News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

Quick And The 'D' It's USIU Speed Vs. USO Defense In Big Game J/-3-li (},r,/or\ Perkins was off to a fast action the jumor tran~er tales International Unlver- start this season-he was from the University of P1tts- ity and University or San named the ~p performer in burgh has completed 20 of 44 the Toreros second game of passes for 311 yards. Morgan, Perkins and their the season ~fl~r making 10 USD's 3-4 record at this ams will meet Saturday tackles, asslstmg _on three time make_s ~he current temoon at Mt Carmel others and recordmg three team a possibility of becom• igh, and it could ·very well quarterback sacks- before tng the first continge~t at the that the battle of the be_ing hobbled by a knee school to post a wlnmng sea- . dividuals will be a decid- lnJury. . sonal record since 1973. i g factor in the outcome of After being rested b~efly, "Nothing will probably l e contest between the two ~erkins was b~C\< in ?pera- vindicate the season," says ams. tion last week m USD s 47-0 USIU coach Shan Deniston. Morgan, a 5-8, 175-poui,u victory over team from "But a win against USD J ior tailback, has the Edwards Air Force Base, would certainly help." and galloping ability and should be at near pe3;1t \ of the breed of horse that eff1C1ency for tomorrow s 1 sh res his name. A sub-10 test. , . ond man in the JOO-yard "He w_as at about 80 per Larry Morgan and Greg meeting between the erklns represent the squads.. two I missed last week's USIU test 1 wlth a sore ha~d. When 111 trengths of the United !ego football teams. .

Union N~v.t: /'llr J WESTERNERS TOP

Sunday, November 5, 1 I I I I

USD TAKES. SCOREBOARD

Toreros amble Past Error-Prone USIU, 38-20

account for 96 in an equal I number of tries. Adams I completed seven of 22 passes I for 133 yards. the second half, for 220 yards to pace the USD offense. His leading receiver was John Dudek with five catches for 41 yards. Nils Ericson got -----------------~- ·- the largest portion (56 USIU, meanwhile, had fre ~.man Keith Morgan ra e for 124 yards on 16 carries and Larry Morgan

scored 17 pomts the game's ftrst 19 minutes. A cleanly executed 52-yard drive off the opening kickoff was climaxed by Jim Valen- zuela passing 20 yards to tight end Ken Loughran and on their next possession the Torer<>S marched 64 yards to position Mark Kelegian for a 22-yard field goal. • pparently stopped on their third possession, USO got a gift when USIU's Bill Leitner fumbled a punt at the Westerner 35 and three plays later USO's Dave Maynard ran a fake punt seven yards to keep the Toreros on the move. When Valenzuela found John Green with a low pa in the nd zone with 11: 25 left In th half, it was 17-0. USIU came back to put together 75 and 35-yard marche to trim th Torero edge to 17-14 Quarterback Wayne Adams rolltng in from the three to cap the first drive and Larry Mor- gan bursting 7 yards up the middle for the s cond with 2.47 left befor halftJme t that point the game's mom ntum was decideclly v.llh USIU, but t o qu ck allowed USD to regain c-ontrol and quash W • temcr hopes First, in a .second-and-10 situation at the USIU 47 and halftime only 90 conds away, Maynard took a screen pass from Valenzue- la, cut against a flow of pursuers, outmaneuvered two would-be tacklers in the open field, and went in for a touchdown that rebuilt the Torero lead to 10 points. On the first play after the en uing kickoff, Adams loft- ed an apparent 57-yard touchdown pass to Stan Brewer, but the Westerners were detected holding and the play was nullified. USO added two more quick scores in the second half, marching 52 yards on their first possession then punchmg SIX yards follov. mg a r covery of one or .four USIU fumbles to build a 38- 14 advantage Valenzuela completed 15 or 22 pa ·ses, four in a row to art the first half six in succession at the outset or Nov /1, 7'1> USD sponso?, i ........ two open runs The Univer 1ty of San l>i go has scheduled five and 10-mile runs Dec 2 at 9 a.m. over a cross country course on campus and through Tecolote Canyon Runners may enter ei- ther event by contacting th U DAthletic Dept in nc

as w had planned It out,"

yards) of 104 yards for the Toreros rushing.

--:;:;:=c..-!-~-

1r ,.1

,1\

(j ~ (.,

JOE STEIN

l l

go for slo-pitch Oklahoma Junior Billy Sims, wbo bas been running wild this fall in the finest tradition of ex-Sooners Billy Vessels, Clendon Thomas, Greg Pruitt and Joe Washington, will be the No. l attraction on ABC's NCAA telecast Saturday morning. Sims has three straight games of cracking the 200-yard rushmg barrier, but he will be hard pressed In Lincoln against another strong Nebraska club. The former Texas prep phenom spent three rather uneventful seasons with the Sooners (one was as an injured redshirt), but he really has blossomed this fall, coming from nowhere to a prominent spot in the Reisman Trophy race. His performance Saturday (Chan- nels 7-10 at 9:45 a.m.) will have a great impact on his Reisman chances because it's a nationally televised game. Sims is a fast, slashing runner who might have been described best by the Sooners' equipment manager, Jim Cummings: "A rattlesnake on roller skates." Little League Baseball has scheduled its 1979 ~ries for Aug. 21-25 in Williamsport, Pa. Among the LL board members is Thomas P. Johnson of San Die~o. - -- ..... - =-~~-~ Biden to speak U.S. Senat

da h the 5-8 175-pound jun- cent efficiency last week, [, lo f{um Savannah, Ga. who and Greg at 80 per cent is tr nsferred to USIU from better than a lot of guys at rterville JC has been a full strength," says Wll- nsistently productive Iiams. "His quickness and\ nner for the Westerners toughness make him very Morgan strung together good at both containing the our straight games In which wide runs and rushing the e ran for more than 100 passer." . ards this season, and his Though neither coach is total of 590 yards on 90 car- set on a _starting quarter- ries (a 6.5 yard per carry ,back at this tune, the likely average), tops all westerner s1.gnal callers will be senior backs. Jim Valenzuela at USD and It is the speed of Morgan Wayne Adams at USIU. and that of teammates Keith Valenzuela got off to a some- Morgan and Johnny Dodge what discouraging start, but which worries USD coach has completed 55 passes in Bill Williams on the eve of 118 attempts for 718 yards the battle for bragging and five touchdowns while rights between San Diego's being mtercepted seven two small college football times. Adams has been hobbled "They have the kind of with an ankle injury and teams.

-

made a rather smooth tran- sition from pitcher to right fielder, but don't expect Roger Craig to call upon Shirley to make the same switch. Bob's not exactly setting the league on fire as an outfielder. In fact , all three Padres are finding out there's a big difference between baseball and soft- ball. Frances Shirley, Bob's wife of four years, also no- tices a big difference in her husband's reaction to soft- ball. "In baseball, Bob's so cool and so much in control," she says. "But he

-~~ ·~'-"':71r--..;...--'~~'!""f4+.--'L

-==::'.?--=_______..

team speed that they could just explode against some- body some game," says Wil- iams. "We're hoping they do against whoever they "Defensively you try to take away what the opposing team does best, and that's what we'll be trying to do And that is where Perkins comes in. A 6-2, 215-pound defensive end, Perkins has been the Toreros' most valuable de- fensive player two seasons in succession after being the team's leading tackler both years. He was also the out- standing defensive perform- er in USD's 13-7 triumph over USIU in last season's against USIU." 1 N Pay OV. 11.

-

\

,

The public relations office at the University A.~ of San Diego has appointed Bill Ritter ay News and Publica tions Writer . . . University of San Diego Law School Alumn ~ ]7 Associa tion. has honored Judge Herbert Katz, Judge Judith N. Keep, and attorneys James Longtin, Detroy M. Richardson, and N~vl 1 ~ 1 " a

Delaware), one of the youngest and most outspoken men ever elected to U$ Senate; will speak at the Uruvemty of San Diego's Salomon Lecture Hall at noon Thursday Nov · BHie~, 35, Wll3 first elected to the Senat.e m 1972. He sits on the Judici• ary ~mittee, the Intelligence Ov~ight Committee, the Foreign Relations Committee, the Senate Biqet Committee, the Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, and the powerful D_emocratic Steering Com- rruttee, which cietermines the com- z mi~ assignments for all Demo- i== cratic members ol the Senate. presentation is open to the ..,, public at no charge. Fer information, phone 291-6480 >- ext. 4296. .J, iD >.a l; 16 · ' . Z ,:, .g :!: .;:: QI

TR111uNE _,, editor

gets really mad at himself in softball." If you want to catch the Padre trio in action, their • team's next softball game is at 9 p.m. tomorrow at Fourth St and Coronado Ave. in Imperial Beach. 1 The Padres '!till be tbe oppo~lt!on when tbe Dodgers open defense of their . ·ational League championship at 1 p.m. April 5 in Los Angeles. Opening-day ceremonies will include the raising of the 1978 NL pennant and the presentation of championship rings to the Dodger play- s lf you're interested in lending some vocal support to the Padres, you .:an order box or reserved tickets this way: Send a check or money order payable to the Los Angeles Dodgers to Opening Day 1979, Post Office Box 80300 Los Angeles 90080. Box seats cost $4.50 each, while rese;_.ed seats go for $3.50. There's a 50-cent handling and mailing charge for each order. More Padre news ... Roger Craig, Bob Fontaine and Ballard Smith will be special guests of the San Diego Building Contractors Association Nov. 16 in the Mission t Bay Room of the Bahia. Cocktails are at 6:30 p.m. with dmner startmg at 7:30. WIIUe Brigham, former two-time eounty basketball ( player of the year at San Diego High, apparently is ready 1 to leave the Uruversity of Southern California, which 1 onre wooed him with such ardor. 1 According to University of S~n Diego Coach ~im f Brovelli, Brigham has talked to him about transferring " SC has given him permission to talk with oth~r coaches," said Brovelli. "He hasn't made any conurut- ment to come here, but we're certainly interested if he 1s. ( He's a great athlete - he can help us." . Brigham got lost in the shuffle at talent-nch USC and sat on the bench most of his two seasons with the I Trojans. Former larquette Coach Al McGuire bas signed to f continue as a color commentary on NBC's college basketball telecasts this coming season. Among his duties will be work on the 1980 Olympic Games in loscow. McGuire was a refreshing addition to the telecasts last season. How's this for an odd twist . . . Kansas City's Chiefs, who play the Chargers here Sunday, have won their last six games mSan Diego. The Chargers, on the other hand, have won four straight in Kansas City. You try to figure it out.

Thomas E. Sharkey a1 Alumn, Awards Banquet

the Dis1inguished

ilo& An.9ele&

Tues., Nov. 21, 1978- Exceptional Children to Perform Exceptional ~dren from San Diego County schools w Sa penrfDioi:zneg~ aSalChristmas program Dec. 3 at the University of om omon Lecture Hall The 3 ,P:m. program, whose theme will be "The Litt! = 18 sponsored by the USD Special Education Exeeptio:f student chapter of the Council for

It will be free to the public.

TV documentary features TP!!~:,t .!,.e:~!ff ~:'!~~"' a, a tinuing education for senior thirty-minute special airing citizens in San Diego is the November 3, 8:30 p.m. The subject of a half-hour tele- program will then be aired vision special which will be by Storer Broadcasting sta- programmed throughout the tions in major cities of the nation in the coming United States, and distri- months. buted to other television the docu- ed as a pilot program at the mentary special are Tina University of San Diego, Loy and Richard Schreier, adopting approaches origi- with television network nated in Europe. KCST actor Jock Mahoney as host Channel 39 film cameras and narrator. The University of Third Age has been conduct- the stations. Producers for

SMALL COLLEGES S,O U1J ,., ,1

'11$

Nc v.2 1 1

p

Cage Tearns Eye

-Stoff PhCIOS l)y BOil Redding r verslty of San Diego nmnmg back Jeff Morgan ) I haul d down by on USIV tackler while ggle Robmson (S:i) lends a d (top photo) 10 ye tcrday' small college contest at It Cann •I lllgh. USIU's Johnny Dodge (37) m anwhlle, watch a the ball rolls free aft r USO'' Guy Rlcclardulli applied a tack! USO pr vail d fo th l'o11d year In a row, 20 W m r llncbaek r

a markedly improved cam paign at UCSD if the Triton- can overcome eligibility dif- ficulties which have robbed them of key· players in re- cent years. A look at the prospects by school: UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEG~ The Toreros are the defending Division II West Coast Regional Cham- pions, and would like to re- VE:a~ _before stepping up a D1v1s10n and joining the West Coast Athletic Confer- ence next summer. Returning starters from last year's 22-7 team, which lost. in the Division II quar- terfmals, are a pair of sopho- mores, guard Mike Stock- alper and center Bob Bar- tholomew. Bartholomew (6- 6), a Kearny High grad, averaged 10.6 points and bet- ter than seven rebounds per game. .stockalper (6-0), out of Marian High, led the team with an average of 3.5 as- sists per game. To combine with Stock- alper at guard, the Toreros have three candidates who all stand 6-3- junior Dave Cook, junior transfer Earl Pie'.ce and freshman Ru.sty Whitmarsh. Pierce is a "complete" player acrord- mg to Brovelli whUe Cook is entering the year unfettered by injury for the first time in three seasons at USD. With Bartholomew on the front line Brovelli can mix 6- 8 Frank Walsh, a senior who missed most of last season with an ankle injury, 6-9 freshman Joe Evans, an all- county ch?ice a year ago at Manan High, and 6-4 junior transfer Russell Jackson a teammate of Pierce's l~st season at Oxnard In reserve are freshman Don Ca~ener to-4), an all county p1rk last year at Tor- rey Pines, 6-4 Jim Hitzel- berger and 6-7 Keith Cunn- ingham along the front lme and 6-4 Ken Cooney in the backcourt. "We have a young and enthusiastic team but we're working In a lot of players from different ~ystems and how we do will depend on how ,they play together," ~ays Urove Ji "They could Jell ti xt week or not for thra momll , it's hard to tell.,, The Torero season open- er L~ ~ov 27 at lmola of Los An el ·

By HANK WESCH Stoff Writer, The san Diego Union Jim Brovelli would like to exit the small- time scene in style. Mike McDonald would like to enter the head coaching ranks witl1 a flourish. Ben Foster would like to ?ut-man opponents by mix- mg youth With experience. And Barry Cunningham would like to be able to have his best men available for a full season. Such are the intentions of the men who coach basket- ball at the University of San Diego, United States Inter- national University, Point Loma College and the Uni- versity of California San Diego as season openers ap- proach for all. It is a season or transition for both USO and USIU. USD makes its last cam- paign as an NCAA Division ' II affiliate before joining the Division I ranks next year. USIU will be playing for the first tlm~ in 20 seasons with- out Bob Kloppenburg as head coach though McDonald took the reins once previously when Klop- penburg took a leave of ab- sence to coach in Europe. It is a season of great promise at Point Loma where the Crusaders hav~ won 39 varsity games over the last two seasons and as- sembled a 22-2 junior varsity team a year ago. It could be

LA JOLLA LIGHT ov ;., 1978

covers the sessions through- out the five weeks, with a

Fifty-two senior citizens were chosen as students in the Third Age program from a field of over 400 applicants by Malachi Rafferty, direc- tor of continuing education at USD, and Dr. Pat eulner, assoc·ate rofessor of sociology at t e university. "The growth of the senior citizen students, their rela- tionship with others, and their horizons is one of the most remarkable and memorable things I have ever seen," co-producer Loy told Senior World. "I have covered many stories and have produced many pro- grams in my career, but being a part of this Third Age project gave me an un- forgettable and positive im'pression of the aging process." Jock Mahoney, host·and narrator, is a veteran actor and stuntman and star of the "Range Rider" ·and "Yancy Derringer" televi- sion series.

Woolf festival at USD fi'\ The upcoming "Vir- ginia Woolf F tival" pr phone the Forwn, 45~ 5879.

ntation. Also peaking will be Dr. Anwar Oil, author of "The Predous Sanity or Virginia Woolf· Three Guinea for War or Peace, " a member or the " Virginia Woolf Quarterly" editorial board and professor at United States Inter- national University. Dr. Suzanne Henig, editor of the "Virginia Woolf Quarterly," will make a short presentation. At 6 p.m., following the program, a dinner will be erved consisting of foods mentioned in the work of Virginia Woolf. Seating for this portion of the festival is limited. Tickets are $12.50. For infonnation

Actress Sarah DeWitt WIil do a Virginia Woolf unpersonation, and the favorite music of the author will be played. The Forum presents the festival following the tradition of the Bloomsbury Group f which revitalized culture in England. The Forum aims to foster a renaissance of art and literature in San Diego.

will be highlighted by the playing of the actual voice of the Bloomsbury Group author. The festival will be held at 4 p.m,, Sunday, in De Sal Hall at the University of San Diego (USD>. The festival , free to the public, is sponsored by the Forum o( the Arts, San Diego and USO. Dr . Saul Karlen of La Jolla is president of the group Richard Kennedy, author of "A Boy at the Hogarth Pr ." and an early manager of the Hogarth Press with Virginia and Leonard Woolf, will make a

Children To Givff Program At USD "7,.c Littlest Angel," a program by exceptional chil- dren from thrOughout the county, will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Dec. 3 at Salompn Lecture Hall at the Universi- ty of San Diego. Tbe program is being sponsored by the USO Spe- cial Education Department and the student chapter of the Council for Exceptional Children. Carol Hutchison, a reporter for television sta- tion KCST, Channel 39, will be master of ceremonies. J/ o t/, 1 o/, If Jf> Un, o l'>

'Magic Flute' production The University of San Diego will present "The Magic Flute'' opera at 8:15 p.m. Nov. 16 and 18, and at 2:30 p.m Nov. 19 in the Camioo Theater on campus: General aclmission is $2.50: tickets for students with I.D. are $1.50 and tickets for USO are $1.

'The Magic Flute" - Mozart opera given by thl! us and orchestra of the University of San 8 p.m. today• Sunday in Camino Theater on Tickets: $2.50 general admission and ·ents. 291-6480. 'JS 4 Jo//q L: '11 /

":HE MAGIC FLUTE," ~~rl"s last opera, will be performed in English by the USO Opera Workshop, Thursday, November 16, through Saturday, November 18, 8 p.m.; and Sunday, November 19, 2:30 p.m., Camino Theatre, USO, Alcala Park. 291-6480 x4425.t,/ Ir. •I~

\1't Clinician Analyzes Causes Of Child Molestation, Incest Sunday, November 19, 1978

-

are an importan tor. All family members are an Integral part of this phenom• enon and .it is n ssary tc look at all family relation• ships, Fowler said. Conditions conducive to incest, she said, include basic family isolation - "a closed family system in which members do every- thing together and do not satJSfy needs outside." She said there also may be emo- tional Isolation, loneliness and a lot of host11lty giving rise to ''situational stress- e~ ,, , Family dynamics usually include a fear or ol'tstde-the-

family setbacks and "an being affectionate and pos1- overriding motive to keep live ~ward the perpetr~tor, the family intact at all to bemg ~land and exhibiting cost:;," Fowler said. total demal, to blacking out Poor communication or showing a dramatic, trau- among family members and matic response. role reversals - "a child "The greater the degr beCOming parental, a father of violence in molestatio~: wanting to be 'parented.' or the grea~er the Impact, a mother wanting to be Fowler said. parented" - often may ~he ..underscore"d one seen In the incestuous fam1- pomt. Jncestors are treat• ly, the psychologist said. abl~ folks. I hope the legal• Reaction to incest, she sociological system can help reported, can lead a child to these families and n?t do display an thing in the more damage than 1t al- gamut of emotions, from ready has done." ./

for control or power or a compete strangers.

dren as a replacement for

Such adults, according to adults, the speaker said. "They often are impulsive "very much a cause for con- and symptomatic of a failure cern In a co unity." The, to cope adequately with as a class a seen as "l s life's stresses," Fowler said. amenable to treatment" Molestation does not de- than the other general class velop from a single cause, of molesters but rather is the result of The s cond category, many determinates, she known a! regressed" child said. · mole ter , o ginally pre- In cases of incest the men ferred relationships with and women attendmg the peers but because of some USO seminar sponsored by Inner confilct turned to chil- the county Bar Association were told, "fam!ly dynamics Fowler, are a danger and

f ling of In dequacy.

There are two gl'neral cat- egories of child sexual abu rs and th needs apply to both, sh said One group wa Id '.ltlf1ed " as "fLXated'' ch[ d molest- ers, b slcally attracted to and pr !erring und r-ag persons. Th type may get 1nvolved sexually, not only with on 's own children but with II(' ghbor chlldr n OT

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker