News Scrapbook 1982-1984

SAN DIEGO lvlAGAZINE

LOS ANGELES TIMES

Tl IVIES-ADVOCATE OCT 2 5 1983

SD BUSINESS NEWS

SAN DIEGO UNION

19BJ

OCT

OCT 2 8 19<1

OCT 2 4 1983

SPECIAL EVENTS

Masquerade fashion show University of San Diego Auxiliary w1ll have its an- nual "Masquerade" fashion show at 11 a.m. Monday, Oct. 31, at the San Diego Hilton. Individual tickets are $25 and table reservations of 10 persons a table w1ll be available. For more Information, call 291-

OCT 2 3 198

The Developmenl of Successful Mana ers will focu on how managers learn successful per- sonal skill and how progre sive organizations purposely develop 1hcir managers. USO, Oc1. 28. 7:30-9:00 a.m., fee: $20. Info: 293-4585. Con,truclive Discipline offers approaches to disciplining employees m an organization en- vironment. USD, Oct . 28, 7:30-9:00 a.m ., fee: $20. Info: 293-4585.

USO Auxiliar} Luncheon & Fa1hion Sho" • l.iSD Aux',liar, and Robin,on\ department ,10res co-sponsor " \ 1a,querade." 27th annua l fund- rai..,ing ra...,h1on ,ho\\- and luncheon Procccd:-i h) benefit USD Scholarship l'und Mon., Oct 31, at the San Diego Hilton. 1775 E. Jl,fosion Ba, Dr Info: 29 1 6480ex, 427 1.

[OUN~!>RS GALLERY (University of San Diego, Founders Hall), Beaata, an exh1b1l!on of animals in art form, including sculpture, paJnungs and etchings. Gallery hours are from ndon tO 5 p m Monday through Friday

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8'80.

DAILY CALIFORNIAN OCT 2 9 1983

SAN DIEGO UNION

LA JOLLA LIGHT OCT 2 7 1983 USD sponsors breakfast seminar

SAN DIEGO UNION OCT 3 O 1983

OCT 3 O l98J

Animal art - "Beasts," an exhilnt of animals in art form, will be on view from noon to 5 p.m. weekdays beginning Tuesday, Nov. 1, through Wednesday, Nov. 30, at the Founders Gallery, Founders Hall at the University of San _- Diego. Admission is free . . ,_

USO ORCHESTRA-The University of San Diego Orchestra, conducted by Henry Kolar, will perform works by Bach, Strauss and Brahms, with violinists Kolar and James Zagami, at 4 p.m. next Sunday in the Camino Tltealer, University of San Diego.

vanced registration is en- couraged and may be ob- tained by contacting Penny Navarro at 293-4585.

1333 7th ve. Dr. Johanna S. Hun ilker, a si tant profc or of management and cduca 11011, will id ntify and di cus IO megatrend currently changing th future of American busmc~ . ·1he ame day, Dr Robert R. John on, a oc1atc profe or of e onomics, will explore th importance of " anagmg for Quality Improvement." How

long can your depart ment or division urvive it own internal defects? Do you wonder if :;uch defect arc controllable? Can you te t for their cau e ? Dr. Johnson will aJdres these and other quc tions at the La Jolla Village Inn, Interstate 5 at L a Jolla Village Drive. rhe es ion begm at 7:30 a.m. and conclude at 9 a.m. Admission is $20 and includes a con- tinental breakfast. Ad-

Fo11Dden Gallery: "Beasts" an- imals in various art tdrms through Nov. 11. University of San Diego. Weekdays, noon to 5 p.m; Wednesdays, noon to 9 p.m.

B-2 'lllE$IRIBUNE San Diego, Monday, October 31, 1983 Students offering help with chores

Have yard work you need done, or light housework you just can't get to? Once again, University of San Diego students are sponsoring a senior weekend, and they'll help with those chores. If it's something that doesn't need a skilled craftsman - they're students, not carpenters or plumbers - they will be doing the work for older adults Nov. 19 and 20. Sign up by calling Senior Citizen Services of the city of San Diego, 236-5765.

J Sunday, October 2, 1983/Part Ill 19 Seeking Revenge, Toreros Instead Give Away Ball and Ballgame By Tim GILLMAN, Ti~s Staff Writer

SAN DIEGO-F1r t-year University of San Diego football Coach Brian Fogarty threw his head-set up in the air In d1 gust after watching one of his players lose a fumble for the sixth time Saturday everung in the Toreros' 28-71038 to Occidental College. 'l'he Toreros also had two balls intercepted for a total of eight turnovers. The final fumble with 13,10 left snurted a U D drive that had started at Its own 29 and ruined ny chance the Toreroo had of gmg a comeback Ten minutes later. the visitors scored the last of their four 'touchdowns on a 4-yard run by quarterback Dan Osborn. "The thing that bothered me," Fogarty said, "was

that most of the fumbles were execution problems, not forced turnovers. Maybe we were trying too hard." The third quarter was fatal to USO. Tied, 7-7 at halftime, the Tigers took the third-quarter kickoff and went 80 yards in six plays to take the lead for good. The score came on a 4-yard run by Jeff Goldstein. The visitors made it 21-7 with 3,59 left in the third quarter when Jon Finstuen scored on a 13-yard pass play from Osborn. The one bnght spot of the evening for the Toreros wa,~ the running of back Jerome McA!pin, who finished with 140 yards on 23 carries. "He's a good runner," Fogarty said. "But we had three turnovers at his position and l'tn not sure why. Some may have been bad exchanges."

The Toreros mounted a nine-play, 48-yard drive just before halftime to score and tie the game. With about four minutes remaining in the first half, Occidental punted deep in its own territory and the ball went out of bounds at its own 48. For the first time in the half, Fogarty used McAJpin on seven of the drives' plays and be delivered. McAJpin's final run of the first half, a 5-yarder, gave the home team first-and-goal at the Occidental five. One the next play, USO quarterback Phil Spencer rolled right but kept the ball and reached the corner of the end zone. The successful PAT by Robert Lozzi tied the score. Occidental's first touchdown crune after Parris De- Vine recovered a bad USO snap at the USO 31. The

visitors lost three yards on thel.l' next three plays, but the fourth was a touchdown pass from substitute quarterback Jeff Monteroso to end Norm Stallsberg. That was followed by a successful kick by John Yohannes. Last year's 34-20 loss to Occidental in a televised game was simply devastating to USO. In that game, like this one, the Toreros entered with 3-0 record. The loss rocked USD and it went on to lose four of its last five games. The pain of that loss in front of thousands of television viewers is well remembered by the Torero players. "They (the players) wanted to get them back,"

Fogarty said.

IBE'S- IRIBUNE

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San Diego, Friday, October 7, 1983

SanDiego Notepad Toreros try to rebound at Whittier

SAN DIEGO UNION

EVENING TRIBUNt: OCT 3 198 TOREROS TOPPLE - It is back on the road this week for USD's football Toreros wh~ perfect, 3-0 record was shattered by Occidental 28-7 Saturday at Torero Stadi- um in USD's first home appearance in three weeks. The Toreros will be at Whit- tier Saturday. !orero tailback Jerome McAJpin, who gamed 167 yards in 27 carries against Oxy, fumbled three times, bis first coming on the game's initial play and setting up Oxy for a touchdown and a lead that ii never relinquished.

OCT I

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The University of San Diego Toreros will try to re- bound from a 28-7 loss a week ago to Occidental College when they travel to Whittier to face the undefeated (2-0) Whittier Poets tomorrow night at 7:30. USO (3-1) lost to Whittier 20-18 last year. The Toreros are led by senior tailback Jerome McAlpin, who has rushed for 483 yards and three touchdowns. Defensively, Greg Stein is leading the team with 31 tackles. The Toreros return home next Saturday to entertain University of La Verne.

Oxy upends USD Special to lbe Unioa

ers, and I think we were just too excited ' Occidental's Tim Kennedy gamed 135 yards on 18 carries and Jeff Goldstein added 109 on 26 carries and scored a touch- down The Tigers used two quarterbacks, with Osborn completing eight of 18 for 82 yards and two touchdowns. Jeff Monteroso com- pleteiJ two of three for 33 yards and a touchdown. Penalties also hurt the Toreros, the most cruc I coming with 3:59 to go in the third quar er and Occidental facing fourth and t~o from the Torero four-yard line. The Tigers brought on the field goal unit but man1ged to pull the USD defense offsides to set up a first and l(oal. Two plays later, Osborn double-pumped and fired a bullet to Jon Finstun to put the Tiger~ up 13-7. John Yohannes added the extra point. USD was able to up its first-

A nervous University of San Diego team gave up the ball six times by fumbles and twice by interceptions to allow Occidental CollE'ge lo grind out a 28-7 victory last night at Torero Stadium "\\ c had to control the ball to win the game, and we obviously did not do it," said Torero ~ead coach Brian Fogarty. "You Just can t spit up the ball that many times and expect to be in there." USO (l-1) trailed 2J.7 with 11 minutes to play but saw its final chance evaporate when Torero Michael Rish fumbled on the Tiger 24 following a 28-yard pass reception from quarterback Phil Spencer. Occidental (3-1) then drove 76 yards in 5:26 to put the game away on a 2-yard touchdown run by quarterback Dan Os- born. On USD's first play of the game Jerome McAipin fumbled the exchange with Spen- c:er to set up Occidental on the USD 26-yard Ime. McAlpin gained 167 yards for the Toreros on 27 carries but had two more !umbles, his second after Occidental had J~st scored lo lead 14-7, and his third on the first play of- lourth quarter. "We w re too nervous and kept mak- mg mlsta , said McAJpm "The coaches empha IZ(~il this game more than the oth-

SENTINEL OCT 5

1983

SAN DIEGO UNI OCT 3 191"

JEROME McALPIN Leading rusher

Clippers play at USD~ The San Diego Clippers, attempting to establish themselves as one of the NBA's better teams, will play their openmg exhibition game of the 1983-84 season this weekend in Linda Vista. The Clippers will host the Utah Jazz Sunday night at 7 at the USD Sports Center. The game is a benefit for the USD athletic department. The Clippers are also holding daily pre-season workouts at USD that are open to the public.

Scores USO SUMMARY

Oceidenlal (UTESATURD1Y)7 14 7-28 o 7 I t _ 7 O - Sfolsberg 34 P0SS from l.'ootoroso (Yclxmes kid) SO - Si>encei 2 run (Lozzi kid) 0 - Goldsttin 4 run (Yclxmes kid) O - Finstuen 12 pass from Osborne IY clxmes kid) 0 Osborne 4run (Yclxmes kkt) NlfVl>UAL STATlSTICS RUSHING-USO ~in 27-ij7· Ocdden- fol-Kemeoy 18-tn, Goic1s1m 26-16'. PASSING-USO\~ 7• )~2-99. Occiden- fol Osborne S- 1- -I~. ~ECEMNG-USO, Rlsii U4 Occidentoi Sfolsberg ~78. . ' Univ. Of Sal Oie,o

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