News Scrapbook 1975-1977

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MEET FAVORED TEAMS I I- G -1~ USIU, USD Buck Odds The football teams from of thl' Klngsmen to have held U.S. International and the starting quarterback Andy University of San Diego Slimak out of last week's 30- today take the sam" road 10 loss to Cal State Los Ange- north to see if they can Jes. . break a common losing rut. Slima could have played, The odds arc not too good but coach Bill Williams in either case wanted to give his principal USD (0-6-1) goes to Thou- offensive weapon a chancf' sand Oaks to play Cal to recover from various Lutheran, a team that upped mmor di comforts in order its record to 6-1 with a 24-14 to be in top form at Thou- verdict over usn: last week. sand Oaks. Another hundred miles up "We think we can pass on U.S. 101, USIU (1-6-1) takes them, ' said Williams after on Cal Collegiate Athletir hearing scout reports of Association lead r Cal Poly Lutheran's game with USIU, (San Luis Obispo). Both during which Westerner gall' s begm at J :30 p.m. quarterbacks completed U~D, after Cal Lutheran four passes for 42 yards. loaded up the score ln a 48-6 In six games, Slimak has rout last year, thinks enough completed 70 or 136 pass at- REPORT CARD School and Youth Notes _Six new daytime courses offering employment skills will begm Monday at Midway Adult Community Center 3249 _Fordha_m St. The courses are business English, civil semce review, c_omupter_ programming, data process- ing, job preparation trammg. and medical terminology a_nd hospital procedures used by a receptionist. Addi- tional mfonnat10n is available by contacting the center. A ~mlnar on mental health law and psychiatric court practice will be sponsored by the University or San Diego Schoo~ of Law and the Criminal Justice Committee of the San Diego County Bar Assn. at 9 a.m. Nov. 20 in Salomon lecture hall, USD. . Law students and mental health professionals are mVJted to the seminar. For reservations at $10 per person, contact the bar group's office, 1200 3rd Ave. e t'CSD Extension "Explore" catalog that describes the 200 courses that will be offered during the winter quarter by UCSD 1s available for free by calling the UCSD Extension registration office. Hlg~ school, community college and college students In San Diego County who are majoring in journalism and who hope to m~ke it a _career are urged to apply for Sigma De)ta Chi (_the Society of Professional Journalists) scholarships totalmg $3,500. The deadline for appl ing for th_e scholarships 1s Dec. 1 and applications can be made with Bill Parry, SDX, P.O. Box 9784, San Diego, 92109. Choral singing Is taught from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the San Diego Community College's Er.tuca- t1onal Cultura~ Complex, 4343 Ocean View Blvd. Popular, gospel, .classical and seID1class1cal music 1s taught Anyone mterested in singing is invited to attend the class: Students are being accepted at Mission Bay High Sch0<_>l _ for a free, two-semester program in radio and teleV1s1on repair operated by the San Diego County Reg10nal Occupational Program. The program is open to adults 16 and older, and the class will meet from 12·30 to 2; 30 p.m. each weekday at the school, 2475 Grand Ave. To enroll, contact the Adult Career Guidance Center 1608 5th Ave. ' Pluto's farthest planet from Earth BER~ELEY (NEA) _ A-38 EVENING TllllUN

FOREIGN STUDENTS Election

Views Told By NEIL BALL Stoff Writer, The Son 01910 Union

tempts for 966 yards and five touchdowns. He has been in- tercepted nine times. His Kingsman counterpart, John Kindred, leads the NCAA's Division III teams in total offense with 233. 7 yards per game and is i,erond in pass- ing with 95 of 167 attempts for 1,142 yards. USIU coach John O'Bnen maintains his thin - down to 30 now - squad played well in its loss to Cal Lutheran, and a 28-14 setback at Cal Poly (Pomona) the week before. But failure to follow through In the first and last quarters hurt the Western- ers both weeks.

"lf I could have voted, I would have voted for Jimmy Carter," said Almaz Mekonnen 20 a MlraCosta College student from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. ' He has very social attitude , Mekon- nen, whose homeland is now a socialist nation, explained. Ali. iksefat, 25, who is studying business administration at United States Interna- tional University, said he was !or Gerald Ford. ·iksefat, whose home is Iran, figured the President could not overcome the burden or Watergate left him by his prede- ssor. however. He Bet On Carter So he bet on Carter, and won $6 from his landlady. tekonnen and 'iksefat were among 200 foreign students who were guests at the International Students' Day dmner held last night at Vacation Village. sked about Tuesday's presidential elec- tion the maJority of the students, who attend area colleges and umver ·ities, said they either preferred or expected Presi- dert F-ord to wm over Carter "The debates were fascinating to watch. We do not have that at home," said Arshis Kermam, 24, from Bombay, India, who is studying computer science at uCSD. "It was a surprise it worked out almost like the polls. Maybe more Americans thought a change was the solution to their problems." 'I Like Ford' I l!ke Ford," said Kanoka Imanaga, 18, from Tokyo, who attends the Umversity of San Dmgo. She did not know why Carter Y.On but her USD roommate, Regina Andrr , IB, a premedical student from Palau in flcronesia , said "It was Carter's promises, and I think he will try to k p them. • . Ht.at, 23, of Singapore, a San Die o State University student, offered another reason. "It was the smile on Cart r' face,' he said. "The lection was exciting but it was too mu of a how for something so import- ant, said Dan Andersson, 19. from Swe- den wh is enrolled at Grossmont College. But P!'ter Lyons. 35, a teacher in South Afric'a who is laking instructional televi- sion at San Diego State, said "it was d1sappomtmg - not as exciting as I expected . But I think Ford has done one "?Ii of a job in two years, considering \\atergate, the GOP party split, and the unemployment that comes with a nat10n being at piece ' The City's International Affairs Board societies and its four Sister Cities were the major hosts. _Lim

BURL

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Ar rhc A vr.ick pmy· Top, Dr. &imund Kee- ney wirh porrrair; sec- ond row, lcfc, Dr. Jack Anack; right, Pat Had- dock, AmJ A vcack, john Haddock (back to c:imcr:J); bottom, left, Margaret Bancroft.

Son Diego, Friday, November 12, 1976

• • •

Honoring the ters or Social Service of an Diego, the Sodal Service Auxiliary "111 stagf' a Gold n Jubil celebration Saturday at the Untvcrslt) of San Diego. There' II be a ta In the Founders' Chapel at IO: 0 a.m. followed bv a lunch- eon m De Sal s dining room. · (C ntlnu n D-2, Col. !!)

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Schenk 'Outstanding'

USD Meets St. Mary's In Finale Two years ago, in the last game of the season, which was homecoming, USD closed a miserable season on a happy note. The Toreros beat st Mary's that day, 2.3-17. They hope it was a precedent be- cause today the same cir- cumstances arise at the USD_stadium at do p.m. .It IS USD 's last chance to ~ve_ Bill Wllham a victorv m his rookie season a:; the Torero coach. USD is 0- 7• 1 after !ast week's 47--0 thrash- Ing at Cal Lutheran. . Sl. Mary's also was bru- ised last week by Southern Oregon, 49-21. How USD does today de- pen_ds on Andy Slimak. The J~or quarterback has pro- Vlded two thirds of USD's offense this season with 83 compleliortS in 161 'attempts for 1,125 yards and five touchdowns. Wide receiver Pat Iaccino has 35 catches for 486 yards and three scores As a team, USD has rushed for only 547 yards a 1.9 per play average. ' Freshman quarterback Terry Cottle leads st !'dary's with 66 completio~ m 157 attempts for 619 yards and eight TDs.

San Diegan Honored In D.C.

In its 248-year orbit or the sun, Pluto never comes closer than 2,670,000 miles to Earth.

Pluto, discovered in 1930 is the most distant kno~n planet in our solar system.

( ~ursday, November 18, 19v

INJURIES SIDELINE STARTERS

.Sz,nb~c ll,n.,io"'-'

USD Cage Depth To Get Early Test

can also play guard), and New Mexico transfer Mike Koller. "The schedule scares me," said the coach. "It's one or the toughest we've ever had. We play the Uni- versity of Hawaii three times in a row, and San Diego State, and Santa Clara up there, and UC Riverside, and Grand Canyon."

By MICHAEL GRANT Stoff Writer, The Sml -Union Jim Brovelli figured his University of San Diego basketball team would have more depth this season than any had in his prior four years at Alcala Park. He didn't figure he'd have to open the season with it. But much of the first string has watched most of the Tor- reros' six weeks of pre-sea- son drills from the bleach- ers. Eddie Davis, last year's scintillating floor leader, hurt a knee In a pickup game during the summer back in his home town, New York. Buzz Harnett, a mus- cular returning starter at forward, strained his knee In a pickup game here. Dave Cook, the pure-shoot- mg freshman guard from Francis Parker High, broke his shooting wrist in a freak beach accident. And old injuries cropped up to bother new forwards Rick Michelmore and Wil- liam Stewart. Michelmore's problem is Judged to be an infirm knee that he can play on, but it can't be treated until after the season. Stew- art apparently had a hairline fracture in his root last year and it didn't heal quite right. It hurts him more now than it did then. Of these, only Harnett has joined the workouts. Brovelli thinks it will be mid-Decem- ber before the squad is back to full strength. "After coaching my sec- ond string for three weeks, I

;/-It/- 77

NORTHRIDGE BLANKS USIU, 27-0

D 1ps St. Mary's, 16-14 University of San Diego Andy Slimak, led the round Rick Cellini open and mounted a serious threat closed out a dismal football Torero's fi!51 drive for' a . hit him with a 34-yard touch- against tJie Cougars (7-3) but ~ason on a happy note, _de- touchdown m the opening pe- down pass and Shea added did reach the Gougar 20 in its lighting a Homecoming nod with Steve Goodbody the PAT for a 14-13 edge. deepest penetration of the crowd w~ile _:u.s. lnterna- carrying the ball into the end With 8:11 left in the period day.. tlonal University suffered a zone from the six. up stepped Shea, who booted Quarterback Craig Gal- 27--0 shutout at the hands of . St. _Mary's came b~ck to his 46-yard game decider. Jagher scored all three Cal State orthridge yester- tie 1t m the second penod on USD, which gave rookie Cougar touchdowns after day. an 81-yard pass from Terry coach Bill Williams his first directing long drives with T_he Toreros pulled off Cottle ~o Bob Keiper and a win in a t-7-1 season, out- Mike ·Maglione carrying 30 their firs~ wm of 1976 as Bob conves1on by Kevm Shea. traveled St Mary's on the limes for 203 yards to set up Myers kicked a field_ goal usp struck back quickly ground, 216-163 while the vis- Gallagher's rollouts or 2, 5 from the ~yard lme m the as Slimak hit Pat Iaccino for itors had the passing edge and 1 yards. final, period to nip St. a 14-yard scoring strike and 192-103. Calandri gained 76 John Dohle kicked field Marys, 1~14, at USD _Stadi- led at the half, 13-7, after yards in 13 carries and goals of 21 and 41 yards for um. Myers also contributed ID1ssmg the PAT. : Goodbody had 72. Jackie the winners and converted a P T. , t. ;Mary's took the lead Erwin topped t. Mary's, after eac Gallagher touch- Freshman C,eorge alan- early m the final penod after now 3-6, with 82 yards rush- down. · drl, who ared the quarter- both sides were scoreless in ing. • The Westerners, whp are back duties with Junior the third quarter. Cottle The Westerners never expected to lose coach John ------~------~ O'Brien after their final

JIM BROVELLI ... USD mentor Every game·counts in the Toreros' independent bid for an NCAA Division II playoff berth, which makes Brovel- li 's concerns about his squad's early-season health even more acute. USD fin- ished 15-10 last season and still lost the playoff bid to Cal Poly (Pomona), a team it beat late in the season. don't know at this point now it looks a lot better than Pomon~ finished 15-12, and where we are," joked Bro- it did three weeks ago. Brovell1 has been scratching velli. "Cook has his cast off "We have as much depth his head smce. * * * and is in conditioning. as we thought we had before. Davis's leg is still one inch If we keep them all healthy, from where it will be at its it will be the most depth USD normal SJZe. We can't really we've had since I've been NAME POs. HT. WT. have atrophied, like the oth- Strode " said the coach of Rtck Mlchetmore ...... F 6-5 ers, during the layoff. his 5-11 junior letterman William Stewart ...... F 6-5 H 200 "It's very questionable from El Cajon "has looked No•• 2' T i scHNeouL1E r.Jr. h th 'II • •. • o won allono s, Nov 27 Lav• W e er we be at top good in practice because he erne, Nov. 29 at cs Domlnouez Hills. strength f th f . t f . ' Dec. 2 at CS Northrldoe, Dec , Point or e irs ew has run 1t before Loma. Dec. a Son Dleoo stote,' oec. 10- wee~,'' he said. "Our front line looks ~~iiv~ti:~~~... ~~~J~tus';,~?~ Still, the coach doesn't feel good " he said "We ha··e Clora, Dec 30 at cs Havword, Jan. 7 at t b . , • v LA State. Jan. U at Grand Canyon Jan 00 ad at thtS stage. five forwards J think can 17 N Colorado•. Jon. 22 at UC 1.:V1ne: "We were very afraid of play." Besides Stewart Mi• ~f"H~~l1~~~':i'.'"#~/H.1'a~~i/· i".7; 2 ~ losing Eddie and Stewart chelmore and Hamett •Bro- CHoanwvaonll, FF•~ B 1C2hoPtman. Feb. l 1 Grand d . , . cv. a Riverside, Feb 1-4 an M1chelmore for the velli likes lettermen Steve cFsb~inc"""', Ht11s, Feb. 19 uc 1rvine, S " h 'd "R' h • ••• U R verslde. Feb 24 at Chop. eason, e sa1 . 1g t Honz and Don Gibb (who man. Feb. 2, LA state. · , All home i,omes 8 o.m. RON COLE ... Oregon transfer YR. so p~t a date o~ it. Michelmore here." will have his bad knee all ~~~c~~ft:8 junior Garv E1v .... c t~ 6-10 l:ll m m Brovelli said 6-4 season. There's nothing we Ron Cole, a transfer from ~i~.G~~ri.ii:: can do about it until after the Oregon, had looked good in ~t~!.H~~•-~".'. season. Stewart has prac- practice. "He has controlled M00 1 1ttt st rode ... G Jrs. fr: Fr. S-11 6-3 1eo 170 t . d b t h' ice , u th ve Cook ..... G IS o er muscles things very well And Mike Mike Koller ... F 6-6 206.. sr

game with Azusa • Pacific next Saturday at Azusa, are 1-8-1 for the season. USIU .............. 0 0 0 0- 0 NorthrldOt St....... 7 10 7 3 - 27 N -Gallagher 2 run (Dahle kick! N - Gallagher 5 run (Dahle kick) N - FG Dohle 21 N - GollOQher l rvn (Dohle kick) N - FG Dohle 41 :J--16 USO -GoodbOdV 6 run (Myers kick) •Keiper 81 pass from Cottle• (Shea kick) USD-loccino 1• poss from Slimak (kick foiled) sM-Ce-lllril 34 POSS from Cottle (Shea kick! uso--Mvers 46 Fe, st. Marv's .• • • .... o 1 o 7-14 USO ................ ,... 7-6 0

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