News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

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;i, ents back Toreros move to Division I

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(Ant.CM, or quer Matadors, 76-62 Freshman center Bob Bar- tholomew :,core 18 points and pulled down l 3 rebounds to lead the Umvcrs1ty of San Diego to a 76-62 victory over Cal State of Northridge last night The 6-6 c ntcr connected on eight of 10 shots from the floor High· coring Ron Cole as- ~isted B holomew with 19 points while William St1•wart ad d 13 and Rick Ml• chi more 10 L rry . nglf'ton paced the Matadors with 19 points. CAL-NORTHRIDGE (62) Prestero O0-0 O, Evans 10.0 2, Single- ton 91-119, Flock0-01 Goudv51-2 11, Evertu 3 1-1 7, Colemon 5 3-3 13, Smith t 0-0 2. USO (76) SPOCkOIHr ,4 0-0 8. Cole 8 3-4 19, Harnell J 1-2 8, Stewart 6 1-2 13, 8artt,o- lomew 82-2 18, MIC1'1tmort .t 2-110. HOlttlme scor• - u O 35, Nortnrldge 28. Fouled out - none Totol fouls - Northrld

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Diego State University will be . named, probably by spnng. The Presidential Se- lection Advisory Committee is doing final screening of candidates for the post to replace Dr. Brage Golding who resigned last summe; to go to Kent State Univer• sity in Ohio. SDSU officials are await• ing a decision by the Ameri- can Council on Education in Journalism on their appeal from the council's withhold· Ing of accreditation of the school's Department of Journalism. Trustees at Pomt Loma College at its spring meet- ing will act on a master plan for the most effective use of its land and facilities on the Lomaland campus.

Higher education (Joseph Theskea)

S0n Diego, Thumloy, J0nuary 5, 1978

San Diego's colleges and universities look to contin- ued growth and educational opportunities in 1978. At UCSD, construction will begin in February on the second and final phase of its Third College. Four new buildings, at a cost of $3.5 million, will contain classrooms, labs and facul- ty offices. The university's recently named Warren College, for• merly ~ourth College, will be dedicated Jan. 28. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and Pat Brown Sr., former Califor- ma governor, will be princi• pal speakers. Unjyersitv of San Die1w's new Hahn School of Nursing "',=· ".!:] ' nanced in part by a U.S t Department of Health, Edu ation and Welfare gra A new president at San 1

reros tab two freshmen

scorer, ls producing at a rate of 10.5 points per game. The 6-5 Stewart helps Harnett both on the boards and in scoring punch. However, USO coach Jim Brovelli has decided to start two freshmen this weekend in fotward Bob Bartholomew from Kearny High and guard Mike Stockalper from Marian. Bartholomew, who has been eased into the lin up, already IS the team' third leading rebounder although he has been averaging only 19.4 minutes per game a d fourth highest scorer. Stockalper, the 6-2 playmaker, has been the big surprise to the USD offense. He has had the hot hand in the past three games, scoring 13 in 24 attempts from the field and six of seven from the foul line. USO (9-3), which looked terrible in losing to San Francisco State last Wednesday 91-73 did redeem itself last Friday against Hayward State in a 67-58 triumph Excep for the Hayward game, Brovelll was gettmg concerned U e team mlght hit a slump e 1l did last season when It dropped seven in a row. On Dec. 23 the Toreros lost to ·orthridge State at San rnando, 81-56 which was its worst drubbing since the 1975 sea.son. Northridge will amve in San Diego Saturday with jts top playmaking guard Terry Miller probably sidelined with a knee injury. The fatadors "warm up" for USD tonight by travell- ing to play the undefeated University of >,; vada at Las Vegas Runnin' Rebels, ranked ninth m the nation by ttie Associated Pre among major colleges.

This I. h w kend that IS for tile Uruvcrslty or San DI o rero basketball team. If USO hope to enter th • CAA DIV! on II playoff am can shak the blahs it dl played In t\\o of Its me ason can tarting assignments tomorrow and Satur-

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USD head basketball coach Jim Brovelli, school president Author Hughes, faculty representative Dr. Jack Opdycke and dean of students Tom Burke. Toe team's competitiveness at the Divl· sion II level has been established by a 20-'7 season a year ago and a current 11-3 record which includes a victory last Fri- day over the division's top rated team from Puget Sound. Whether It can stand the intensllled competition and extra expense of becom- ing a Division I affiliate Is a difficult question to answer. Nearly 2,000 students signed a petition circulated on campus supporting a move to Division I status recently. Coach Brovelli is assuming a wait-and• see attitude, since the final decision lies with the board of trustees, but has ex- pressed the opinion that the school could compete at the Division I level. "My goal since I came to USO has been to make the basketball program here comparable to the other Catholic universi- ties on the West Coast," says Brovelli. (Continued on C-3, Col. 5)

By HA 'K WESCH SIGH Writ..-, Tht son D!$0 Union

What can the University of San Diego basketball team do for an encore after defeating the top ranked team in its divi- sion? How about stepping up to a higher division. Like the National Collegiate Ath· letic Association's (NCAA) Division I. That is one possibility that is being considered as the future of the Torero basketball program ls being pondered at the highest levels of the school's adminis- trative structure. Other possibilities· being pondered include: -Maintaining the team's current status as an NCAA Division II independent. -Seeking membership in the California Collegiate Athletic AssoClation (CCAA) a six-team grouping of Division II schools hich has previously" invited the Toreros join. A directive on what course the school will take is possibly forthcoming from its board of trustees within the month. There have already been meetings involving I

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JIM BROVELLI ... ponders move

At Uni verslty of San lego, the new Hahn School of Nurslng Is being ·con• structed with matching funds from the U.S. Depart• ment of Health, Education and Welfare and the unlver- Jty. The new courtroom facul- ty ln More Hall at USD's School of Law was dedicat- ed by university President Author E. Hughes It was named In honor or Joseph P. Grace Sr., whose SQn, Charles M., Is a USD trus- tee and a major donor to the facility. A record number of new students enrolled In the fall term at USD. The 544 fresh- men brought the total or undergraduate and gradu- ate students to n arly 4,000. USO inaugurated three master's programs during the year, one in educational mJnlstrles, another In edu• catlonal administration and a third In nursln

Tuesday, Janu0ry 10, 1978 C-3 Toreros Studying Step Up In Class THE SAN DIEGO UNION

small college competition result in teams in both those haven't brought the recogni- categories being reticent to tion that wins over major schedule the Toreros. The schools might. result would be a decline in Brovelli has stated that the overall strength of the faUure of the school to either USO schedule concurrently align with the CCAA or as- and the status of Torero pro- sume Division I sttus could gram overall.

would seem to be the least appealing of the options open to the school. Though the team's record has been ex- ceptional over the past two years it has not been serious- ly considered for a playoff berth and victories over

(Continued from Page C·l) "Basketball is a low over- head sport. It probably wouldn't cost that much more to go Division I, but there are several other proj- ects needing funding that the university is also consider- ing." A school can attain Divi- sion I status merely by de- claJing its intentions to do so but is required by the NCAA then lo schedule 75 per cent of its games against Division I level foes. USD's current 26--game schedule includes only three Division I teams. Division I level schools are allowed to have 15 basket• ball players on athletic scholarship at any time. Di· vision II schools are limited to 12 and USD currently has 10 players on scholarship. Any move to the upper level would involve in- creased costs for additional scholarships needed to be competitive, travel expenses and other necessities. The other poss1bil ity , alignment with the CCAA might be appealing for om reason-it would eliminal.E what has been a bothersomE problem to the Toreros ove1 the past two seasons. That problem has been tht team's inability to secure a place in the Division Il post- season playoffs despite 15-10 and 20-7 records. The CCAA champion is au- tomatically given a berth in the playoffs. Should USD join the CCAA it would be at a size disad- vantage to the other mem- ber schools. But USO cur- rently has home-and-home arrangements with three CCAA schools and has a 9-4 record with the league's member. hip over the past lhrH' St ;J',OOS

USO hosts Northridge in rematch

executive programs Is John E. Peterson, who had held a similar post with University of Southern California's Graduate School of Business Admlnlstratlon A master's degree In edu• cation ministries in the Col· Jege of Arts & Sciences was offered for the first time tn 1977. Dr. C. Joseph Pusateri came to the college from Loyola University in New Orleans to take over as dean. 1978 HIGHLIGHT A 1978 highlight will be completion of the unlversl• ty's new Phlllp Y. Hahn School of Nursing Building. A. $359,419 grant from the W.F. Kellogg Foundation helped the nursing school ex• pand and a master's degree in nursing was tnltlated. The Commission for Teacher Preparation and LI· censing has approved a new bilingual-cross cultural credential program, to com· mence in the spring semes- ter In the School of Educa- tion, which began offering in 1977 a master's degree In educational admJnlstration. Altogether at the Universi- ty of San Diego, 3,611 stu- dents were enrolled for the fall semester, up from 3,349 a year earlier. A 250-bed student dormitory-lounge building Is scheduled for construction In mid-197V '

The number of ·women studying law at the Universi- ty of San Diego i continuing a strong uptrend, school ad• ministrators reported. Fall 1977 registration showed 286 women enrolled in the School of Law compared with 89 five years earlier. E ROLLMENT HOLDS MeanwhUe, men's enroll- ment In law study held roughly level, ranging be· tween 700 and 800 in each of the last five years. This term's number Is 717. Two months ago, the law school's new Joseph P. Grace Sr. courtroom was dedicated, with Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman deiiv(;rtng the fea- tured address. 1111 state Su• preme Court met in session ti1e~ as part of the dedica- tion. The law school's third an- nual Jaw and economJcs se- ries begins this month and the campus's Center for Criminal Justice Polley and Management wlll open early In 1978. National conferences on Immigration law are con- tinuing this year. To meet increased-enroll- ment, five new Ph.D.s have been added to the School of Business faculty and classes are being conducted In a new location. Th n wdirector of

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·. P.C-1 SU!At,A.Y,,; u1U,, de-....nts ba~ic ~ 1 ! [ Toreros move to Division I

As the .University of San Diego b~ketball team flew off into the ·wild b)ue yonder today for a match wlt~ Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs tomorrow night, Its future was being debated back on the cam- pus. The question Is whether the Torero basketball program should continue its NCAA Division II independent status, _should seek membership In the DJVISiOn II California Collegiate Athletic Association or should step up to NCAA Division I. Toe proposition has been pondered at meetings involving Jim Brovelli USD President Author Hughes Fae: ulty Representative Dr. Jack Op- dycke and Dean of Students Tom Burke. Some 2,000 students recently sign~ a petition supporting a move to Division I. The Toreros, who posted a 20-7 record last year, have won 11 of 14 g~es thJs season, including a 74-72 victory over University of Puget 5?und, the top-ranked team In Divi- sion II.

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