News Scrapbook 1979

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE SAN DIEGO UNION OCT J

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE SAN DIEGO UNION ®T 13 1979_

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

EVENING TRIBUNE OCT 12 1979 USO goal: Control TRIBUNE Oispatd\

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SMALL COLLEGES Williams Lauds Torero Play

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Once-Beaten Toreros Seek Sixth Victory Of Season At Claremont The Cmvers1Ly of San Diego, 5-1 and e season thus far, goes after its fifth co toda) In a I 30 starter at ClarPmont. The Stags, who defeated the Toreros last year, 10·9, on a field goal in the final seconds, are led by quarterback Bob Farra and wide receiver Don Chester Farra threw for four touchdowns in last 11,eek's 45-20 win ovPr Occidental. USO .ull agam be dirrcted by quart"rba<'k Tim Call, the D1x1c Junior College transfer who has alreadv passed for 1,021 yards and four touchdowns and running backs Jo Henry and Dave :'vl.aynard Henry and Maynard are averaging 6.4 and 3.8 yards, res!)f'ctivel). Defrns1vely, the Toreros' backfield of G org~:t alandn, Marty Parkrr, Jim Goldston, and Gary cwbcrry hould see considrrable artwn against thP 3-2 Stags - the NCAA ·s Division !II pas. ing and total offense leader.

warned. One of the game's high spots 1s expected to be a passing duel between USD's Tim Call who has completed 75 of 139 pa ses for 1.021 yards, and the Stags' Bob Farra.

LA PRENSA OCT 12 197~

CLAREMONT - A big Claremont-Mudd football team stands in the wa\ of a sixth victory by University of San Diego here tomor- row afternoon at I :30. The Toreros hope to get even for a 10-9 loss they suffered last year when the Stags kicked a field goal with 38 seconds remaining. USD has been beaten only once, by Cal Lutheran. "We must eontrol the ball most of the time to win," USO Coach BHI Williams

. d thf other to BHI Leitner, Lvle Leong, an ;hi\, completing 16 of .10 tosse. d . A d placek1ekl'r Lee Larsen, a yar s n . b k th school homorr from llawan, ro e •1 " rr re~ord for ftl'ld goals (12) \\ Ith a 4~-)ard Else\\ here on the small coll _ge scen\. 11 i Pt l oma- The women voile) a l t a~ d '.reated LSI c last Tuesda) lo~.~~! ! fourth con ecut1ve \\ m. then Jost to Lo. . last Thursdav Th~· CrusadP1:. have three lrague games this \\Pek against Cal Bap- tist ra\ Luth ran and Westmont. Coach L •on Kuglr.r's soccer squad droppPd a 9-0 contest against San D11g~ State after tra1llng 1-0 «t the half, then e l to ~·resno J>ac1fl1.: later mthe weekr:t next mat<'h is \\ rdnesday against U . followed by Cal Luthrran Saturday f . c1·oss C'ountrv team aret The mens · • p . f bette1 The Crusdaders beat_ Azusa- 4 c last yrar's d1stnct champions 23- 3 Bill st~ong ef!ort b\ rankltn Haralson, t Tokar and Chris Sadler They compe Saturdav m the Stanford lr.v1tat1onal ~h1l th om n travrl to Cal Lutheran. ~;D The womens' volleyball team lo to 1 ~·1n de!cated St. Mary's, th.en fr C B k \ev lm ll ished second in the U er e ' . t10nal O\ er the weekend ln the touin the Toreros beat San Frane1s1 ·tate' Portland and Sacramento State t .. fore io ing to Berkeley in the finals. Th 10 et Fullerton Thursday t,;Sll- The soccer team took.. (·on . . for 172 ' ' ' . ment

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1Jnivrrs1ty of San Dwgo Coa<'h Hill \\ il- l . m has a thl•ory about why his football t~un i 5-1, wl11ch surpnsmgly, has l~\tlP t_o d with talent Willlams Ill. t1·ad atll lhUtf s h;> tram•~ sucl·l'SS to two [aC'tors emotion and enthu ·iasm , ,. To parnphra,r tlll' coarh th, t~.1m hirh plays at a gr ater rmotmnal lrvel :ill cTrate and eapltallz . on tlu• opportum: t1r and thus, excl'L And adm\ltcdl) , th< bps\ t am may not always wm. w1111ams may b,• a bit b1~~r~. ~owevf'r ! "•" omm nts !allowing USD s 21 •14. wm over Wl11tt1er last Saturday mghl mdi< atrs that h , t becomPS soml•what cmot10n- I , 1 ha\ to brag a lllt about our sper.1a teams They haw allowed Zl'ro punt return yardag' and we're hallway lhrou rh thr ,. Or •·on kiclwf! roverag . the s- a on ' • I 10 rcls M•· oppo it ion has averaged or. Y ) a · · , Aunt r.xa can do that, and I'll tell you, th · l' 89 years old." And on ClaN'mont, 7i:xt S~turda)' opponmt, "they'll ~ave to comP out throwing. bceau r •1obod) s hrrn .t )n eight vears, and om· l\hl!'h almost wasn t The l;0<·b, down Ho at halft1mP, l~f'.d .tt'r <'Orr. m thr. thml quarter But I or rro uartrrbaek Tim Call connectrd with iandy Hrpp nha en for a touC'hdO\\ n with ablP to nm a •amst us ' . USD's win ov •r Whitt1rr was its fl'. . .

BOUTIQUE DE NOEL A bazaar of ha1,Jmade gilts, decorative Chnslmc1s uems and baked goods will lx ,old .11 •he annual "Boullque de Noel.. at the Urnversity of San Diego·s French Parlor, on Saturday, October 20 at '7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Alumnae of the Sacred Heart, the proceeds support scholarship programs for USD students, as well as other Alumnae events. No host cocktails and hors d- oeuvres will be served.

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE SAN DIEGO UNION OCT 14 1:.11,

second of nine recitals that will present the 32 ee oven piano sonatas during this school year will be presented next Sunday at 4 p.m. m the Camino 'J'h er on the campus of the University of San Di o Rev ~1colas Reveles, Dana Mysior and Michael lcie will P ady the Sonatas Opus 109, Opus 78 and Opus 27 Nos an 2. , •

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LOS ANGELES TIMES OCT 13 197g USO vs. Claremont 5-lal t. TIit Tlffl4t

UH'.e in th i; 1 Cla sir wi h ::m 0\ , . (3-0), :\t dwestern College (a-1) an 1' Los' against San Diego State (2·1). c. 1c players selected .for •h •. all•ltou~~:a~.~ · ·luded Jim \1 I:,, · oe ' te:i~o c1,1~~ron and Khaled Sultan. The Gulls host CSt' Thursday. and Chapman College aturday . t n:so- The womens cross coun ry team captured a triangular meet with, Cal Tech and Whittier wh!le the volle)ball team finished behind UC Dans in the. All· Cal Tournament last week. The Tntons host Westmont Friday' then v1s1t Occ1den· tal Saturday. . th The mens· water polo te~m won e Claremont Invitational with v1ctones over Santa Clara 15-11 , Pomona-Pitzer 12-5, Claremont 16-11 , and Loyola 22-1_1 Dan Eby Jeff Ell10tt; and Willie ;,\tarns were nam'ed to the all-tournament team. tvu

cond rrma1mr : -~,...n~c,a:·~an,. ens iea ) ,

SAN DIEGO UNION

ham acfdP~, , Our guys Ju~t nrver b'lV!' up. \\ ;- don t ha\e thi (l pth or th p •r ·onnrl that a lo! of other tPams du, but Wl' play: well, with,, lot o[ hParL And that's what wms games Other Torerns mrnttuned by \\11\llams included runnmg backs .Jor Henry and ,Jef! \'ePder and dPfens1ve back Jim <,old· stonr '\tarty Parker and GeorgP Cala~dn . ThP Toreros travel to ClarPmont Satur· . United States International l mvers1ty' meanwhile, has quirt!; be.en impro\mdgXtss record to 3-2, its uHens1ve i•'le an running game TtlP Gulls bPat Cal I ly Pomona 30-1~ last Saturday. mghl,. al· though th Broncos were stat1st1cally supe- f Quarterback Bob Gagliano thrr1\ . or four touchdowns, three to wide receiver day for a 1 30 p m contrs~. . . nor •

a mont Hands USD 38-8 Defeat SP!tial To Tilt S~n Oie,o UnlOll CLAREMONT - Claremont College scored in every quarter and cornp:ctely shut down the University of San Diego running game here yestt:rday afternoon to score a 38-8 romp over the Toreros. .u was only the second loss of the season against five wms for USD while Claremont improved its record to 4-2. The only bright moment or the day for the Toreros was when Charles Pillon picked off an enemy pass at his own goalllne and raced 100 yards up the right sidelines for the score. However, 1t came in the third quql"ler after the wm rs had amasser! a 31·0 lead. Meanwhile, quarterback Bob Far was completing 23 or 39 passing attempts for Claremont for 335 yards although the winners failed to score through the air. Runnmg back Blake Isaar.son Erflred twice qn runs of 23 and 3yards and Matt Kawamura returned a punt 62 yards for another six points. · ............................................................. .. 0 180-1 eed i i;~·ici.in kicki............ .... i:c:::F~:;~;·;;;,;-icoo~ ki ti ...... .7 ! 7 7 l-l8 CC- ~awoir.ura 62 PUnl rei1Jrn (Cohn kiek/ USO -PIiion 100 POSSlnler~ (Gariboldl run/ - F='i',/' (tohi kl

CLAREMONT-The University or San Diego, trying for its sixth win in seven games, travels to Claremont for a 1:30 p.m. game today. Claremont is ranked 18th in the Division II NAIA polls, although its record is only 3-2..

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SE.RVICE

SAN DIE~O CLIPPING SERVICE EVENING TRIBUNE OCT 1 5 1979

EVENING TRIBUNE

OCT 16 1979

Son Diego, Tuesday, Oct

Programs set on furniture art Grossmont College Gal- lery will feature Larry Hunter presenting a slide lecture on "Contemporary Amer~can Furniture An Overview" tomorrow ~ight. USO, this talk is part of a patr~n•s subscription series offenng lectures throug 1• o~t the year in conjuncti , with gallery shows.

Torero streak over

.Claremont College scored an 38-8 victory over the Umvers1ty of San Diego in Claremont Saturday to end the Toreros' four-game winning streak. USD couldn't get its offense untracked against the to.ugh , Claremont defenders, scoring only on Charles P1Hon s 100-yard return of an intercepted pass rn the third quarter Claremont. quarterback Bob Farra completed 23 of 39 pa for 335 yards rn pacmg his team's victor.v Clarem~nt now has a record of 4-2 while USD is 5-2. Th~ Toreros next game 1s against Azusa Pacific at USD Saturday.

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SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE SAN DIEGO UNION OCT 15 137

The public is invited t attend.

Hunter has recently re- turned from a trip across th e Urutect States meeting and photogr phing wood craftsmen. After the 7 p m slide lecture, there will be reception at 8. ~yanel discussion at 8:30 on D1r~ctions and Careers In Furmture" will include panelists Hunter, Erik Gron.burg, Jack Hopkins, Sterling King and Kenneth Langston. At 10 a.m. on Oct. 24, Therese T. Whitcomb, chairman of the University of San Diego's Art Depart- ~ent, will discuss the "Cal- iforma Chair" exhibition Held at Founder's H~IJ.

USO Scene Of Drive A "Better Life Drive" to benefit Battered Women's Services of San Diego is bemg held at the mversity of San Diego this week. Phi Alpha Delta, the legal fra- ternity, will sponsor the campaign to collect canned goods, clothing, utensils, dishes, furniture and other items. Depositories for the Ilems will be located around the USD campus. Large items will be picked up if donors will call Battered Women's Ser- vices.

lth,um h _ 9 - 79

SMALL COLLEGES

"Real Estate Syndication" will be the topic of a talk by Stephen Richardson, assistant business professor at the University of San Diego, at 7:30 a.m. Friday mthe Town & Country Hotel as part of the Update breakfast seminar senes sponsored by the school's business and contmuing education departments.

1 Williams lauds Torero .Play i By AILENE VOISI 1.l... Si>eeral To The San o;ego Union Lyle Leong, and the other to Bill Leitner, r,;; University of San Diego Coach Bill Wil- while completing 16 of 30 tosses for 172 1 Iiams has a theory about why his football yards. And placekicker Lee Larsen, a 1 team is 5·1, which surprisingly, has little to sophomore from Hawaii, broke the school 1 do with talent. Williams instead attributes record for field goals (12) with a 42-yarder. 1 his team's success to two factors : emotion Elsewhere on the small college scene · l and enthusiasm. Pt. Loma- The womens' volleyball 1 To paraphrase the coach: the team team defeated USIU last Tuesday for its J which plays at a greater emotional level fourth consecutive win, then lost to Loyola , will create and rapitalize on the opportuni- last Thursday. The Crusaders have three · ties, and thus, excel. And admittedly, the league games this week against Cal Bap- I best team may not always win tist, Cal Lutheran and Westmont. 1 Williams may be a bit biased, however. Coach Leon Kugler's soccer squad r Afew comments following USD's 21-14 win dropped a 9.0 contest against San Diego r over Whittier la~t Saturday night indicates State after trailing 1-0 at the half, then fell that he, too, becomes somewhat emotion• 6-1 to Fresno Pacific later in the week. The r al. next match is Wednesday against UCSD, "I have to brag a bit about our special followed by Cal Lutheran Saturday. teams. They have allowed zero punt return The mens' cross country team fared yardage and we're halfway through the better. The Crusdaders beat Azusa-Paci/- season." Or, "on kickoff coverage, the ic, last year's district champions 23·34 with ; opposition has averaged only 10 yards. My strong efforts by Franklin Haralson, Bill Aunt Eva can do that, and I'll tell you, the Tokar and Chris Sadler. They compete gal's 89 years old." And on Claremont, Saturday in the Stanford Invitational while c next Saturday's opponent, "they'll have to the women travel to Cal Lutheran. I come out throwing, because nobody's been -'.-USD- The womens' volleyball team lost 1 able to.run.against us ..". . . . 'Ito Irvine, defeated St. Mary's, then fin• 1 USD s wm over Wh1tt1er was its first m ished second in the UC Berkeley Invita• 1 eight years, and one which almost wasn't. tional over the weekend. In the tourna• 1 The Poets, down 14-0 at halftime, tied the ment the Toreros beat San Francisco 1 score in the third quarter. But Torero State' Portland and Sacramento Slate be• 1 quarterback Tim Call connected with fore losing to Berkeley in the finals. They Randy Reppenhagen for a touchdown with meet Fullerton Thursday. 1 40 seconds remaining. •·-· • •--•- -=~- '

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

EVENING TRIBUNE

!}:CT 1 6 1979

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COURT NOTES By BEN PRESS Special lo TRIBUNE

LOS ANGELES TIMES

. Tbe vo.id left when the Colgate-Palmolive Co. withdrew its sponsorship of the Grand Prix circuit . has been filled. Volvo has stepped in to pick up sponsorship of the tour arid that's good news for the men, who faced a big setback without a sponsor to gua~antee the $11 million m prize money and the $2 million for the bonus pool in 1980. More than 20 San D1egans participate on the tour. The state of tennis at public facilities remains confused. The various methods of pay-for-play are tentatively set to go into effect Jan. 1. It will probably not happen that soon as the clubs invited the city,. and the committee heads helping to make the dec1s10ns are m total disagreement. In the midst of all the confusion, two suggestions em- erged from the last Tennis Council meeting. The frrst was. that the Patrons accept managemPnt of the tenms courts at Robb Field. ThIS woulr:l be unp()pular, un~orkable, unwise, and unlikely. Sec: and, 1t was pomted out from a Jan. 25, 1962 reprint of a Tnbune article that the Pacific Beach Tennis • Club began as a facility for juniors and their development. The suggestion was that perhaps the ~BTC.be returned to a Junior Tennis Center. This 1s a mce idea but not too feasible . USD, in association with the Sau Diego Profes- s1~nal Tenrus Assn., 1s sponsoring the second San Diego All-College Tennis Tournament, Oct. 25-28. There will be singles and doubles events for both men and women. All matches will be plaved at USD. and tournament chairman Ed Collin.5 said entries are being accepted until Oct. 19.

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Career Women Focus of Talks The University of San Diego is par- ticipating in San Diego's "Women's Work Week" Oct 22 through Ocl 26 by planning a series or roundtable dis- cussions and seminars led by professional women. The session kicks off from 7 to 9:30 p.m. OcL 22 at the school of nursing, Room 106, With physic1311 Sarita Eastman, Channel 39's Cathy Clark. ' Catholic Family Services' Sister Barbara Welliver and lawyer Lynn Schenk discussing their careers. On Oct 23 at 3 p.m. in Camino Hall's L-shaped lounge, speelalistS in physi- cal education will lead exercise and information sessions. On Oct. 24, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., an Alumni Career Day will cap the ac- tivities. The event is open to the public.

And characteristically, Williams added, "Our guys just never give up. We don't have the depth or the personnel that a lot of other teams do, but we play, well, with a lot of heart. And that's what,~ms games.·' Other Toreros mentioned by Williams included running backs Joe Henry and Jeff Veeder, and defensive backs Jim Gold· stone, Marty Parker and George Calandri. The Toreros travel to Claremont Satur- day for a 1 :30 P.Jll. contest. United States lihernational l lniversity, meanwhile, has quietly been improving its record to 3.2, its offensive line and its running game. The Gulls beat Cal Poly Pomona 30-15 last Saturday night, al- though th Broncos were statistically upe- rior. Quarterback Bob Gagliano threw for four touchdowns, three to wide receiver r

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