News Scrapbook 1979

Fr day, October :-, 1979

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

OCT 6

197i

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE EVENING TRIBUNE OCT 6 197i Toreros out to halt Poet skein TRIBUNE o,spatch WHITTIER - Bidding for a first victory over their hosts in eight meetings, the University of San Diego Toreros meet the Whittier Poets at 7:30 tonight at Me· morial Stadium. USO will take 4-1 record mto the ntest, Its only loss coming against Cal Lutheran. The Poets, one of the favorites in the Southern California Inter- collegiate Athletic Confer• ence, are 2-1. St. ary's topped them 24-7. "The Poets are a hard· hitting team," USD Coach Bill Williams said · We will have to play our b to win." Gomg into this game,

SAN DIEGO UNION

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

C-6

Gulls Host oly; USO its Road

____..,c

191i efense Exp Debate Over

LOS ANGELES TIMES oer s 1919 USD Tries to End a Jinx

A

T II

From • Ti- Stiff Wl'lflr WHfM'IER-From the days when Richard Nixon was a benchwarmer to the present, the University of San Diego never has beaten Whittier College in football. But the 4-1 Toreros are hoping tonight will break the seven;game losing streak jinx in what USO coach Bill Wil- liams calls "the pivot.al game for us because a win will give us ~omentum for the second half the season." The game against the Poets begins at 7:30.

th World Affairs Council of Sar 1>1rgo the Fo ·elgn Pol• icy A oc1at1on and the l D olleg of Arl5 anc Sci nee Part1cipatmg or ... nlza- t10n m Jud· the San Diego chapter oT UI AmPr1can A£:. I 1n of l.,01vrrs1ty Wom n the LeagJr ot Wo e Votr•rs of an D1 g6 and t 1 l mted Nations As socia I n of S::.n D1l'go

A debate exammmg the merits of SALT 11 has been schedull'd for Oct. 25 at 7:30 p m in l'1e University of n Die gel's Canuno The- ater Speaking III suppo~t of th pa t will be 1 00 Gay- lor, a r •tired avy admiral and r rrenUy a r ltant to th I nd rorp th a Uonal Secunty Ag nr:,, and the nate Arm ct Serv1r1 s Com Ill Oppo mg the treaty will be Charles Martin Kupp1 r- man, a defense analy t and resr rch assol'1att for l It Cormmttee on th Presen Danger Kupp rman h servL'

By AILENE VOISI. S11edal To Ttie Stn o,ego Union

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

LOS ANGELES TIMES OCT7 1979

University of San Diego president Author Hughes and Msgr. I. Brent Eagen were among the men in the audience Tuesday for the USO Auxihary's 23rd annual fashion show and luncheon at Vacation V11lage. The social ho~r host- esse. as embled by Mrs. Enc Ba. s, the chairman, included Sally McBride Thornton, Helen Anne Bunn. Judy Comito, Justine Fenton, Maureen Gh10, Jane Guymon, Barbara Hope, Judy Keelin. Amy Krulak, Betsy ianchester, Mag-. g 1e 1azur. Emma Lee Powell, Susan Rick , 1omca Teys- 1er, Ginger W llac and !'Janey Wo:.. art Some 760 peo- ple had rr....,.=·'1JOI--- EVENING TRIBUNE

USD quarterback Tim Call has connected on 49 of 92 passes for 708 yards. He was picked as NCAA O1v1- sion II quarterback of the week after hitting on 18 of 25 passes m la l weekend's win over Ocl'1dental. One of the backs the Toreros must stop is Dwane Jones, asp y ball 1>arker who stands only 5-!eet, 3· inches. Wide receiver Ray• mond Chavez, with 121 yards gained, 1s the No. 1 target of quarterback Pete Janke.

1i79

OCT 9

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

~NEIL MORGAN {Hell Morgon is on as.Si n• ment. This ~o/umn is written by his ossistant, Tom alo/r.}

SENTINEL OCT7

P.itrons .ind guests at the23rd annual luncheon-fashion show of the Universi~ of \ Sdn Diego Auxiliary include, clockwisefrom top left: Elsie Weston, Carol Smathers, GeorgetteMcGregor {co-chairwoman), Barbara Iredale, Ruth Mulvaney, Deborah Szekely ,ind JimMulvaney and Linda Smith. It was a rare luncheon appearance for Sz kely, one of 750 in crowd. Lunching Fashionably t And Glove Affair , Continued from I>·l)

1~7'..>

LESSON NO. 1: USD's Labor- Management Relations Center and the American Arbitration Assn. have scheduled a "two-day intensive workshop" in labor re- lations here Nov. 19 and 20 at the Sheraton Airport Inn. The choice of locations could provide a first lesson: The Sheraton's on labor's do-not-patronize list.

John Cosentino is back on the local basketball scene. The .former University High head coach, forr:ner U~1ted States International University ass_1stan_t 1s now a full-time assistant at the Umvers1ty of San Diego. To~ero Head Coach Jim Brovelli made the appointment. . "I was looking for a recruiter now that we're m the WCAC (West Coast A hletic Con- ference)," Brovelli said. "And I think John is very personal. He's very easy to talk to. "He knows the university very well and he know~ I.he. type of program we have. People are very ~pres~d with John. He's a people per- son. I thmk he 11 be a good recruiter." Cosentino coached at University in 1975-76 and '76-'77. His two-year record was 19·34 and he departed !)-fter t?e second year when coaches we~e leavmg Uru more rapidly than graduating seruors. To say he was a little bitter at the time would be an understatement. "There are more maintenance men on ~,a~p1;1s now than coaches," he said at the time. 9?gmally, I wan~d a year's leave of absence. Bu: now, I don t want any part of this school. I don t even want a recommendation from here." BOMBS AWAY ...Last week's 83·yard Mark Halda·to-Steve Stapler touchdown pass that defeated Wisconsin was one for the record books . . It was the fourth longest pass play in State history. The 55-yard Halda·to-Lonnie Moore aerial was e~en.more special for the recipient. It was Moore s first catch as an Aztec. RED AND BLACK... If you find USIU's football team resembling that of San Diego State's don't be too surprised. Three former Aztec_s, John Fox, Lew Chumich and Mike Solan, ~c coaching for the Gulls. Fox 1s handling the defensive i,econdary Chw:nic~ the line-backers and Solari and of: fens1ve lme. All three coaches played on the '76 State club that went 10-1 and was ranked 18th in the nation by UPI. Ironic~lly, all three players experienced first- ever l~smg seasons a year ago. Fox was 4-7 as an a~1stant at State, Solari was 3·6 in the same cap!1c1ty at MiraCosta while Chumich ex- penenc~d a 1-~ campaign at Bolsa Grande High. Churmch said the experience was a learning one. "It y,as disappointing, but it was also a good expenen~e ~or me and the players to go through, said the former Aztec linebacker who played on two 10· l teams at State. '.l'HE STATU~ QUO ...The San Diego Padres might ma.km~ some strange moves in the front office but give them credit for making one ve~ stable. decision - they've kept ticket prices at their present level. That mean~ fans will still be able to get into the ballpark m 1980 for anywhere between $2 and $5. And wh~n you compare that'to the price of 0th ~r professwnal sports entertainers around town, 1t' not a bad deal. Even for a club with a 68·93 record.

rainwear), a smo dermg crum on glow (for a scg ment called "DI cover Red! '), and other applau~ ·e-getting Ulu ions. t went home with ~r.nples of the wares or Diane \-on Furstenberg and Eliu.i'beth Arden, and, as a special bonus, folding umbrellas with Bullock's signature. • • • All th gu

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

SAN DIEGO UNION

Sunday, October 7, 1979

GAGLIANO HURLS 4 TD PASSES USIU Scores 30-15 Win; USO Rolls, 21-14

penalties, fumbles and the interception.

picked up 93 yards on 16 carries and Joe Henry 89 for 17 trips to lead the ground offensive. USD went ahead 14-0 at the half on four and one· yard dashes by Henry and Mark Garibaldi. However, the Poets came back with 14 points in the third period. A 25-yard pass from Peter Janke to Ray Chavez capped a five-play series and Louie Sanchez returned a pass interception 52 yards for a touchdown. USD had threatened five times but were thwarted by

down pass with 14 seconds remaining in the half. The marches in the sec- ond half were for 56 and 53 yards. The Toreros had many opportunities in a game it dominated but it took an eight-yard pass from Tim Call to Randy Reppenhagen with 40 seconds left to gain the victory. The USO team had marched 70 yards in eight plays. Call had completed 24 of 44 passes for 261 yards with Reppenhagen catching seven of them. Jeff Veeder

improved USIU's record to 3-2, the first time since 1975 it has won more than two games in a season, while Cal Poly dropped to 1-3. The irst two USIU touch· downs were on drives of 64 and 68 yards while Mike Wright's fumble recovering set up the three-yard touch•

Gagliano, who completed 16 of 30 passes for 172 yards, threw touchdown passes of 10, 18 and five yards to Lyle Leong and fired a lhree-yarder to Bill Leitner. Leong, a transfer from Taft JC, caught six passes for 79 yards. The victory

Bob Gagliano tossed four touchdoYln passes last night as Uruted States Interna- tional Univer ity whipped Cal Poly of Pomona, 30-15, at San Diego Stadium while University of San Diego ral- lied in the last minute to down Whittier College, 21· 14, on the latter's field.

............ 6107-21 0 0 II G-14

USO ................. .. wt,ittier.................. ....

USO-Henrv i run (kic.\ failed I us~ribaldi I run (Veeder run) W-Chnllez 15 POSS from Janke I Sanchez , kick! W-Sonchez 51 POSS ,ntercept.on Sanchez kick) USD-Rewenho9en 8POSS from Coll (Gold· stone kick) COi Poly Pomona............... o o 7 8- 15 USIU ............................. 7 10 I ll-lll USIU - Leong 10 POSS from Gogl 000 (Lo= k1c

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online