News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

Sunday, February 26, 1978 USO Wins, Eyes Spot In Playoffs

Torero

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try lor F l.S 20th wln~ 1 ., 1 University of San Viego plays its last home game or the season tonight at 8 against UC-RlvPrside, hop- ing it will be the team's 20th win of the ye;ir. USD ( 19-6) figures 1t must wtn to gain nn Invitation to the . AA II dlstnct playoffs which wJII be played n xt Thursday and Friday at orthridge State. The Toreros are an inde- pendent and must impress the NCAA JI selection com- mittee, somethmg Coach Jim Brovelll thinks his team has don The formal m 1tations to playoff teams I be made tomorrow. N hr1dgc State is the only t m d fmltely in the tour ament now. Five teams bring con- sidered for J.he thr other berths - Chapman, t.:C- Dav1s, Hayward State, Puget Sound and SD USD has on of the b{>st records on th West Coast among !\'.CAA ll teams It has defeated Chapman twice 88 7 and 94·84, Pu •et Sound 74-72, H yward State 67-58 and pill with Northridge Sta 56-81 and 76-62. The team has Mn its last seven games In a row, in- cluding a 68-56 romp over UCR Feb 14 at Riverside. I

The University of San Diego Toreros are Just a phone call away from an NCAA playoff date after an 83-73 victory last night over UC-Riverside in the team's home and season finale. USO wound up the season 20-6 and now must await a call today from the selection committee of the NCAA to find out if it has been award- ed an at-large berth in the western regional Division II playoff, scheduled Thursday and Friday at Cal State- Northrldge. The 20-fl season was the second straight for the ToreroMs. In addition to tying the school for most victories, the club also set a record for most points scored, 2,170, and averaged 83.3 points per game, also a school mark. The mood in the USD lock- er room last nlght clearly was one of optimism. "This 1s very rewarding right now," said coach Jim Brovelll. "This basically is a group of semors and it was a two-year goal for the kids on the team. I'm pleased with the entire season It's a trib· ute to these klds that they can disappointment hang in there after the of last seea- son (when t e Toreros were bypassed by the NCAA) .. I feel confident that we will get a call tomorrow for the playoffs." USO outrebouncted River- side, 61-50. John Green had 27 points !or UCR and Rick Baldwin added 16 In another small college game involving a local team, Azusa Pacificrned back USCD, 91-71, to finish at 7-3 in NAIA District III South- ern Division race. USCD fin- ished its conf rence season at 3-7 and 8-19 for the year. Azusa's well-balanced attack, led 1 by Jeff Golven and Mike Street, pulled the Cougars away in the second half after the UCSD Tritons stayed within three at the break. Azusa, with Steve Severs, Levi Richard and Golven prov1dmg the muscle, outre- bounded the Tritons. The Tritons also were outshot from the field, 53 percent to 44. UC•RIVERSIOE (73) Green 13 1·2 27, Loudermill 2 1·1 5, Baldwin 8 Cf.-4 16, Woolsev , ~7 11. Walker 52-412, Gord 1 0-12, Totols-33 7-1973. U~~1~ 8 Jt, B, Strode 2 2-2 6, Harnett 8 ,. , 20, Sltwarl 9 3-5 21, MIChlemore 4 2-2 10, Cook 3 4-4 10, Bartholomew 4 0-3 8. To~~ll~t°j;;,~ 2 _!,!·at~• JB.25. Fouled out - Walker, Bartholomew. Totals fouls - UCR 20. USO 27 AZUSA PACIFIC (Pl) Streit 5 6-7 16, Golven 8 ,.5 20, DIiion J 4-4 10, Severs I 0-0 16, Wetzel 2 0-0 4, McO0<1gol 0 2-2 2, Groves I 2-3 4, Rich- ard 5 7.9 17, Berry 10-02. UCSD (71) Hopper30.06, FrozlerB0-216, Brock- ett 7 1-3 15, Brodley 3 2-J 8, Greenstein 2 2-2 ,. Omoltv J 2-2 a. Polk 3 0,0 6, Nlchol$0n 0 2-2 2. Slark 2 0-0 ,. Holfllme score - Azuao 38. UCSO lS.

PUZZLER: A San Diego en- trepren ur has b n trying to sell 600,000 barrels per month of low sulfur Mexican oil at le than OPEC prices. He's found no takers. All the fin ri s, he insis , th y're u with 9Var ry n ea . .. . All the ra ha compounded Port District headaches. The 1.3-mil- lion Harbor Drive landscaping project, betv.een Broadway an~ Market SL, won't be ready until mid-July And opening of the new Lindbergh Field parking lots has I been put back to October .. The heroine of yesterday's Jog-a- thon for a new USD student unton: Marge Hughes (wife of university Pr s. Author Hughes) who turned 29 quarter-mile laps to contribute more than 1,200.

Kimbrough; left) Helen Davis, Hazel To\\, Lynn Schenk, Mruj Glen Phalen (back row, from left) Sara Goodrich, Joann ' Warren, Prtc1Ua '.\1oxley, Sister .'a Furay Lou Smith, La\\ anda Si vert. (middle ro\\, from

*Women

attorney Y.ho Y.a In th organtzatlo I of the La11- yers Club of an D1 go, Equal Right.s Advisors and the Women's Bank. She tS on th city's advisory board on th atus of women nnd Is a member of the attorney g neral's \\om n's Rights Tak Force. La\\ anda S1 v rt - pro- f mnall)' active in real at I v rt presld nt of th Star or India UXIII· ar;,, chairnoman of the Point Loma aux1lial) of th an Vt go ·ymphony and I a member of th board of th Manttme Association n'ld th Children' H alth c nt r Aux1hary Lou m tr - a key f r on n D go's golf Smith has rved a tou m nt d r ctor of the J World Golf Champ10 fps frllyar Hazr,I Hartzog Tow - acll\

c1etv editor of The Tnbune Tow• career in JOUrnahsm fnclud a stint as a war corr spondent during World War II A a commumty volunteer, she has worked with the Salvation nny dv1sory Board, the GI be Theater and Guilders nd the Museum of l\lan. Joann \\arren - pre! 1- dent of Tl:e Country Fn nd \\ arren I a trus- tee of Children's Hospital and Health Center, a m m- ber or the Easter Seal \d- \lsory Board, and on the board of dlfeclors of the ~ymphony A soctat10n. After introducing the trad1t1onal 12 Y, omen of D d cation, Carl paid peCJal tnbute to Even- son Evenson pearheaded the c omm1tt or 100, 11 hich has helped pre rve h1 tor- IC bulldmgs in Balboa Park.

'"'"" •---.,. i~~~n/ - coiect1ve bargaining tlel,ate Donald T. Weckstein dean of the Unive ity of of collective bargaining and strike be extended to public employees?" .guests wx '$.l:in~~:1b-

an Diego School of Law, will debate Sen. Jake Garn of U ah tonight. Their subj t will be "Should the right

The 8 p.m. debate in Salomon Lecture Hall is free and open to the public.

Intersession registration set at USO The University of San Diego will conduct intersession classes from Jan. 4 to Jan. 24. Those who are in- terested in taking classes at this time may preregister before Dec. 20 in USD's Founders Hall, Room 100, or can wait to register Jan. 4, 8- 12 and 4-6: 30 in the registrar's office, Founders Hall. gr aduate students. The maximum number of units which may be taken in the intersession Some of the classes offered include: anthro- pology, history, political science, physical science, psychology, English, education and career-life planning. r:: t=-..1 '1<6 ro~l is three. Tuition semester is $95 per unit for

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'Inn Of t;ourt For 6More \Veek Th • f1r~t

/HE SAN DIEGO UNION

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Meeting Set On Praying

11,n of the an IJ1 •go i1tn •d to ufler young

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The Uhiversity of San Diego School of Education and Religious Education 1· Program will hold a work- e shop next Saturday from 1 9;30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m in Salomon Lecture Hall on 0 ''Praying Together " t Peter Gilmour, author of "Praying Together," and adjunct professor at the In- stitute for Pastoral Studies, Loyola rnwersity, Chicago, will lead the. workshop. Gilmour has been mvolved m the training of religious educators for ten years at The workshop will center on group prayer in the con- text of classes, weekend mlnars, retreats and spe- cial occasions. Infonnal!on is available from Dr. Joseph Ro:;t at the School of Educa- tion, USD Loyola.

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an opportunity

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c urlr >om kills, wi1 t night at thl• U111ver ity of , an r iugo and will <'onlP1ue fur ix m we •k nmed for the Cngli h Jnn of Court, where lawy nr trained profe ion lly. lhe program off r cour c in din cl and cro - e am!n hon of w1tne • , vo1r dirt• l•Xamination of juror , op ning t lem n nd d in argum nt . "Tradition I lc1t ,i educ lion d not ,td

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FOUIICI out - AzU$0 Pacific 20, ucso 2, J 'o'

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Dr. Author E. Hughes, the Chamber's vice president for communications, addresses movie industry leaders at a luncheon last month in Beverly Hills to introduce San Diego's Motion Picture & Television Bureau. Some 100 producers and production managers were told by Hughes, Chamber President John M. Murphy, Mayor Pete Wilson and Port Commissioner Bernice Leyton that their productions are welcome at San Diego-area locations.

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R I B u N E

SD jog to raise funds

session event, which will take place at noon and 5 p.m. on a track at the west end of the campus. Pledge cards were mailed out by the Associated Students of USD, and participants will receive credit for funds for each lap completed.

students at the University of San Diego will have what they call a "jogathon" to- morrow to start a fund- raising mpaign f?r a l:\ew student union buildmg. A USD spokesman said more than 200 students have signed up for the two-

USD Lai St. Thomas More 2-,,-'/'it The University of San Diego School of Law will commemorate the 500th anniversary of the birth of St. Thomas More with a program at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 21 in the Joseph P. Grace Courtroom in the Law School. Three lectures on themes related to More's role in developing the law and his impact on subsequent philosophers wil! be presented. "St. Thomas More and the Dif- ficulty of Restraining Sovereign Power Through Law" will be discussed by Rev. James McConica, professor of hfstorY,, Pontifical In- stitute of Medieval Studies, University of Toronto. The final address, "Value in a Lawyer's Life," will be delivered by E. Clinton Bamberger Jr. with commentary by Dr. John M. Winters, Professor of Law, USO. Bamberger, currently executive vice president of the Legal Services Corp., was for- merly dean of Columbus School of Law, Catholic University of America. toJ!i~2~, f

The Tokaido Stops Here

Prints of the 53 slops on the Toko1do - the imperial Japa- n se rood from Tokyo to Kyoto - ore now on display at the Founders' Gallery, Univ rsity of Son Di go. They ore by th famed 19th centu- ry Japon se artist, Hiroshi . Art Critic Richard Reilly discus s the prints on Pag 8 inside. At right is the lshibe sta• t1on.

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