News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

19 EVENING TIIIUNE

ll.h.7/7<( 1 ~ USO keeps rolling along The University of San Diego won its seventh game in a row last night, trounc- ing Xavier or Illinois 78-65. SD led by only one at the half, but freshman Joe E\ ans and senior Mike Stockalper led a fast-break- ing offense early m the sec- ond half to take the Toreros to a IO-point lead. Evans, with 19 points, was high scorer in the game. USD is now 8-2 on the season. Summary: XAVIER. ILL. (65) R1mpsev I ?·218. krustkc 12·2,. Sandlin 3 3-5 9, Slyler 3tl_2.)5. Oizowskl 2 3-4 7. Shimko 4 2-4 10. uow11ch 10-02. Totals 22 21 29 65 USO (7') Stockoh>er 72-2 16. Pierce 71·215. Jock· son 6 0-G 12. Borlllolomew 20-0 ,. Evans 7 5· 619. CcPOl\ef 5 2·312 Totals ll 1~1378. Xo,ier ...... .......... ........... 34 31~5 USO.. • ..• 1. .. ............. 3S 4}-71 Fouled OU -hons. Sandlin. Total fouls-Xavier 20. USO 18. \

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H1mwm1 ............. .......... 21 ll - SI USO ............................... JI 4'-71 Fouled out - Pettis (HI. Totul Fouls - Hayword 25. USO 20 PALOMAR (Ill Boles 1 ~12, Tatum 32·21. Babin 92-520. Davila 9 J.-4 21. Gotscn 31~ 7. Hamilton 1 0 2. Leng 32-21. Totals 2910-1811 RIOHONDO(n) Willlom$ S 6-916, McLeod 1 ~22, Bonks 7 4-5 11, Mcstev 72·2 16. Drozdowski I ll-0 2. Bolden 11)-0 2, Gusiff J3.l 9. Clayton 31•17. Totals 211'-21 n. PGIOmc.- ••.••......•.....••...•..• .•• 11 31-41 Rio Hondo.,.,....................... 32 •n Fouled Oul-Bobin IP). Technical Fouls: Bob1n (Pl. Total Fouls-Palomar 11. Rio Hondo17 HOOP MENU SMALL COLLEGE R~londs vs. USIU ot UCSO,' Stcrlfslous SI. of UCSD. 7 .JI) JUNIOR COLLEGE Grossmonl of Columbia SoulltNesternct 1/'ea. 7 .JI) MiroCO$IO at R1vert de Tournev Toreros \'19 go for 5th straiaht 1r:b,oc. uJr/7/ - The rejuvena(e'd-Univer- sity of San Diego basketball team will shoot for a fifth straight victory and a 6-2 seasonal record tonight when 1t entertains Hayward State at 8 in the USD gym- nasium The Toreros, who all of a sudden are doing every- thing nght, pinned a 83-67 defeat on UC-Davis here last night, avenging an ear- lier 75-64 loss to the , ·orth- ern California quintet Bob BarthoJ()m v, was hero of the piece as he hit a career-high 30 points and Almost doubled his season- al average of 15.3. The Toreros also received a big boost from freshman Joe Evans, who had 17 points and 14 rebounds. Mike Lien led the DaVJS attack with 24 points. UC•DAVIS (67) Thomas 7o--0 1', JOMSOO S o--0 IQ, Porrietl 1o--02. Lien I s.10 2,. Mason 1ll-02. Enget 2 0-0tWeldl31·2 7. Cenr1s 12-S, Totcls- 2111•17 67 USO (IJ) Stockol11tr 6 f.J 1. Pierce• 5-' lJ; Jack- son 11.2 3; Walsh 2ll-0,: Bcrtholo~ 10 1~16 JO: WMmorsh 1 IHI 2; Co11tner o l2·J 1; EV0ll$65" 17. Tolols-Jl)2J·361J. ~~ec1··oiii·::.:··;.;,;iii.,1iinu!of rot~ UC·Dovis ••• fouls - UC•Dovis JI). USO 19. sonora). 7·30 ,.....··-· •... 1l 42 -~7

Citrus ................................ JI 34-+l MiraCosta .......................... 34 45-7' Fouled Out-Cambell (Cl, A~lo (Cl, Mo$eS (Cl, L Smith (Ml; T!'dlnlcal Foul-- Mases (C), Wulf (C); Total Fouls-Citrus 2S, Mlro~tu 21. SPRING ARBOR {77) Krog! 16-10 22, Ehrman 10-H Ded

aylor's 19 points proVJng to be the purt th Spartans needed. Palomar v.as JU t outgunncd by a stronger shoot ng five from R10 Hondo. ummarl · Do U ~31 Hill 0·37 Wr gilt 511-1 10, Samuel I 12J, Jones IO&-t7!i Bryant I l • •·Coemon41l-OI Tolols-Dl+72n. CENTRAL ARIZ.178) 1,~dt'1atirlril\ ~~'°':t?•°"o-G 6 a 1 L~t/i~ 1 0-G 2, D ake s l)-0 10; Heor>s 2' Totals 351-1278 SOCC lnl

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Dr. Henry Kolar, chairperson of !he Department of Fine Arts at USO. has performed and taught at the University of the Third Age. O e.- ( i 7'"6 S. I'.! fi•J ".:z., "1t.. Learning never ends The Universicy of the Third Age- a

free-enterprise basis. There were no public grants involved . It was done be- cau e Krulak and university president Author Hughes thought it wou ld be a good idea. The first University of the Third Age program was given last summer and insp ired enough en- thusiasm to lead Bill Fox of Channel 39 to order a 30-minute documentary on it. Prerequi sites to being selected for the course are th at an app licant must be 65 (i t was 55 last summer), able to get to the university at 8:30 every morning four mornings a week for six weeks, and willing to pay the $45 fee . Speakers (all vo lunteers) include expert on local , national and international political ques- tions, nutrition, health and the art .

Sen. rrJ:J~I California visits an old stomping ground-a col- lege campus-lo deliver a bit of oratory Dec. 6 at 8. Ca•!-\ino Thearre, USO. Dec. . J'f 1( / .::,,,(l l'fll44.2i1., _ . I. Hayakawa- The junior senator

University~ cember 6 at 8 •ego Speakers Burell'u. De- p.m. Senator S f . . r aya awa, known semanticist and orn1a. Internationally Language in Tho h author of the book Theatre. Info: 291 .~! 8 ~ 0nd Action. Camino ext. 4296. ,,,,.- 'I k Junior senator from CaJii . . · ah1l, ( NJr+I-. -•try

program to show ,enior ci tizens how to add meaning to their li ve, by exposing them lo a uni versity campus atmos- phere, having them mix with under- graduate and participate in exer- cise-wi ll be repeated at the Universi ty of San Diego next summer. me 55 sen ior citi1ens and a handful of young undergraduate students will panicipate in th e program that wa; developed under the guidance of Lt. Gen. Victor " Brute" Krulak (USMC-Ret.) after a program he had been impressed by at the Universi ty of Toulou e, France. The program, it should be noted, was set up at the Uni versity of San Diego on a

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1.t ' "- •nihtttle t Angels," a free Christmas progra n which exceptional children from throughout San Diego County ~splay their talents, is scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday m Salomon Lecture Hall at the University of San Diego. The program is sponsored bv the university's Specral Education ~partment. Caroi"Hutchison, broad- caster for KCST-TV IS the program announcer and $anta Claus will make a special appearance. I)~. I 1 d/

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Rile que hablarJ de "Lo Probl ma De La_£nugraoon . Con;;ibu<: ion 5.~0 por r~r_nilia. Para ma yores informes llaz a l ctntro Padn Hidalgo 235-62 9 1. USD Coach Guest-Speaker rl\ VISTA Bill Williams, head football coach at the University of San Diego will be the featured speaker at the Vista BroncrosPop Warner football banquet tonight at Bringle T rracePark. 12 f3 -(,-jl,i.u,L. /

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Church's Resurgence In Latin Co ntries Is Noted-

Social justice on global, local levels subjects of symposium at USD

Protestant groups, though the population is still 95 percent Catholic. "A lot of people ask how all this social teaching fits in with the teaching of the church, but to me it is the gospel. Jesus said he came to bring people abundant life, not pie in the sky1" McCoy said. "If American Christians can have an effect on their brothers in Latin America, and they refuse to bother, they are not living the gospel,·• he said. "People have to start be- coming aware of what our military expenditures do to our ability to provide food and medical care for our own people and to the worldwide conomy," he said. Mr-Coy said that in Colombia, U.S. corpora- tions take profits of 100 to 700 percent out of the coun- try, while the citizens there are starving. "! &aw a boy of 13 who looi.ed 6. He will never reach maturity. We need international control on multi-national corporations, since the damage they do crosses nat10nai bounda- ries," he said. ''We have to reoognize what our affluent

lifestyle is doing to others. "Christians need to think what happens to poor peo- ple when there is no trans- portation they can afford. What happens in India and Central America when Americans stop selling fer- tilizer to them, as we did during our oil crisis. We did that rather than cut down sales to cemetaries and golf courses," he said. "You can keep a lot of people happy by preaching 1 a Christianity that doesn't involve ·other people, that just tells you how to save yourself," McCoy said. "But preach the Kingdom of God and what that should mean - that's exactly where the gospel disturbs us."

By RITA GILLI\ION Diego Union 'If we are going to prea h authentic Christiani- ly, v. e can't w1thdraw into the sanctuarv" said a lead- er of Romari Catholic relig- ious orders here last week. The Rev. Alan McCoy, a Franciscan priest and pres- ident of the Conference of Major Superiors or Men in America, spoke at the Uni- versity of San Diego about the effects of recen• politi- cal developments on the church in Latin America and the continuing struggle for social justice. "Preachiug a personal Savior is fine, but many of the affluent want no de- mands mad on them," he <::aid 1 rP. n to those who would label the "social gospel'' communist. "What so often happens is that when the workers de- mand the right to live decently, the military gov- ernments in South America start saying that commu- nism is all that can come of it," McCoy said in an inler- viev.. "If the drive for jus- tice is held back, we often bring about the thing we fear ' McCoy visited Cuba in June of 1977 at the mvita- lion of the State Depart- ment of Cuba with other religious leader . ' We found the church is sllh active a a private m- stilution and there are signs of growth," he said. "We found number of vocations for priests. nuns and othrr

religious orders." "Cuba has not given the political rights we would like to see," he said. "But in terms of food, health care and care for the elder- ly, they have done very well. If we (in America) choose to stress political and personal rights and ne- glect the rights to food and care, it calls our credibility into question." McCoy has been a priest for 40 years and holds a degree in canon law. He taught theology and law and did parish work before becoming an administrator for the Franciscan Order. The conference he heads is responsible for liaison with the American bishops and with the Curia in Rome. He visited Bolivia at the request of the World Coun- cil of Churches' Assembly of Human Rights during the January 1978 hunger strikes and went with a Friend's delegation to Nicaragua in October 1978. "The situation in South America has shifted in the last 10 or 15 years," he said. "A large number of the people are nominal Catho- lics, but there has been a resurgence of interest in the church among the young, particularly in the universi- ty students. It used to be automatic for• university students to fall away from the church." :McCoy attrlbutf d he change to the mcrea ng tendency of tl'e South American bishop to

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SAN DIEGO-Social Jus• tice on aglobalscaleand the poss1b1ht1es for local action on human rights ,ssues will be the topics of a two•day symposium at the Unrver s1ty of San Diego, Thursday and Friday, Jan 5 and 6 Franciscan Father Alan McCoy. p(e 1dent of the Conference of Ma1or Su- periors of Men 1n the U.S .. will be the keynote speaker t 7 30 pm Jan. 5. ,n Salo• man lecture Hall 1n DeSales Hall on the Alcala Park cam pus IN HIS TALK. "A New World Order-lat1J1 Amen ca lJ o Date "he w,11 analyze recent oc,, I iust,ce devel opments 1r Bohv1a, Cuba and Nicar ua Father McCoy has travel

ed extensively these countries w1\h various ecu• rnenrca fa •finding task forces. A long•t1me advo- cate of social justice, he has been closely associated with the efforts of the Un1ted Far'T!workers of America tn unionizing farm laborers On Jan 6 workshops in English and Spanish be- ginning at 9 and 9 30 a.m respectively will explore the prospects for practical applications of social ac- tion IocaUy TOPICS in the English sessions include •·The Elderly tn San Diego, "Food Pro1ects,' "The Nes !e's Boycott." and "Immigra- tion Issues."' Spanrsh•speaking part,. in

c1pants will hear from Father McCoy, August,n1an Father Frank Hiley on 1mm1· grat1on problems: Sister Sara Murrieta of the Padre Hidalgo Center on 'Call to Action," and Father Luis Bernal. also of the center, on the seco d National Hispanic Me mg The symposium 1s spon- sored by the SD Contin- uing Educat on Depart- ment. the diocesan Office of Adult Education, the Padre Hid Center and the diocesan Peace and Just e Comm1ss1on. Fees for the events are $2 for Friday night and $5 for the Saturday workshops More information ,s ava,la ble bycallmg291-648O,ext 4318

1/1 7 111 •'"1\ Another little victory for coastlme lovers: La Jolla envu-onmentallst Tony Ciani and the USD Legal Clinic have convinced a Supenor Court dge to ove~urn the coastal Commission's app val of an 1,800-square-foot addition to the seaside Hopi House. The commission must now revise Its study paperv.ork and the tenacious Ciam can wage a second round of appeals should the project be approved . • . o, No, Gene Klein, The Chargers' recent II et Increases average 20 percent, well above the 5. 75 rcent price ceiling clamped on by President Carter's inflaUon fighters . . Carl Karcher pleased doWf\town planners by covering his new Fourth and Broadway Carl's Jr. th red·brick finish He should finish the Job. Th a ·1mllatlon with the Gaslamp theme is marred by the bare-metal air-conditioning vents which sprout from the roof • . . Convention v1S1tors this month include the ,200-membcr ,\rnencan Beekeeping Federation. Their far.t-f1iled updates on wax moth , bee venom and the plight of the Afncanlzed b('C will be eclipsed by the aplculturists' beauty pageant They'll ·hoose Ms. Amen- / can Hone een 1979. Short Waves lJ 11

REV. ALAN !\lcCOY ... speaks at USD

White House p,ck} USO prg/f!l._Sor 1// t.(J 'f William . tv'ant"lprofes- sor of la~ at the University of .San Diego, has been a _ pointed. to the White Houfe domestic policy staff as a full-time consultant. Currently on sabbatical leave from USD, he Will be Involved in a study of banks haVJng interstate branches ~e will be based In Wash: mgton, DC. '

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