News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

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GROSSMONT, MIRACOSTA WIN

ement o Begin limverslly Club on b. 22· 24, March 8-10 and March 22-24; and at the unl\•ersfty here on April 5-7. Program director John Peterson Id the goal of the both programs to "take an In-depth look at the general manager today's society."

SD Topples Hayward, 87-60 J / '[f/7'J {/J11c»1 . d dished out six assiSts agail".st league play and 11-8 overall. scored17 pomts.and grab~

AIA' Drollinger ay play 'so '

The University of San Diego's Western Ianage- ment Institute and Winter Executive Program will In tomorrow The Western Manage- m nt Institute (WMI) iS called a commuter pro- gram and rnvolv three- day sessions for six week- ends. The Winter Exccutiv Program (WEP) Is a monthlong llv In program. WMI sessions will be held at the San Diego Hilton Hotel on Jan. 21-23 and Feb. 8-10, at the Santa Barbara

ng('d 15 points a gam . crnwd plea g Brad Hofman, a for- m r North Carolina t;nlv r lty star. Th team' play- m r, Hoffman ha tum d In 60 ts In four a• yet to d f at • pr VIOUS t to r {or /\IA l

The University of San Diego notched a big victory to open a tv.o-game trip to Northern California, defeat- ing Hayward State, 87-60 last at Hayward. '.In junior college action, Gro mont defeated Cerri- tos, 67-58, while Mesa Col- lege lost o Fullerton, 102-90 In South Coast Conference games and MiraCosta earned its first Desert Con- ference victory, topping Imperial Valley, 100-75. Sophomore guard :'dike Stockalper had his best game of the year in leading US.D to its third straight vic- tory, a win that boosts the Toreros' record to 1~. Stockalper scored 19 points, hitting seven of 10 shots from the field, and

USD's fellow Division TI Iosm! rivals. Torero sophomore pomts, hit a parr of f;ee effort. The Olyrnp1ans, no forward Bob Bartholomew throws to quell a Cemtos 1-2 in conference play and was also impressive totall- comeback with 1:03 remain- 12-8 overall, played wllh1ut ing 28 points on il-for-18 ing and gathered in nine top scorers Jonath Nlcho as shooting. Bartholomew aLc;o rebounds for Grossmont, and Tim Wright-benched {~r had five rebounds, three Mark Wallace had ni~e undisclosed reasons-;m 4 :_ steals and four assists. points and 10 rebounds while first half and fell behmd, USD was in command Scott Ludwig recorded eight 26. most of the way, jumping In assists. Ml)l~h 1s,Letv10-02,N1c11o10s71·2 front by 13 at the half. The MiraCosta got 26 points 15, wright 81.111, Morton 6i7"9 19 5 tnl/i3 Toreros shot 61 percent from from Joe Naylor, 20 from t:O,is 9 ~~~. k1~ }·J £'-totals 35.,;. the floor to overcome W Howard Smith and 1 ? frn~ ~!tLERTON (I01l turnovers. USO Is idle today Greg Engler in ralsi~g its Schult? 1 rn 11, .Heineken 13 6-!~ but will challenge St. Mary's conference record to 1-3 and 111,i.~~ 2,1~U~[lR~2,1rl:'l'0--02, at Moraga tomorrow. overall mark to 5-13. Naylor L. Johnson 22·2 6, Wokefield 10-2 2. Totols Grossmont scored eight scored 18 of his markers In ......................... 1, l'i: straight points in a span c-f the second half as the Spar- Fu~ 1 ':J·oui'..i.icGtt·1',,ii;·i-ii~ros (Ml: 1:17 to come from a basktt tans amassed 60 points to Davis (Fl· Tedlnla,1 Foul5i~tlI !Fl, behind to a 24-18 advantage put the game out of reach. Teem Fouis-MesoJO, Fuller on · then never looked back Al Fullerton, Mesa against Cemtos. The vktory College's Marshall Morton boo~w the Griffins to 2-1 in USD (17) Stockolper 7 S-S 19, Cook 10-02. Cunning• MIRACOSTA(100) 02·32 Ounh0m2 hom3J.39.Whllmor$h10-02,Copener20-0 Mark Price, Wh? scored 12 18 rebounds m _a

Toreros Face SE Louisi Jl.2 t.' /7q (J.,.,:o 'r\. ' l1AM!t1C1ND, La.-Th ture conference r1va1 ror Unlverstty of San Diego bas- USO, was twice a Torero ketball .team shoots for Its victim. fifth straight victory tonight Sophomore f ard Bob when it takes on Southeast, Bartholomew leads USD em Lou iana here. with a 15.4 po nt-per-game Coach Jilll BroveJll's USU average and 9 freshman Tor ii currently 14-4 center Joe Evans has been I for the season and haven't averaging a down pomts a o.5t since a Jan. 6 encounter contest. Russell Jackson, a at Cal tale Dominguez 6-4 junior forward IS the Hills. other Torero av~rJ!gmg in Since that time USD ha. double figures, C'ii.n1ing an won a pair oI home games 11.9 mean and swept a two-game as- Tonight's game Is the first slgnment In the San Fran is- of two In the South for the co Bay area . ' D on Toreros USD will take on I affiliate St. Iary's, a fu- ew Orleans Saturday night

CERRITOS (51) 4 P1,ra, '0-1 8 Jodcson 20--0 ,. Bartholo- Wr111ht S 1·211.Jones11-13,SontosklH· 1-4 5, ~otrii'R'JI~~~•: TanwH'. mewllb-928. E,ons51-t 11. Totols361S-19 t,l 3 f'ct:r~°t~~~:1~~~~·lff 5 0 1 fl1. 1 iforks4)'.J11,Totolslrn·•391 oo. ~AYWARD5T.(II) IV~~ir 21·3l.Jockscn32·28, Wolke, 62- =::-J i'f; ~11:Jm•o":~nit sm, th I '" 9 20 • Johnson Id O 11 10 i~u~t~T~'1)

AN 18 1979

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JAN 311979 ·:~ Nltm. orna~N f/e,vsl,·r.Q_.

St. Mary's TiBUNE DiSPOiell There's something about K'"lth Cunningham's effect on the University of San D,ego Torero ' basketball team. Even when he's out of the game, the St Mary':; team was cognizant or his impor- tance. Last night, Cunningham scored two field goals in overtime to aid the Toreros to their 14th win of the season, but It was Cunning- ham's sub, Dave Cook, who calmly sank two free throws to insure the victory by a 78-74 score. Cunningham scored IO for the evening Teammate Russ Jackson was the high- point man with 15, followed by Mike Slockalper with 14. Bob Bartholomew with 13 and Joe Evans with 12. Top scorer in the game was St. Mary's David Vann with 18, while David Camp- bell and Ken Jones each had 17 for the losers. St. Mary's 1s now 8-8 on the year. The Toreros are 14-4. HOOP SUMMARY / J .2. C 7"1 MORAGA -

USD's Four Freshmen Sing A Winnin~ Tune

Coll e In overtime, 97-94; U D with 15 points In the Keith At Riverside, Southwest- hurdled USIU, 81Vi8 and UC Jlartholomew had 13, Stock• em College su!fered its 17th D downed UC D, 7~1 alper 12 am Ru ll Jackson I without victory this sea- At w Ori ans, the ID. The n rs, 8-13 for th son a Riverside City Col- Torero , down 23-15 after 12 ason am conqu rors of lege (I~ overall) won for lght • w Ori an points Tulane, d 1d d the ue at the fifth time In six Mission In the first half and behind th free w !me, ca hing Conference outings. 31-24 at ntermlssion, rallied 24 of 32 at mpts to USD's 15 At USIU the Westerners to t th score three l1m s of 25 At Cerritos, th host made a big second half In a wild second half In J,'alcons b t 58 per cent In comeback after trailing, 47- whlch th le d chang d the secon half to win after 28 at Jntennlssion. USIU, led hands lght tlm . trailing f.' College 42-39 by Pat Kneuer's 18 points lk Stocka!per' 30-foot at the ha Th Olympians, pulled within eight points of w Jumper narrowed th ew 2-4 ln the uth Coast and 13- Southern California College n I ad to 71).67 with 10 overall wasted 23 points but could get no closer. The lhro and 1.04 remalnmg but reserve by Jonatb 1cholas an 22 by Vanguards are 3--0 In AIA agee with 28. uth m camomla Coll ge cw Ori n gam Bob t JI Ori

90, but the Hornets' Jesse Morris hit a basket and then made a three-point play. He scored I9 points after inter- mission, Including seven of Fullerton's 15 points in over- time, and finished the night with 22. The Griffins, 2-3 in the league and 11-10 for the season, were led bv Mark Wallace wltir 23 points and Scott Ludwig Y..1th 20. Fullerton is 4-1 and 16-5. MlraCosta trailed by 14 pomts at halftime at College Of The Desert and went on to accept its fourth loss in six Desert Conference games. Tim Dunham paced the losers with 22 points. 1)2,/7°1 \ iJ§l,bfiAi:LY EARNS WIN TRIBUNE DlSPGldl HAMMOND, La. - Mike Stockalper, who scored 12 of his H points after inter- mission, sparked a second- half University of San Diego rally,which netted a 64-63 basketball victory over Southeastern Louisi- ana here last night. Stockalper's 30-!oot field goal with 23 seconds re- maining was the game winner as the Toreros e back from a 41-29 h e USD, now 15-4 for the season, will play University of New Orleans tomorrow night. deficit.

.,

"We're the little guys on the hill, trying to work our way up," says Jim Brovelli. The Umverslty or San I)iego coach might be challenged on his grasp of geography, but it is difficult to fault h!s sense of basketball. Under Brovelli's direction, USD 1s indeed moving up, at a rate which would do credit to Sir Edmund Hillary. The Toreros are a team in transition, performing somewhere between the Division II label they wear this

season and the Division I status they will enjoy next year upon entry Into the tough West Coast Athletic Conference. There Is no more difficult place to play than transition. Brovelli must coach each game with one eye on the present and another on the future. We wants to win now. Every coach wants to win now. But he also must prepare this team to do battle with the likes of the Univer- sity of San Francisco, Santa C,ara, Pepperdine and Nevada-Reno next year. With that in mind, Brovelli fre- quenUy offers a starling lineup

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Th To.reros ended a four- r.ollege out of a lie for firSt In

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game trip with th ir first place Ill to prepar for a match with Knights I and r tum horn

Mission Confer- Brockett, with 17 pomts, and the Gary Kloppenburg with 16 le their d the Trltons (7-13) 1n the utfouled

today ence. At Saddleback

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In Action n • t Sat- ho ts, 31-19 and the winners non-conference game. cashed i1 of 35 free throw Audwtn Thomas with 24

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Ray Wright, with points, and Zach Jones, wl At Grossmont, the Griffins 16, were high for SDCC, now and I-'ullerton were tied, 90- 4-2 In the league. Saddle- '4 12).

Wayne Loe woo consisting of three freshmen and two sophomores. Of late, it is not unusual for the Toreros to have four freshmen on the floor at the same time. In such a circumstance, you would expect to find the coach In a corner, head in hands, devouring a package or antae1d tablets. So why is this man smiling'! Well, a 12-4 record might have something to do with 11. Thal was USD's accomplishment before last night's appearance at Hayward State, one which opened a difficult four-game road trip. Somehow, Brovelli has discovered a way to giv~ his ung people playing lime and still win. The formula ,, •ludes patience, tolerance and a sense of humor

back, now 5-1, was I d by

Spencer Busby, editor of the Woo/sack, poses with recent copy of publication that ,rks USO administrators.

since it's futile to get corrections in the Woolsack," claimed Weck-

ing,

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effect,

is obstructing

freedom of the press.

Fouled out- hone. Toto JGuls- USD 21 St !Mry's 20.

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"A few years ago the Dean's the paper," explained Busby. "The Dean wanted positive, law- school related articles. If the editor didn't publish a story the Dean wanted, it triggered the Dean to abruptly cut off funds. The Woolsack could have filed a law suit against the Dean's office had USO been a public university." newsletter which he claims is not meant to compete with the Woolsack but rather to provide news and information from the adminis· tration's perspective. "When Woolsack contains errors, we'll correct it (in the administration's newsletter) office paid totally for Dean Weckstein recently began printing a

Busby sees the Dean's paper

as retaliation against editorial A Homegrown Flavor content that Weckstein believes "Against St. Mary's, we went into a delay game with since certain three minutes left and three freshmen on the floor," have Brovelll recalls. "That's an easy way to get an ulcer questioned the administration's Freshmen tend to be a little, ah, unpredictable." th •ty P. • CJ ss of '82 at Acala Park appears out of the ortiinary on authority, some U~D .~.tudents two scores. It has enough skill to overcome most of those sense an overpowering in loco youthful mistakes and it ls largely local. parentis" attitude among th e Brovelli's first-year players include Joe Evans of :'Vlari· administraton which exerts con- an, Don Capener of Torrey Pines, Rusty Whitmarsh of trol over curriculum and law- Monte Vista and Keith Cunningham of Morse. school related activities like the Among his grizzled veterans are sophomores Bob Woolsack. Bartholomew from Kearny and Mike Stockalper from Jackie Garner, a USO alumni Marian. and former Woolsack editor, Doe~ the coach rea~y intend t~ win. wl~h this beardl~ss · • th current conflict as bunch. You bet. Whats more, hes domg 11. A team which ~.tews . et·t t · nalized dispute seems destined to get better and better isn't too bad right a~ ~ns,t u 10 0 ,, now. C, wluch tsn t so unusual at US · • Brovelli has eased Evans, a 6-9, 230-pounder in the Wes - 'J / ;7-,"'•;.-9'---..,.... l.Jnseld mold, into his starting lineup. Against St. .Mary's, the strapping youngster scored 20 points, ~abbed 12 won the game, 61-59, against one of the WCAC au Ori . . I th t f t Though traditionally law nva s ey mus ace nex year. , . d t respect fhere are freshmen. And then there are fresli:qlen. The schools train st u ents O is inappropriate Woolsack articles

,,

fleeces Woolsack F is on shaky ground and Dean Donald Wein• stein's office has offered no guarantee that it will continue to subsidize funding. The bi-weekly paper, which is circulated among students and alumni, is nominally supported by the administration. Wool- sack editor Spencer Busby, charges that the sporadic fund· inancial support for the Woolsack, USD's law school newspaper Many of these teams were ranked in the top 20 last season." A new face with the Toreros this season is Peter Herrmann, who has been a private sttlent of Collins for four years. The Bmita star will play No. 4 for USD. Scott Lipton, vho posted a 22-9 record for the To~ros last season as the team finished in a tie for second in the Division I championships, remains No. 1. He's followed by Par Svensson, .Milo, Dimitrijevic, Herrmann, Rick Coldberg and Mike Rodriguez. Redondo, 29, Ii from the well- known National City tennis family. There were nine children and Skip was named Si.xtc because he was No. 6. His sister 'larita, a touring pro, gave him his uckname when he was l!ttle. Skip started t~chmg at the 11/a- tional City Recreition Department in 1973, then moved to Morley Field before the end i that year. He remained there f three years and since has taugh at Chula Vista Tennis Center, uthwestern and Kona Kai Club. Redondo accep the position at State in October. There are eig t seniors under Redondo, headed by No. I-ranked a Kearney, a former La Jolla High star. Paul ubens, up from Mission Bay, is ~o. 2 and Doug Wood or Sacrameno is No. 3.

r1' .. ¥ •

I lei, 11 -r I ,,, San Diego Ballet o f>ance At USO e.... /

sbort narrative history of billlet, warmup exercises apd excerpts from "The Nutcracker" and "Carnuna Burana. The performance at Cam- mo Theater JS free.

The San Diego Ballet will perfonn in a special presen- tation at USO at 8p.m. Feb. 2. Sponsored by the USD Cultural Arts Board, the performance will feature a

Son Diego, Tuesday, JonuGry 23, 1979 --------~--------~.:===-=---------

USD,;

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STATE, USD BID FOR TOP JUNIOR PLAYERS

rebounds and held the Gaels' 6-11 Norm Kelly to six points. "Joe.has really come on," smiles Brovelli. "When he's But the Toreros are no one-man show. Eleven players have scored in double-figures at least once th·s season. Bartholomew, perhaps the team's headiest athlete, leads !lie offense with an average of 14.7 points a game. • tocl_calper, the other sophomore, runs it. The Road To Maturity "He must have put up about 23 shots a game in high school," Brovelli remembers. "We let him take two a game last year. This year, it's up to maybe eight. "l'm not so sure he likes it, but he's done a great job of adjusting to what we want him to do." Cunningham, a slender 6-8 forward largely overlooked in high school, has come on to be a pleasant surprise In recent games. "He didn't make All-CIF or anything," Brovelli notes. "I think maybe he has a little something to prove_" The rest of the team does, too, despite its success to date "We still have to prove we can win on the road," Brovelli acknowledges. "That's where maturity really Before last mght, the Toreros were only 1-3 outside their m ame, he's a dominant force." comes in." .

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Coaches hope to keep net stars home

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University of San Diego will be at Hayward State tonight for the first of two road encounters in basket- ball. The Toreros will play .at St. Mary's Friday. Meanwhile, back on the home front, Point Loma College was celebrating an 80-70 victory over Westmont last night, and UCSD was bemoaning a 104-78 loss to Whittier. Barrie Elliott, who scored Point Lorna's first 12 points, took scoring honors for the Crusaders with 21 and also contributed eight rebounds in the Golden Gym match.

By EARL KELLER San Diego has been developmg outstanding junior tenms players for many years, but a big percentage of them depart to attend colleges across the land. However, Ed Collins and Sixto " kip" Redondo Intend to do some- thing about that in their n w coach- mg po itions - Collins at University of San Diego and Redondo at San Diego State. Both are determined to put an end to that trend and see that the be t pro pects attend one of their school. Redondo gasps when he thinks of all the fine preps who have left here to study and play el where. He mentioned Raul Ramirez, Brian Teacher, John Holladay, Steve Mott, Bruce Kleege, Warren Eber, Angel Lopez, Mik l\"ewberry, Mark Bern •r, Chrl Smith, Denny Bond and Andy Gordon. " y aim ls to k p the top juniors from leaving town," Redondo said. He's hoping a winning season for the Aztecs In their fir t year in the West rn Athletic Confer nee WJJI en- hanc th ir chances of keeping tai- nt In town, "If our fund raising ls a success, we will have five full scholarships to offer In tennis next seaso1 . I want to gtv State a top tennis program, on that will h •Ip me recruit the best Junior I'm writing i tters to area play rs to tell t m w ar building

Where have all the tennis stars gone? More often than not they've lied San Diego when it came time to pick a college. Here are two coaches determined to keep them home. ' our program and would like them to consider State.

the sport is when he's asleep - and sometimes he gets behind on that because his schedule is so full. The Toreros' court boss doesn't mind his go-go routine, though. In addition to coaching at USO, the 31-year-old Collins holds adult and junior programs throughout the county with the help of a staff of 10 and In the summer he puts on a camp. This year it will be held at USO for the first time. Al least twice a year Collins also directs a teachers' and coaches' workshop or clime somewhere in the West. He also must find time to write his weekly Tennis Tips col- umn. His book on tennis was pub- lished last year. "We have a very tough schedule m our last season in Division II of the NCAA," Collins said. "I really think our dual schedule is the toughest of any school in It country. "For instanc we will meet UCLA, U C, Sta ford, Pepperdlne, California, Arizona, Yale, Harvard and Ohio State, Just to nam a few

"I believe our chances of getting some of the juniors will be much better if we are in the top 20 in the country this year. It would be good for us to gain national recognition." Colllns believes his chances of attracting some top Juniors to USO are good. "I feel I'm well known among the jumors because I have worked with many of them in recent years," Collins said. "I hope to get some of the top•ranked youngsters in the seasons to come. "USO will have six scnolarships to give tennis players, so that will be a big help to us." Seven of the top high school pros- pects this year are Fabio Mion-Bet, Phil Lehnhoff, Hector Ortiz and Mark Scribner, all of La Jolla High; Steve Dawson of Cfalremont, Jerry Jaffee of Patrl k Henry and Mark' McMahon or Point Loma bout the only time Collins iSn't Involved Jn tennis or talking about

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must playl..oarem1 atch with St. h_-tary•~ and games against ms ana and the Umvers1ty of New Orleans. "The real test of maturity for our young people comes ,, HenrvD0--0Q.McCreoJ2·2B,K.Brown10--0 in these games, Brovelli feels. "Sometimes young people areTodd Mtrton 20--0,,Hunterl1H1 2.Tolols4.ll8- have .a te~dency to turn Into sp~ctators on the road, Harvey, from University High; ~ffiei::::::::::::~.. :::::::::::::sf J:i: especially m pla~s like San Francisco and New Orleans, Peter Davis from Fullerton· Brian Fouled Out-Hung (Wl; Te<:11n1co1 Foul- h1ch they haven t seen before." Sours, fro~ Carmel; Greg Bell, Whittier bench. Still, it's exactly the sort of exposure this team needs to from Canada· Vali Moezzi from wesrMONT (70l •• 16 8 repare for next season. What else does it need? • . • . . ' Dvkstro J<-410, McGowen 8 "" • ec "We don't recruit · b ·· " B Iii Northern Ca!Jforn1a; Joe Prno, from 20--04,Leichsenr1ng30-1',Rosem020-01, m num e1~. rove says. "We're San Diego City College; Peter ~~~n~,~uy~ln1\·J';"1-'~~1~3H.?1 ,crultlng about three !UO~e people_ If we can come up Butemeyer from Texas· Gene 10 th three bona fide D1vis10n I players, we're in pretty Lachelt, fr~m Northern California; PTA~:O~~~s11,Leoh~m1s,Jobl0--0 ~d ~liape. Mark Pa,lucci from Pacific Pal- 10, Tvson 2 s-6 9, Etllottt 3-521, southworth With a coup! of top players, the people we have now i d """' ? _ f 60--012,FreemanlO-O?. Tolals3118-2l80 ill be better still" sa es, "" Kilker, rom Los Ange- wutmont ........................... :,o 4'-70 • !es, and Mike Kates, from 11/ew Pl.~1t4·-0i,'i:i:eidiseiirij/ ....ivi,~ 1r:;:_ Even Without them, Brovelli's team is .moving up tha ork aifl=oul-von der Koov 1W ; Totol Foul5-, ill. / Westmonl 72. Poird Lomo l:l;;;,22:lilifi:....lll..Jili.:\.:...,_ML,,;.~;L_.;,.J Othersbiddlngforbert

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