News Scrapbooks 1977-1979
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San Diego, Friday, May 5, 197~
*Camps
DISTRICT PLAYOFFS LOOM
att nl!on. "They come here to play," he say_s of the campers, "and if they don't get enough attention, they don't come hack." He is proud that many campers return, from all parts of the world. . like those who run other tenms camps, suggest ca'mpers take longer than one session_. Two are recommended. Each session runs $225 for a resident, $135 for a day camper. The camp is coed and accepts . The Bishops School in La Jolla converts to a tenms camp during the summer. College students who have taught at clubs or other tennis camps instruct youngsters 12 to 18 years of age. Lois Boyd, camp secretary, said thP. staff hopes to have the San Diego Friars give exhibitions al the camp this summer They are also trying to enter campers m local tournaments. .. The bulk of the campers come from Arizona. It has to with the heat out there," Boyd said Campers pay $235 as residents. $185 as commuters. Already mentioned was the volleyball camp Rudy suwara runs. Last year was its fi rst, and Suwara said he Wichary youngsters 10 to 18 years old.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 0-1 Kloppenburg said his cal!lp is smaJ!er_than those Sportsworld runs, thus allowmg a more mtunate camp- ing expenence. "We individualire 1t (the teachmg) more " he said. Tuition runs slightly less than at L A It ts probably In the field or tennis that Sportsworld has its most significant compet1t1on. . But how much of a dent other tennis camps put m Sportsworld's business is q'lestionahle. The others proba- bly suffer more from Sportsworld's presence. . Hans Wichary, for instance, USD 's head tenms coach and the man who trained Bobby Riggs for the Battle of the sexes some years ago, admits other tennis camps have reduced the drawing potential of the camp he run at USD. He can accommodate 42 at each or eight IO-day sessions, he said, hut sometimes doe not fLll the quota 'l haven't lost any business because of the rompetl- t1 n," Wichary said, " hut would have gotten more without it." . Wichary start '1 the camp six yea:5 ago, to raise money for the co lege tennis team. His assistants are students from thr college. . . . Wichary believes his camp has the edge on md1v1dual ( C • t l L Sporuworld. '
USO Nine, Coach Face Milestones·
TVRADIO EDITOR
--THE SAN DIEGO UNION----:------
percentage of any West recalls. "We've pla~ed de- Coast Division II affiliate. It cent ball all along thlS year, was built with a 10-game and lately it has seemed like winning streak which only whatever It takes to wm ended in the seconl game of we've done." . fact that in runs hatted in his The winning streak was team's leadoff man has ac- two short of the school counted for 20, the No. 2 record set m 11160 and it hitter 31, No. 4 16, No. 5 23 boosted the '78 Toreros into and so on to 23 runs batted in second on the list of most for the , 'o. 9 hatter in the successful teams produced or~er .. by the Alcala Park institu- Our ahil1ty to score _runs lion. has been the most surpnsmg Entering a final home thing about this team," he game of the season tomor- says, ." and, really it's he- row against UC-Irvine the cause 1t hasn t been a case of Toreros are atop the stand- one or two guys doing the tngs in the Southern Califor- work.". nla Baseball Alliance, a Besides Mendes and league in which they finished Engel, USD has gotten ex- last one season ago. cellent hatting work from "If you looked at the play- Bill Heberle (.316, 20 RBI), ers on this year's team one Mike Savarino (.304, 23RBI), b) one and compared them Terry Frank (.340 average), to ones we've had on other and Dave Buchanan (.281, 23 teams It wouldn't matrh RBI). up," says Cu nlngham. "But The pitching has been led collectively It's a very good by lefthander Dan Flanagan, team. whose 9-3 record has given "There's no real standout, him 37 victories in a Torero but no real weakness and career that has spanned four from top to bottom in the seasons. His next victory lineup wr've had ery con- will make him the winning- sJStent plav." est pitcher In USD history. The hottest Torero h.tter How far can the team go? of late ltas sophomore "This Is the type of team outfielder Paul Tmgel. The that has to function on all Grossmont High product cylinders," says Cunning- moved to third in the hattmg ham. "When things happen order v. ithln the past month, good or had they ,,seem to hit sar ly 12 time in 28 at happen all at once. bats and drOVf in 13 runs SM ALL co LLEGE duiing h ght of the win- !1,;0TES- The ~AJA District n!ng str ak. III track preliminaries and The 6-2 1 pounder leads finals are set Friday and the tram m runs hatted in Saturday at Blola College m (31) and h boosted his bat- La Mirada. Point Loma ng ave e to .323. rates behind favored Cal Lu- a doublehead Poly Pomona u gainst Cal ,L weekend. Cunningham pomts to the Paul_ M1>ndcs tops the team contingent is defending m hitting ( 343), and runs NAIA national decathlon scored (30) and is second champion Bill Waters, though he is ex~cted to he A veteran of USD's 1976 thorough!) teStea at the dis- tearr which ad anced to the trict meet. Division II playoffs, Me d Other title threats for the notes an unportant di!fer- Crusaders Include Sam Saw- ence between that team and ney and Perry Kleinsasser, the current edition. doubling in the 800 and 1,500 "Two years ago we were meter runs, Chris Sadler, hot early in the season but Rich Nance and Brian Bur- lost something like seven in nett in the 5,000 ueters and a row at the end," Mendes Chris Shea in the pole vault with 30 runs batted Five U D pJavers current- theran and Occidental for I th t till h t th earn . e, u e ; • and regular third baseman Crusaders figure to o pro- Paredes Is sitting at ~n~~r/ome mdividual Senior second baseman Leading the Point Loma
By HA, KWESCH
r, TM San Dlevo Union
Stoff Wrl
The next thr weekends figure to be rather Important ones for John Cunningham, the Umve 1ty of San Diego baseball coach. Next weekend his Torero baseball quad will be clos- ing out one of the best regu- lar seasons in tne school's history. Two weeks later the team figures to be engaged m the CAA Divis on II dis- trict playoffs. And m the week between the end or the season and the start of the playoffs Cunn- ingham Is forsaking the bachelor life to enter the state of matnrnony with Nancy Ashwortl: "The v.eddlng date was set so that ·u we were Involved In the playoffs we'd be abll' to work things out, CUnn Ingham says • Bu eally wasn't anti ating the base- ball team d be In the po lt1on It Is "I may hav to po tpon the honeym n but I've al- ready told her 'First things first " USD's haskethall team l'.t peak performance level near the end of 1ts 1977 78 ason and ge rated mo ment m wh1cl: c.arrlec through a district p yor champlonsh p
See CAMPS, D-9
jOlk~J.) C,t.~ 'Sparrow' mass to be sung at USD A votive mass 1n honor of the Blessed Sacrament at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Ma9 25, on the University of San Diego campus will feature the singing of Mozart's "Sparrow" mass. The mass will be cele brated in Founders Chapel by Father Nicolas Reveles, chairman of the diocesan music commission. f'AA- '-( I :,
The ha hall team Is ap- pearing to follow a sirn ar course. The Toreros 28-14 overall record is the hest winning
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6 1978
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' On morals lltur 1 , U5D plans ' asses • ny J:I
A i tl\'\'c,"!)- f\'t:N OCATE ccountants scholarship night set , ~:;y ~1, fA~e~J! Society of Women Accountants, will have their annual scholarship awards night Monday, May 22, at Escondido Country Club The social hour at 6 p.rn. ill be fol- lowed by dinner at 7 p.m. • Funds for the scholarships are made available through the Kay M. Barth Memorial Scholarship Fund that was es- tablished last year in memory of Kay M. Barth, a past president of the chapter who was a victim of the Tenerife dis- aster. Nickoletta Eichman is chairman of the scholarship committee, which was responsible for the selection of the recipients. Applicants are young women who are majoring in accounting at the various colleges in the area. Student guests and candidates for the scholarships who will attend include : Marge Massey, Susan Castaneda, Deb- brah Robb, Florence Teskey, Shirley O'- Connor, Charlotte Bradley, Susan Saywell and Louise McIntyre, MiraCosta College ; Cheryl Nelson, Palomar College ; and..Mary Maloney, University of San Dieg. Parents of the applicants and anyone interested in the accounting field may attend. Reservations may be made with Wahnetia Alderman of Escondido or Margaret Stahl of Fallbrook. Jane L<>renz of Escondido, certified public accountant and mana ging partner of Morris and Lorenz, will be speaker for the evening. Her topic will be "Budgets and Budgeting for Busines- ses.''
rad School or Theology in St. Meinrad, Ind.; Sister Mary Ellen Sheehan of St. John's Seminary in Plym- outh Mich.; and Patricia coo;ey of the Catholic Uni- versity of America in Wash- ington, D.C. A course on the liturgy will be taught at 6:30 p.m. June 26-30 and July 3-6 hy the Rev. Patrick Connolly of Loyola-Marymount Uni- versity in Los Angeles and Bart Testa or Victoria Col- lege in Toronto The course fee is $55. Helen deLaurentis, direc- tor of an advanced religious program at USD, will con- duct a two-week workshop m July on preparation for the reception of the sacra- ments. The class, for which the fee Is $100, will meet at 1:30 p.m. July 10-14 and July 17-21. Asimultaneous course on teachin religion to adoles- cen Ill be taught hy Richard ~o tel10, director of y th ministry for the J\:orwlch Conn ., Roman Catholic Diocese. The fee s $100.
workshops on women in the ministry. morality. the liturgy and religious educa- tion will be held beginning next month at the Universi- ty of San Diego. under auspices of the uruvers1ty Conference Center. Teaching a June 12-16 course on morality will be the Rev. Richard McCor- mick of the Center for Bioethics at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.; and the Rev_ Timothy O'Connell, chairman of the department of moral theolo- gy at t. 1ary of th~ Lake Seminary in iundelem, Ill. O'Connell and 1cCor- mick will conduct the 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. sessions respectively during the five-day workshop. O'Connell 1s scheduled to speak on sin, moral abso- lutes, the relation between conscience and church teaching and other sub- jects. The conference center will also offer an institute on women in the ministry from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. June 19-23 for a fee or $85. The leaders will be Sister Margaret Brennan of t / Toronto School of Theology, Toronto Canada, Sister Ju- liana C~sey of the St. Mein-
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'":OURSE WILL FEATURE .,IC SITE PRESERVATION easing concern for preserving historic t_reasures r heological artifacts in development proJects has pro pted a new course at the University of San f?lego_. To help provide trained profess1o~als ~'I~. umvers1ty will r fer a "certificate program for histonc site archeol- ogy • chmcian." Ca ;e studies from the Gaslamp Quarter in downtown San Diego will he included in the first of three course segments to be taught hy Mike Stepner, a senior planner for thl' city, on Saturday mornings ·n June. The second segment will be given on Saturday morn- mr s n July by Dr. James R. Moriarty Ill, professor of hi ry One of the area's leading field archeologists, .M arty will teach environmental impact reporting; pn his ric, historic site and salvage arch~logy; aerial g, and the, techniques of conserval!on archeolo- s-;i~-7t an
L 'Ti~ Diplomat to Lecture f at UC San D · e s.--;~7 A career diplomat with the State 'Department will lecture on foreign policy at 10 a.m. Friday on the Mat- . thews Campus of UC San Diego. The forum is free and open to the public. Woodward Romine will discuss "How Our Foreign Policy Is Made.• Currently asmgned for the academic year as diplomat in residence at the University of San Diego, Romine is the first such appointment in San Diego. /s- ..J)
Sacred Heart alumnae meet Margaret Linden Sara S. Finn of La Downs of Del Mar was Jolla, first vice- elected recording secre- president of the National tary of the Alumnae of Associated Alumnae of t~e Sacred H_eartst of Sant the Sacred Heart, Diego at 1 recen _ annual spring meeting reported on the nation'.11 at the University of San conference to be held m Diego. , J. San Diego in 1981. '-• 4,1. ., , ..,,r ~-.21- 7Z
MONAHAN: Brovelli trying to collect another team
TE
Obviously, being the other guy in town has it benefits For one thing, it means you might get a closer look from some of the better basketball players around . So it is this season with the University of San Diego. This is the time when coaches are running for their lives and USD coach Jim Brovelli has done little el ·e the past two months . Watch a player's final games, visit him at home , check his academic grades and move on to the next one Even though Brovelli is stationed at a small college, the process does not d1ffer.
But, judging from the success San Diego State is having this spring, the results are staggering. While the Aztecs, who head into the Western Athletic Conference this fa ll, have brought only one player into the fo ld, the Toreros are catching more prizes than they know what to do with . Although Brovelli is assured of finding a spot eventually "To this point," he said, "we 're ex tremely pleased . We got the peo- ple who were at the top of our list and we got them early . "The types of kids we've gotten fit perfectly into our program of winning."
First. Brovelli set his sights on Marian High School 's huge Joe Evans, a 6-9, 240-pound center who averaged nearly 22 points a game this past season . What the giant Crusader needs most is coaching and plenty of play- ing time. He 's raw, but talented. Next came Dave Parrott, 6-8, 230 pounds , who is also a center. " Both those kids are big, old strong guys who need to work real hard to realize their full potential ," Brovelli pointed out. " We thrive on fi nding these late bloomers , the_ ones the big names ignore. "As they mature, so do we." From Monte Vista came guard
Rusty Whitmarsh, a 6-3 wizard who handled the Monarchs' deliberate style attack with near flawless play the past two seasons. "He can do anything you ask of him,"' said Brovelli. "Plus, he can see the entire court. He's a team player." Earl Pierce, a 6-3 guard, checked in from Oxnard College to help relieve some of the grief with the graduation of silky smooth per- former Ron Cole. "We lost seven seniors - guys like Buzz Harnett, William Stewart and Rich Michlemore - so our initial concern was the fron t line," Brovelli claimed.
"With the type kids we've gotten so far , and with the ones we're still afte r, we should play a bit more un- der control than ever before. " Brovelli Wednesday collected Don Capener, a 6-4 forward from CIF champion Torrey Pines, and wants 6-7 Keith Cunningham, another late bloomer like his older brother Alan, now at Colorado State. A 22-7 record and a visit to the quarterfinals of the NCAA small college playoffs before Florida Tech eliminated USO, 77-71 , in Orlando is the best season in recent memory. Yet, it went largely unnoticed un- til the playoff adventure because t he Aztecs performed well ,
finishing 19-9.
Outside of 5-10 playmaker Howard Avery, though, the Aztecs have come up dry on all their drill- ing sites this spring. USD has struck it rich. Brovelli still has the likes of big Bob Bartholomew, the new field goal percentage leader for a single season , and cocky guard Mike Stockalper, a teammate of Evans the year before, in his lineup. " I always like to judge a team by performance, " he remarked. "I've always been terrible at predicting." Well, here's one. Don't be sur- prised if the Toreros, the little guys in town, keep right on winning.
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TIMES-ADVOCATE THURSDAY. APRIL 27. 1978 8-1
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