho ~as taught 1n

b 4 pm

L

t the

(' fornta Oregon and Washington, has been elated pro-. '.'."IC1al su~rior f Sacred Ht:'art Prov10ce of the SlSters of t Fra,cis of Philadelphia. IJp-rnding class, 9 JO-II JO a.m fhursda\S F oren Communtt) Center. first and University, San Dit'go \ olunteeMt needed for rape cme-rgcnc\ a s1stance league bcmg formed Hl ·l)Mh C'oun1, Dc.:1a1h· '4~-3549 Octoberfe~t St George s tiool ground\, Fr1da\•Sunda1,:, Oct 14-16, ponsored b, Italian Ca1holi Fed ralton adui"ts S2 children Sl .25. D

Inda), Sept 19, r ,ary II 15 am.. flow d

aM rs {or I c 30 pm, ( •tr

"n,...-dlin,>

pt

am,rs.tn

nnt:"'

' Beaver' Star To Appear In USO Show Jerry fathers former star of the Lea It to Beaver" rle , Will apl)('ar tonlgl1t at S at the camino Th ater on the Umverslt) of Diego campus. athers, wh<> ts now 29, Will offer a rem nt look at the se- ries "hldl was In production from 19;1'7 to 1963 and ts still being - on Channel 6 locally - Iii reruns. • 'ow a real estate es- man in San Fernando \ illley a1h rs IS retired fl"Gm actillg He portrayed lhe l1tle role of Beaver Cleaver, the younger brother or Wally Cleaver, played by Tony Dow. In a recent int~rvlew, Mathers said. "When yolP're a star, you are kind of cloi• stered. I'm a VCJ1' iable person and selling real es• late you get to meet a lot or people."

begtnn ng Sc..1)1 2 • da or C''t n n

Is 2, on Tuesda

Gen

1M' for Around the dioce&e I~ "'b du\ Ired date ol publication, The deadllne for Southern C...s I• ue of September 22 Is Frida, Sept mb

Deul1s

se s1 ns. Church of the Resunect1on, E

ndid

'46-3533.

:JO p m Saturday Sept. I adults S2 2S, cl!1ldrcn SI 75 De a1.s Hol)

Spagheul dinner 6:

Famil) churcl! tu'

2 9-2037. Bible baring "Ith Pat Kanko" k1. 9'45•11 JO a ea h Friday. stanmg Sept 30, St nerese Social Center Detail : 286-4652 or 582-5785 Father \larl. Toon 058, monk and pnest of St. Mcmrad Archabbcy m Indiana. died Sept 3, less than s,x hours alter the death of his mother Meeting, Coun M ther of D1vme Grace Cathohc Daughters of America. I pm Wednesda). Sept 21, Ocean Beach Woman'<:. Club. Third Order St. Franc!•. S1. Clare Fraternity, begi a,on \\ ith benedktion at St. John B o mi !i.lOn, Lo!) Ang le~. 2•4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. I~ . Jerr) Mathers of the former tele\is1on !lohO"', l.cJ,e lt to Beaver will appear at Univer h' of San Diego 8 p.m. Fridav, Sept. 23, outside tudenls S2 general public S3. Detail·,, 29-1-b-180 fa 354, Former Calllomlo Go,. Ronald Reagan '" peak at L:iiversity of San Diego, J:30 p.rn. Saturday. Oct. l Details: 291 b480 Ex. 354 . Bruce Farle) 1 former La Jolla real estate man \I, ho v. a!l. imprisoned, wil1 share his tcstimon) at Mary Star ot the St>a church in L.a Jolla, at 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 17.

metal backing during concert at Uni,el'Slly of San Diego last night The band Is trying a second comeback - Photo by Tony Doubek, Tnbune

STEPPE:\WOLF HOWLS - rom Pagon, lead singer for the rock band Stepp('n1

Band of drug-culture dropouts fi ds comeback trail all uphill By JACK WILLIAMS

TOREROS' MANSON ~11 Football Is HiS Real 'Racquet' By HANK WESCH Stott Writer, The San D160 Union When he's not managing a Western League selection as racquetball club or mmister· a defensive back in his final ing to his studies. John Man• two seasons at University son IS mmdmg his own busi- High, Manson always con• ness in the Unive.r~ity of San sidered baseball to be his Diego defensive backfield. best sport. An operation for In the first two pursuits bone chips in his elbow cut he's busier than ever. In down his throwing ability regard to the latter he's hap• sulliciently that he has con· pier than ever centrated on football at "Other years there have USD. ' been many times when I've "I really like baseball, but had to concern myself with I couldn't relieve my aggres- helpmg someone e, ,e plus siveness in ii like I can in handling my own ,1•sign• football," says Manson. He ments," says the sem~r who rates )lis aggressiveness sec- has been a lour-year starter ond only to experience as his with the Toreros. "This year strong points, and he hopes I haven't had to do that. to get a chance to try and With the defensive team parlay those strengths into a we've got now I can rely on professional football career. each guy domg his Job and "I've talked to the Raiders it's a Jot easier that way." scouts and to Willie Wood It's understandable that (ex-Charger assistant)," Manson appreciates the less- says Manson, "ii the oppor- emng of responsibilities in tunity presented itself, I'd one area, for off the football certainly like to give it a field he's a busy person. He try."

and create an image." Whatever, the band was revived in '74 with a different lineup, then' disbanded after an album of indiffer- ent success as Kay pursued an un· distinguished solo career. "I went broke," said St. Nicholas. "I never made that much anyway- the record company got 1t all. I did gardening in Malibu. Goldfinger Gardening Co. we called ourselves. Undercover gardeners." In March of this year, St. Nicholas and McJohn launched the comeback lry. But not without surviving a legal hassle to retain the name Step- penwoll. "Kay put ads in Performance magazine caihng us 'Bogus Wolf,' " said St. Nicholas. "lie warned peo- ple not to hire us for gigs and said we were a fraud. It went right down to the wire in court but, alter a settlement, we kept the right to the name.'' Not that it has been that big a boost thus far in this recycled band's career. "We're like a rebuilt hockey or basketball team struggling to get in the playoffs," said St. Nicholas. "The bottom line Is the record con- tract. We're grabbing and groping and settling for thlS and that right now We don't have the freedom to choose where we want to play ," Two nights ago it was :\lcAllen, where the fuses in the P.A. system blew out during the band's first set, said St. "1irholas. LeGrange was better "It's supposed to be one of the 10 worst cities for fights In the country," said St. Nicholas. "In this bar where we played, the guys had knives and they started lighting when we started the music. They didn't care who we were. "They Just heard sometlung they could get into and they were gomg alter the sound. I'm glad they went alter each other and not us." . The Steppenwolf approach to rock is like that of an ambulance's ap- proach to traffic. It comes in high· decibel doses, injected with the venom of Tom Pagon·s growling lead vocals. The band talks only vaguely or new material. And laSl night ii relied heavily on its old hits and other rock standards, including "Mustang Sally." "Basically we've never changed," said St. Nicholas. "It has the feel of the original. It's fun playing the old stuff. "It brings back some good memories.'' Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods, a band thal sold three million copies of "Billy Don't be a Hero" three years ago, is also trying to make a comeback. They opened for Steppenwolf JaSl ni~t after Delaney Bramelelt and Friends canceled. And, while the horn-textured funk sounded polished enough, it seemed to have little effect on the heavy-metal addicts in the crowd. "We finally got a record contract we can live with," said Donaldson, a keyboard artist, before the show. "It's with Playboy, distributed by CBS." ' The band's latest single, "Give Me Some Time," is getting some airplay in the East and midwest. Bul the California market, sald Donaldson , "is a tougher nut to crack." Steppenwolf can vouch for that. )· '

They were there when the hits stacked up like Harleys outstde a bikers' bar, and they Sl'em resigned to the fact it will never be the same. St. Nicholas, 31, his Mickev Mouse T-shirt sweat-stained alter the band's first set last night, talked of the contrasts m time and place. "Our biggest gig was m '69," he said, "when we played before be· tween 120,000 and 150,000 people - at Miami Raceway, I think it was. We were on with Joni Mitchell, Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Quicksilver Messenger Service and Richie Havens. "lt was exciting at the time. We'd done five albums and we were on top. But it's not that interesting now. Nothing special. 'There was something wrong. You think of how big the Beatles were then and us. I couldn't believe il." Three years later, lead singer John Kay and the rest or the band had reached a creative impasse. A dead-end, perhaps. "A conflict of interests," ex· plained St. Nicholas. "We were pull• ing in different directions. Kay fired everybody in the group. He wanted to hire great musicians but it doesn't take great musicians to make it. "It takes somebody whose heart is in it, whose found his niche in the band - who can give it characler

108 enroll in attorney program The 4th annual Inn of Court began last night at More Hall on the University of San Diego campus. The program, sponsored by the San Diego County Bar Assn., is designed to acquaint new attorneys with courtroom procedures and techniques. Some 108 area attorneys are enrolled in the six-week course, ac- cording to William G. Bai- ley, chairman The Inn of Court was founded three years ago by Superior Court Judge Louis :.!. Welsh and is patterned and named after the Eng- lish Inns of Court where barristers are trained. The six-week course in• eludes night classes at Uni- versity of San Diego and four Saturday sessions at the County Courthouse The faculty for the pro- gram includes !\funicipal Court Judge David 1\1. Gill, Superior Court Judges Ross G, Tharp, William T. Low, ]I; orbert Ehrenfreund and Welsh, retired Superior Court Judge SteVE!JlS Fargo nd attomeys sj>fcializing in cnmmal and civil law. ~,.n.,u,,...., 9-17

Back in the late '60s, there arrived on the scene a rock ·n• roll band that dared march to a different drug. A band as straight lorward and raunchy as the Beatles were subtle and respectable. A band that rode a macho, -evolutionary route to recog- nition, on the strepgth of such acid anthems as "Born to be Wild" and 'Tile Pusher." By 197'2, Steppenwoll had earned e1,:ht go)d records By 19 , it was no more. And w there i a new, reformed Steppenwoll A b ers' band twice req cled that is p ying places like lcAllen lex.. an lleGrange, lowa, lead of Madison Square Garden am: liami Racewa rt~ name ·s Ute me, and so is mos! of the musir. But the come- back trail is Jo g and Jagged, litl red with humilit) , and last night 1t l 'd this six-man semble to the Unl\ersity ol San Diego, where fr1

REAGAN IN S.D. Former Gov. Ronald Reagan will speak before a University of San Diego au- dience tomorrow afternoon. Reagan, who 1rlll be In San Diego tills ueli:ead for the state Republican party con- vention, wlll appear ai 3:31 p.m. at Ualverslty et San Diego's camtno HaJJ.

has managed the Rose Can- yon Racquetball Club for the past live months-he's an 'A' player in the sport-and he's an excellent student majoring in history and law when he leaves the courts for the classroom. He's the captain on a USO defense that has allowed only one fteld goal in its last 10 quarters or play and shut out Pomona-Pitzer in USD's 34-0 win last weekend. "This year's defense knows how to win," says Manson in commenting on the 1977 edition ol the Toreros. "We've had teams with as much ability or· more, but they didn't have the confidence of this group. This team is just bubbllng with confidence." A graduate of University High, Manson has been a Torero starter since the first game of his freshman sea- son. He has missed only one game in four years at the school, the result of a sprained ankle in hiS sopho- more season, "It wasn't a hit or anything," says Manson. "I just stepped in a hole coming down with an interception- that should tell you some- thing about field. "Except for that, I've been very fortunate. It has been a good experience for me here both academically and in football." Though he was an All·

"II some team does sign him as a free agent, they' be in for a· pleasan surprise," says USD coac Bill Williams. "He can r back kicks as well as pla defensive back, and he'll as hard as.aeyone around.• Last weekend, Manson re- lurned a punt 49 yards for a touchdo,.n, and had another 25 yard return in which he was tackled by the final de- lender belween him and the goal. '

Try'.ng on some of the John Hogan fashions they will model in Mon - days_ f_ash1on show at the Hilton Inn are, from left, Mrs. Daniel Mulv1h~II, Dr. Ethel Aginsky and M rs. Charles Ki ng . The luncheon event 1s. sponsored by the Un iversit y of San D iego Auxili ary . Reservations are being accepted by M rs. Henry Hedges, 222-6986 (Photo by Bob Candland) .

17

Scholarship benefit u Bob Hope to appear at USD Bo b Hope, top flight each year selected for leadership qualities.

~"-I"<( oly Fetes

Ca

USD Official Armistead B. Carter, a member of the advisory board of the lniversity or San Diego, has received a certificate designating him "master of public sen'ice" by the Caliiornia Polytech- nic State t.: ruversity :in San Luis Obispo. Carter. former member of the California , late Board of Education, was recognized by the state university for his efforts lo raise the level of the institution from that or a technical school to a degree-granting college The certil1cate was pre- sented to Carter by Cal Poly's president, Dr Robert E. Kennedy, during- the opening session of the university's annual fall con- ference. -~--~-

Cal Poly Fetes USD Official Armistead B. Carter, I member of the advisor board of the University of San Diego, has received a certlflcate designating him "master or public service" by the California Polytech· nic State University in San Luis Obispo. Carter, lormer member of the California State Board of Education, was recognized ! by the \s(ate university ror his efforts to raise the level of the institution from that or a liechnical school to a · degree-granting college. '('he certilicale was pre- se~ted to Carter by Cal I Poly's president, Dr. Robert E. Kennedy , during the I opening session of the I unitersity 's ann~al fall con•/· ferf nce. J'l.(.,yu_.., '( /Jc/n • - --

entertainer for more than 40 years , will perform in a benefit show at the Univer· s1ty of San Orego on Mon- day. Nov. 14. The o ne night show sponsored by the Associ · ated Students of theUrnver- s1ty. wi ll raise moneyforthe Bob Hope Lea ders~ip Fund, provid ing a special scholars tff for outstand- ing students. ACCORDING to Tom Free- man cl)airma n of the USD speak au, the even- mg could raise $13,000 to $14,000 from sales of tickets at $25 and $50 each. The performance, which will take place at 8 p.m. in Camino Theatre on the campus, will. it is under stood, include a singer and a band, in add ition to Bob Hope. From the revenue, Free- man said, it is ho ped the interest on 1t annually will provide "about $1.000" for fo r a stu nt

THERE ARE no present plans for an annual show by Hope to increase lhe fund. A committee which m· eludes Bishop Leo T. Maher and the university pres1• dent Dr. Author Hughes, will make the ad1ud1cat1on. according to Freeman.

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker