News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE EVENING TRIBUNE SEP 22 1978 ,..,°' USD, 'Hens • promise a hot battle When Pomona-Pitzer's Fighting Sagehens come into town tomorrow night for a game with the Univer- sity of San Diego Toreros, a lot of points figure to go up on the board. USD has lost its first two games this season but not from a lack of scoring. The Toreros lost to a couple of top-notch small colleges in Cal Lutheran and Redlands, both in the dying moments. The loss to Redlands came mthe final 20 seconds 24-22. "Pomona-Pitzer is a much improved ball club,' said Torero Coach Bill Wil· Iiams. "They have a top running back in George Bushala, who garnered 130 yards against Imperial Val- ley College last week." The Sagehens lied Impe· rial Valley 10-10. The Sagehens have a local flavor too with three players commg out of the San Diego area. They are Tonv Mosel and 'tom Bulm ski ·from El Cajon, and Fowler Brown of Ranrho Sante Fe.

SAN DIEGO CLlPPlt-. , SERVICE

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

SEP 301978 C-8

SA DIE GO CLI£PJ!\G SERVICE ~l:.P 2 3 1978 SAt\ DIEGO UNION

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

DAlLY AZTEC SEP 271978

USIU Home; 3JCs Face League Test Five county-based games and three road contests comprise the schedule for San Diego's small college and junior college football teams today. In small college games, United States International University's team moves Its base of operation to Mt. car• me! High's Field and . the University of San Diego makes its second venture away from home this sea• son. USIU hosts Redlands in a l p.m. starter while USD is at Occidental College in Los Angeles for a 7: 30 kickoff.

SEP 291978 EVENING TIIIUHE

TIMES- ADVOCATE

Son D,ego, Fr

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Naderto speakat USO tonight

\1~ U ,USIU Face Grid Foes Here By day and by night, against differing opponents the University of San Diego and United States Interna· tional football teams seek a common goal today Each will be aimmg to record its frrst win of the season And in each In.stance, th possibility of success would seem good. USIU hosts LaVerne in a game set to commence at 1 p.m. at Hoover High, while USD has a 7:30 engagem 'It at its own stadium against Pomona. USIU (0-1) got off to a rather shaky start last week agamst Occidental, accept· Ing a 21-0 defeat. In LaV- erne, the Westerners have an opponent that i among 0cc1dental's foes rn the Southern Cal1fornla Int.errol• legiate Athletic Conferen l CIACt "We have to improve (on last week's performance) 1f we're going lo Y.in," sa)S' usn; coach Shan Deniston. "We don't know much about LaVerne but figure they'll be about the same calibre of team as Occidental "We made a lot. of mis- takes last week which were the difference bet\\ en 11, m mrg a iosing. We have to r-ut them out if we're going to be a good football team." After alternating Gerald Thomas and Wayne Adams at quarterback In the open- r, Deniston is expected choose between the tv.o and give one every c,pportunlt) to dil'P.ct the \ 'esternrrs today LSD meanwhile, has ample incentive again ;t a Pomona team over which It recorded one of Its t'iree victories last season (34-0). Coach Bill Williams' Toreros have had difficulty moving the ball on the ground m losmg to Cal Lu• theran and Redlands in their first two games and will be seeking imorovement m that regard. To do so would re• quire providing running room for tailback r-;ils Enc- son, the team's leading rusher of a season ago wl'f'o;e 55 yards gamed last week was high for a Torero this season. Quarterback Jim Valen• zuela showed a good passing touch last week, hurling for 220 yards and a touchdown in a 24-22 loss to Redlands. John Dudek has been his favorite target. Dudek's two- game totals include 11 recep- tions for 106 yards and two touchdowns.

HAZEL TOW EVENING TR/81.JNE Society Ed,ror 12-1--,r

Conferen~ on women r and the law Preparations are under way for the eighth far west regional conference on ''Women and the Law," to be held Oct. 27 to 29 in San Diego. This year's con• ference is being sponsored by Western State University, College of Law, San Diego, in cooperation with the Univer• sity of San Diego and California Western law schools. Attorneys law students and con• cerned c1t1zens from the seven-state region which encompasses California, Oregon, Washmglon, Al ka, IdahcJ, Hawaii and Nevada. Each year this conference is organized by law students to promote the equality of women through a series of educational workshops, to develop and exchange technical and litigatlonal skills and to create a nationwide support network of women in law. "Women Inspirit," to Illustrate the importance of women working together and supporting each other in a field that once was a male bastion, has been selected as this year's theme. The conference will offer more than 30 workshops, seminars and speakers focusing on such subjects as violence against women, the economics of being a woman, third world women, dis· crimination in education and employ• ment, age discrimination and lesbian rights. The Saturday luncheon will feature a panel of prominent speakers from the seven-state region who will discuss 'Women and Power.' A highlight of the event will be a judge's banquet Saturday, Oct. 28. Chief Justice Rose Elizabeth Bird, state Supreme Court, will be the speaker. The banquet will honor the women who serve as judges throughout the region.

Consumer advocate and activist Ralph Nader will s?eak at t~: UniverMty of San Diego camp tonight . f Nader will be in room 15 l 0 Camino Hall at USD at 8 p.m Nader is known for his battles tor consumer safety and his book, " UNsafeatany Speed. ' '

USO Rallies, Tips Pomona B ll Peters came off the bru-r.h to spark the Umversi• ty of San Diego football tParn to a 27-23 victory over l'omo- na-P1Lzer last nigllt at the USD Stadium. PPters, wllo repi, red .Jim \t alenzuela in the second hall through touchdown passc, of 66 and 5 yards, the final to John Dudek for thr df'l.:iding score to c·ompletc a 10-pl y, 59-yard drive• with I 3:! r maining to play Pomoua•PitzPr came back to. >re what appeared Lo be a t .mug score in the final :;ccond~, but wen> naggPd for liarkfield in molrnn and the game ended with lhP visitors on the USD two. PPters comµletP.d seven of 11 passes for 134 yards to brmg USO back from a 17-7 deficit in the third quarter. His first touchdown went to Ken Loughran, a 66-yarder that inspired the Toreros to a later score by Jeff Moraga and the eventual winner to Dudek USD is now 1·2 for the season, while Pomona Pitier's record is 0-1-l. POmono Pitzer .... 7 o 10 , - 23 USD ................... 7 0 7 13-27 USO- loccino 20 pass from Valenzuela (Kelegion kick) PP Del Pezzo 2 run (Zenger klc~I PP- Zenger 32 FG PP- B~zzord 29 pass Int. return (Zenger kick) USO- Loughran 66 pass from Peters (Keleg,on kick) USO- Moraga 9 run (Kick Fail I PP- Bragg 19 run (kick foll) USO- Dudek 5 pass from Peters (Kelegi• on kick I

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RALPH

'ADER

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USIU (l·l) is fresh from its first victory of the sea• son 13.0 over LaVerne, but coa~h Shan Deni~ton is of the opinion that an improved effort will be necessary if the Westerners are to extend, therr streak to two in a row. USD, meanwhile, will be facing a pass-oriented team in undefeated (2-0) Occiden· tal. USD (1-2) defeated Pomo- na-Pitzer in its last outing, . sparked by the performance i of quarterback Bill Peters l off the bench. Palomar College and Southwestern do battle to open the Mission Conference season and Grossmont Col· lege plays Its first home game of 1978 to highlight the junior college slate. Grossmont's non-league contest with Ii>s Angeles City on the Griffins' campus field begins at 2 p.m. The Palomar at Southwestern clash heads up a spate of 7: 30 starters which include Antelope Valley vs. Mira- Costa at Oceanside High, San Diego City at Chaffey and Mesa at Arizona West• ern.

Nader brands FAA a captive of air carriers By MARTIN GERCHES Consumer advocate Ralph •·ader predicted here last rught that the federal lnvestigatlon into the avia- tion d!S3ster here ",tonday will. end with blame being put on the pilots mvolved ' The J,'ederal A v1atioo . dm tratlon will never ome out and say, 'This crash was caused by the ... r r . at {,'(' re . ence at U ver ·ity of. an Diego. The FAA IS a "prisoner of tile airline and alrcraf{ iruiu.st.[ies," •'ader charged before he spoke o students later at a scheduled addr ss. 1t 1s "one of the worst regulatory agencies Wa hington has e,er n," Nader said. "The FAA reacts to disaster m• stead of preventing it. The Airline Pilots Association has been warning the FAA for years about the angle of descent (at Lindbergh Field). It is too steep for safety "The FAA has been sitting on collision avoidance systems fc years." The agency could have avmded the tragedy here by using 1L~ finan- cial power to get the airport moved, ·ader said. Further, the FAA should never allow a mix of commercial jets with small planes, he said. "M1Xmg small and big planes is like m1X1ng pedestnans and traffic on a ltlghway,". ·ader said. Pilot~ of small planes are not as well trained as those in commercial J • and th equipment found in small planes Is often not sophistical• ed, ·ad r said. Too, mall-craft pilots often fall to stick to their flight plans, ·ader added. Citizens of San Diego should de- mand that Langhorne Bond, admin· istrator of the FAA, come here, rent an auditorium near the airport and llsten to compla:nts about the air- port for 5 hours, :-,ader suggested. "The FAA is gomg to .wake up when its top officials are subject to civil and criminal prosecution," ~ader said. Kansas City, ~Io., had an airport which was dangerous, but civic in- volvement got it moved to a safe location, . 'ader said. "A crash here was inevitable," he sald. ''This situation is demonstr- ably changeable.

from t In

Bulinski, a 6--0. 210-pound offensive guard is out for the first time at Pomona. In high school he played at El Cajon High where he was named the outstanding blocker in his senior year. 1osel, a 5-9, 165-pound run• nlng back (who also doubles as a defensive back) is a freshman, who also attend• ed El Cajon High where he arned the ')'lost Extra Ef- fort Award.' Brown is 6--0, weighs 210, and plays offensive guard. He lettered playing many positions last season for the Sagehens as a freshman. This season, he'll concen- trate on the one position. l:SD figures to come out passing. ''Pomona has demo·•· trated it has a good I e- fen:,e against a running attack," Williams said. "We have a tremendous passer in Jim Valenzuela, who rompleted 17 of 24 against Redlands last week for 1S5 yards." Valenzuela's favorite tar• get Is John Dudeck, who has caught 15 passes in the first two games this seaSlln for a IS-yard average per catch and two touchdowns. TM game is set for 7·30 at USO.

Th re were re.... men In th crowd - Dr. :Ep -ten, th chalnnan' hu band, and James 1ulrnney, the auxU ary pres1d nt' husband, lo name a few. There w r tabl groups from a number of community group mrluding All Hallows Romap Catholic Church Guild, Alpha D •Ila Pi Alumnae, Alumnae of th acr d Heart, l.ad1e of the lmmaculata, Loma 'Cnlt of Chlldr n's Ho p1tal and Health Center uxlllary, I.a Jolla Commlltee Jor Multiple Sclero• • and Mercy Hospital and Health Center Auxll1• ry Al o the San DJego Bar Aux11lary, St. Madeleine Sophi Baral Auxtllary, Umv rsity of San Di go, Umv r 1ty of the Thll'd Age at U D and the Worn n' A so JlltJOn for th Salk In&llute. 1aJor don r to the event Included Mr. and Mrs FranK Bend r, Mr . ,1urray Goodrich, i 1rs. Paul A. V co, Mrs Jam Smathers and the Mess . Crak • Mulvaney and George A Pflaum Pro d from th nt go for manc1al aid to student at USO A special gue t .,.. s M . Daniel K. Kerr of La e Tahoe, founding pr s1dent of th former lcala Gu!ld of the College for Men which was merged .,.,,th the U D ux1hary.

4B Wednesday, September 13 1978 THE SENTINEL

Religi n µ1 of class 'Ihe University of San Diego, m conjunction with KPBS, will sponsor a tele- ,.i."' 'l the origins and d1:,,rn.1pu.cnt of religions entitled, "The Long Search : A Study of Re- ligions." The series, a British Broadcasting Corp. Pro· duct· , v.111 air on channel .. d fet· 13 ··--'11 I ii .:,ept. 17 frc: l 7il . ,. It ·ill be repeated on ,,,., :s from 9-10 p.m a"se.s at the wiversity will dtscU55 the program in dep.h. Cla. ses are sche- dulc-d in Salomon Lecture Hall on Saturdays from 9:3fr 1:45 a.m. beginning Sert. 23. l>hone 291-MOO, Ext. 4318 for inf ormalion.

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE Daily Transcript SEP 1 51978 • *

The Joint Legislative C,ommittee on Tort Liability will hold a public hearing in San Diego today on proposed changes in products liability law ·relating to injuries caused by defective items. The hearing will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Joseph Grace C,ourtroom of the University of San Diego School of Law in Alcala Park. / * * *

SA ~. DIE GO CLIPPit\G SERVICE SEP 2 :-i 1 qiZ'A SA ' DIEGO' UN!Ot\

"The San Diego Tribune and the other paper should lead a petition drive to make Bond come here, listen to and answer the people who have suffered" because of the airport's location, Nader concluded. SD Awaits Challenge Of Cal Lutheran T orer,, Coach Williams Optimistic Of Chances Against NAIA Powerhouse By HA"l\ WESCH co~· i com'1PtP w th those Stvff Writer TIie San Diego Union guys 1hlS yi:~ we'll be It Will be the thJid Bill gomg out to the opening willla:ms-r.oached Univer. 1 ty kickoff feeling that way " >f San Diego team that Most coaches coming off a here in the pit. "Anything could happen, and if we win this first one the momentum could really get us rolling for the rest of the season." could hope for at a small Regalado (6-2, 220), ~t. San college," sa s Williams, Ar,tonio College transfer "and Valenzuela has thrown Gary Serna (6·2, 225), Tom the ball very well in Strickland (6--0, 215), Steve practice." Danton (6-0, 220) and Rich•

Thur,day, September 7, 1978

- SOUTHERN CROSS, September 14, 1978

.... •9~ .~ .11 Ill Ill Ill Ill

"This year we hope to get ard King (6-2, 218) will run more of a running game last year's leading rusher, going so that we can throw Nils Ericson and Southwest- when we feel like it rather ern College transfer Dave than have the defense die- Maynard. tate to us that we have to Cal Lutheran, meanwhile, pass. provides the campus upon "We've always been able which the National Football to throw the ball but we hope League's Dallas Cowboys do to be even more effective their preseason training. this year because we won't And once the professional be doing so much out of group leaves, the collegians desperation and we have a start doing a pretty good very flexible passing sys- impression of what they've tern. We'll be throwing from seen. the Cowboys," "Our running game is states Williams. "They do a simple lo learn and doesn't lot of shifting, sending men look like much to a defense, in motion, running from but we can attack every hole multiple sets. Yet they're five different ways. very poised on offense. On Our offensive line won 't be defense, they're very physi- big, but they're agile and we cal. plan to run a lot of counters, "We know pretty much traps and screens to take what to expect. Any team advantage of their quick- that has lost five games in ness." six years doesn't change its Behind the blocks of Rod style much." rollouts and sprintouts as well as dropback. "They're highly influ- enced by

>pens a football season when 3-7 season wouldn't feel too :::al Lutheran College visits enthusiastic about sending a the Toreros' stadium Satur• team agamst Cal Lutheran, :fay night. the No. 2 rated National As- sociation of Intercollegiate But Will,ams talks of the Athletics Division II team 1n upcoming match as if it the nation. But optimism is were unprecedented. equally mixed with blood in • For the first time instead Williams' veins. Even of going mto the game anx- tho~gh USD teams are 0-4 ious and hopeful," !lays Wll- agamst Cal Lutheran and Hams. "we re Just anxwus. have ~n outscored by a cumulative total of 160-29 by "And for the first time we the Kingsmen in those con- feel lik they'll have to play tests, the opener 1s eagerly as Y. ll as thev can to beat awaited. us. • "We are much farther "The guys who are com• along with the team at this mg back from la t year pomt this year than we have know they came so close so been at the same time with often,. and I don't th nk teams in the past," Williams the) 11 be aw d by Cal Lu says "Cal Lutheran will be theran th.s time favored. but It's a new sea- " year ago at nalftime 1t son for them Just as it is for suddenly occured to us we us, and we've got them down

Last season the Toreros cam witt:!,, etgt:~ ;-; 1 1Jts of Cal Luu. ~·-: \2f..17), and the guiding force behind that effort, quarterback Jim Valenzuela, is back. Against Cal Lutheran in '71 Valenzuela, a St. Augus- tine High graduate, complet- ed 16 of 29 passes for 171 yards and rushed for 10 more. He closed the season with totals of 1,043 yards on 84 completions in 182 at• tempts (.462 percentage) and had five touchdown throws Valenzuela's offensive unit includes the top USD re~1vers-Pat Iaccino and John Dudek- over the past two seasons. ' We'll have as good a crew of receivers as you

sprays a bonding agent onto plaster urns resembling giant chess pieces. The urns will eventually adorn the roof ol the building.-SC photo

-Stolf Photo bv Rici< Mccarthy Cal Lutheran Saturday night at USD. Valenzuela completed 16 of 29 passes against Cal Lutheran last year.

University of San Diego senior Jim Valenzuela will be guiding the Torero offense in the season opener against

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