News Scrapbook 1973

Area ollege Enrollments Climb 8.1 % ~~.. 2 Students Defy ;J'

l ower Attendance

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-e..JS scwJSJJllJ U1e fall semester show more than 'apJMuonr.u lU · g classes in San Diego County's 13 ' ·pJl?J . ,ewis; 1 mmunlty colleges. l?°llJS Jm the registrars of the schools, •Japull-i)(Qe\lJO nd part-time students enrolled S PJ na~ve the 1972 faIJ me er ta) a.,sutut1ons of higher learrung and r<11ctions that college enro11ments lty has the largest number of 1 r

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Guardians of the Tomb

Slaff PM10 A big man on defen e for the Unive1· ily of San Diego is end Cornell Stanley at 6-1 and 240 pounds. l The former Palo Vcrck College gridder and the Tore1 os fac<' Pomona College here Saturday night• Stanley Real Find ·For USD's Vinci By CHUCK SAWYER When Andy Vinci was coach- arts major admits. "I found ing football at COilege of the myi;elf with a lot o.r new peop~e and wasn't sure this was where De.ert two years ago, he had I wanted to be. But, J dis- one good reason for not relish• covered it is a good school with ing the idea of playing Palo a lot of good people. I'm happy I stayed around." Verde College. Stanley wears a No. 75 on his The latter school had a big blue and white To1eros uni· defensive end who kept giving f01m, the same as a defensive . . . end named Deacon Jones on Vinci fits. the San Diego Charger,. He "I alwa s laid my quarter- denies, however, tllat it is any- back, 'don't run anythmg at No. thing more than a comcidence. 59. He always kills us'," Vinci "I Just took the number they remembers. gave me," Stanley il,s1sts. " It's No. 59 was Palo Verde's two- not that I don·t admire Deacon year all-<:onference perfonner I and seve;al. other pro players. Cornell Stanley, and indeed, he In fact, .1 d hke to play pro ball killed ju.:;t about any running I myself 1f I ~et the chance. threat headed in his ~neral d1- "But, I Just take whatever rection jer ey they give me and play Belie~ing 1hat if you can't wherever they put me.". whip •em, get them to join you, There wa one as1on la~t Vinci brought Stanley with him season when Slan~~y raised .h1~ when he took over the Univcr- hand rn protest. Coach Vmc1 sity of &in Diego job last sea- hinte,1 he might want to try me son. at fullback," Stanley remem- bers. "I quess I would have didn't." Stanley responded by leading When you are Vi.Jlci's si7.e, a Torero defense that ranked you don't argue witWa man 6-1 10th in the nation in the NCAA and 240. College Division against oppo- TOR~OS• NOTES - Stanley nents' rushing. Stanley and Co., and his teammates go after allowed an average of 74.5 net tlleir third victory against one yards per game. Joss. here Saturday night "We had some very small against Pomona College, the hnebackers last season," Vinci last home game for the Toreros explains, "so we used Stanley until N~v. 3 • • . Quarterback at middle guard part of the Bob ~ulich aceounte

The procession of Knights and Ladies was im- pressively long, their cloaks flowing in the wind. Noble Ladies wore black and their Knights gleamed white in the afternoon sun. The cloaks were emblazoned in red with the Jerusalem cross, insignia of the order - the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem. Equestrian it may be, but there was not a horse in sight. Cass street, Pacific Beach, had never seen anything like it before, as the procession filed into St. Brigid's last week, Cardinal Maximilian de Furstenberg from

Practical fashions star at USO show

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Rome, Archbishop Joseph Ryan from Alaska and our own Bishop Maher brought up the rear of a procession as distinguished as it was elegant. One absentee was Buzzie Bavasi, though his wife was there. The on-again-off-again transfer of his Padres baseball team to Washington D. C., kept him otherwise engaged. Tallest Knight is undoubtedly newly invested Dr. Author Hughes, USO president. Both he and his charming wife tower above their fellow members of the order. by most was a minor interruption at the rear of the process10n when Cardinal de Furstenberg ac- cepted a petition from a man who wanted to deliver it personally to the "red hat." Uns

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Wester Torero

CarmeUte l\1onast1:ry, 5158 Hawley Blvd., San Diego, annual novena honoring St. Teresa of Avila starts 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 6, with Father Michael French of Brooklyn N.Y. and 1''ather Joseph Glynn, OCD, of El Carmelo Retreat House, Redlands. UDi11ersity of San Diego's Founders Gallery watercolors by Robert Perine 10 a.m.-4p.m. weekdays Oct. 5-Nov. 2. Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima Evening of Recollection 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4, St. Joseph's Cathedral; Father Louis Salca celebrant. Mercy Hospital and Medical Center Auxiliary reception noon Thursday, Oct. 11, Hilton Inn, Mission Bay St. Charles Borromeo church, 2802 Cadiz St., San Diego .~110, collecting Campbell's soup labels for 16 mm projector 1- --L.--1

U.S. International Univer- managed 203 of USD's 260 sity failed to find the char- rushing yards in 24 carries acter it was seeking and including 63 yards in 10 at- University of San Diego won tempts as the Toreros took its fourth straight game in the opening kickoff and Saturday night grid contests drove 72 yards in 14 plays. involving area colleges. Sammy Croom got the USIU lost Its third succes- other TD for the winners sive outing in a 24-9 defeat at with a the hands of Whittier College 12-yard dash in the final 1n Balboa Stadium. period with Doug Rothrock USD, with tailback Rich adding a 31-yard field goal Paulson scoring three times, and four conversions. destroy LaVerne College, Laverne's scoring came .31-14, the latter's field . on a four-yard pass from The sterners stav home Marty Mercurio to Joe Ed- to entertain Santa Clara this munds in the second period Saturday night while the and a one-yard smash by Toreros remain on the road John Herrera in the final to meet St. Mary's at Mora- quarter. ga, Calif, Saturday after- noon. USIU coach Don Turner said the Whittier game

"I was a defe~ive end and fullback in high school," Stan• f ley reveals. But, I'd rather stick to defensive end. That's my position. I ALL-CONFERENCE Stanley won all-conference honors at tllat post three straight seasons at Duquesne High in Pennsylvania and con• tinued his strong showing in his two years at Palo Verde Col- lege. "He is a qwet sort of guy and he was a little uncertain of him- sell last year," Vinci will tell you. "But, he has really come out of his shell this season. It's a pleasure to see a young man find himself and to adjust to any situations that come up. He has done exactly that." "I guess I was a little con- fused when I first arrived here the 23-year-old liberal J

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would give the Westerners a chance to prove what char- acter they had after a 62-0 rout by Puget Sound the pre- vious week. It obviously is still char- acter building week on USIU's Elliott Campus. Except for a 34-yard field ·goal by Sergio Albert in the ·opening quarter and Ken :Koske's 98-yard kickoff re- .turn for a TD in the third, the Westerners offered little against the Poets, now 4-1. • Mike Ottombrino replaced Kerman Machado at quar- terback for USIU to start the Jourth quarter. He moved his club to the enemy three and one yard lines but a 14- yard loss on a fumble and an offsides penalty killed both chances. Whittier running back Dan Chikami scored twice and George Todd once, all on short yardage, while the Poets added a 25-yard field goal by Nick Sega and a safety for their final total. Meanwhile, at Verne Paulson tallied on runs or 24' nine and one yards to giv~ him 11 TDs for the season. It ties an USD season record ~th the Toreros s.till having six games remammg. The 5-11 hard-driving runner from L.A. Harbor

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Friday, October 19, 1973

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IN TOMORROW'S ROAD CONTEST Toreros. e·d To Add Gaels To List em Oregon, St. Mary's Jost lo Sacramento St. (28-7), then stoppetl Occidental, 21· 12, and la:;t week tied

unbeaten San Francisco State, 14-14. Against their on common foe, USD has def ated Occidental, 34-14. USD wUI enter the game mtnus defensive end George

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