News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

SOUTHERN CROSS, September 1S 1977-11

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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

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' 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."

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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) .

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

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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.

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