News Scrapbooks 1977-1979
Fir'st USo dO~torcfte·c,ass begins r1 The first class rn the Dr. Philip Hwang,
r Toreros visit. I Tritons tonigh -< "E1ery game now means
01nt Loma
Division II Playoff Berth
the program's coordinator, said the program 1s designed to emphasize leadership in the educational field and arms "to train students to become more effective leaders in the schools and areas where they work." Of the 24 students se- lected for the frrst class six are community college deans and coordinators. three are pnncrpals, three are school district adminis-
ocks USO 84-80 Win
trators, seven are teachers and frve work in special education and student services. The program consists of 60 semester units, whrch writ lead to a Doctor ·of Education degree The nextclassof24w1ll be admitted for the fall se• mester. The deadline for appl1cat1on 1s March 30 Information: USO School of Education, 291 6480, ex• tension 4538.
University of San Diego's Doctor of Education pro- gram begins today, Feb. 1, marking the first doctorate program offered at the university, outside of the law school
with a broken wnst "I think we will give USD a good game 1f we play as ell as we did in the last alf or the A Pacific ame Saturd ," Coach Barry Cunningham or UCSD said. "I was our beSt to minutes ot the sea SD's height will be our bl,g roblem." The Tntons have Jost 6-6 forward Hov.ard Grun! for the season because of Illness. Bob F razier will re- place him in the Im up tbmght.Lehman Broe ·ett is the Tritons' top man witb 286 points. Point Loma and U.S. I • ternational University will be idle until their NAIA District 3 meeting niur · day nigh on the Crusaders' court.
-°' so much to us," Coach Jim -o Brovelli or the University of San 1ego basketball team said in ooking ahead to tonight's game against ucsn on the Trltons' court. TIie tipoff will be at 7:35. are among se~eral teams being consld red for NCAA DI vision Il, we em playoffs, with their 15-5 Brovelli id the Toreros
Ten or the top 20 coll tennis teams in the CO will &Memble today at Universlty of San Di San Diego State for the S · Diego Intercollegiate tenn o an
tournament.
Action is sclieduled begin at 8 a.m. at both si in the event which will en I record. compass three days of play. i • we are takmg one game UCLA, undefeated in s· Q at a time and not looking matches and ranked o. 1 · ;a ahead," Brovelli said. The the nation heads the tourna ! Tritons wlll go against ment field, additional e Po nt Loma C'-0llege at Sat- trants mclude U C, Pepper urday night, face Hawau- dlne, UC-Irvine, Brigham Hilo Feb. 16, take on Na• Young Utah, Arizona, AI1· bama-B1rmingham Feb. 20 zona State Cal State-Domin· and meet Sonoma State guez Hills: United States ~!\· Feb. 23 m their remaining ternational University, Point home contests. Loma College, Fresno USD's only remaining and co-ho&S USD and a road game will be at UC- Diego State. Rlversfde a week from TIie event is actually nln tonight tournaments in one. A 1 If USD gains the playoffs, man sing} limination for• it should have the services mat will determine th of 6-foot-8 forward rank player in ch of the .I Walsh again. _He's pra~tic- through o 6 singles pots, ing_ after bemg s1delmed
seminars begin at 7: 30 a.m. and conclude at 9 a.m. F~h. I l'I '1 LA Jo/la L.•~"-t The cost of fl1e entire series is $150, individual sessions are $15. Registration is available by calling the USO continuing education dept. at 291-6480, ex- tension 4318. Because of limited tpace, advance registration is recom- mended. unday, February 4, 1979
e will hold true
and the
AIA Whi s USO; UCSD, SDCC Lose LJ II i OY\ Irvin K1ffin, a former Ok· lahoma Baptist player, last night scored 22 points as th Athletes in Action outslzed and outplayed University of San Diego, 72-53, in the Toreros' gymnasium befo~ 1,500 fans. The AIA team, playin without the s rvices of Ralph Drollinger, connected on 24 of 67 shots and held a 32-20 lead at halftime. USD, paced by Bob Bartholomew, managed to pull within four points of the visitors early in the second half. Barlholo- mew finiShed with 12 points. In other college action, Riversi nipped San Diego City C ege, 8!'>--84, Azusa Pacific ged University of California, an Diego, 75-74, Palomar shaded San Ber- nard Ino, 70-69, Citrus! romped past Southwestern, I -97-57, and Mt. San Jacinto topped MiraCosta, 86-81. , Riverside improved its Mission Conference record at 7-1 when Ken Copeland connected on a ~hot with 16 seconds remaining. Tom Wight Jed the winners with 24 points while Copeland had 18 and Ed Roberson 15. The Knights, who are now 4-4, were paced by Zach Jones, who tallied 31. Azusa Pacific led UCSD most of the way and the Tr)tons rally fell short at the end. Azusa's attack was balanced with four players in double figure while Lee Brockett (21) and Scott Knudsen (18) were tops or the losers. Brockett an Knudsen also had eight re- bounds each . Palomar rallied from a 41- 32 deficit to overtake San Bemarolno with three-pomt plays near the end by Ivan (Scrappy) Hamilton and . Duane Gatson doitig he trick. Palomar is now 5-3 in the Mission Conferflnl:e and 12-10 overall. Citrus made its Ml.ssion Conference 6-2 w1tll its easy wm o ·er the -\.paches.
l.1
"Duck Soup," thc \1, rx Bntther-s
ror each school's l through o. 3 doubles earn Prellrnmary rounds ltt the No. 1 through • o. 4 s ngles. and all three double are scheduled for USD's coarts today, the o. and Nb. 6 sing! s will be contested at San Diego State StartiQg to- morrow all matches will be held t USD. The tournament .is gener- ally <.'ODSldered to rank only behind the NCAA Tourna- ment as a test of collegiate tennis. o.
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J F"h1ng," with the l1ttl~ 1\1 kick ,,tt the "!vl,Jnighr
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M'-w11.."•,' "\'TU."!°', ~.uurJ,,}. fdirttary 3. m1Jn1gh1, LISDStuJcnt Unn,n , luwcr k•vd Scrr,1 H.111. USL'. Ak.>l,1 P.irl 2\ll c,4 '/" ,4N6. ~11/?1 U).d er- USO Defeats UCSD,
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90 74
Russell Jackson led USO in scoring with 20 points and z In rebounding with 11. Joe Evans contrtbuted 18 pomts, ..... Win Bob Bartholomew 16 (and eight rebounds), Earl Pien.-e 2 14 and Mike Stockalper 12 !r 8- 'P I 0 • i
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SA DIEGO-Ru ell Jackson scored 20 points and Joe Ev 18 to lead the University of San Diego~ a ~-74 v1ctorY over the University of California-San Diego es- da~!8~\:~:;ei~~;~:urrsD's record to 16-5. UCSD, which got 32.._ROints and 18 rebounds_2ogi :;f Brockett, fell to 7-16. rd,. 7 1111 ll- I Mt.)
The Umvers1ty of San Diego basketball tflam 1s expecting an invitation to play in the NCAA Division II Western Regional playoffs after completing Its r gular season by shel- lackmg Sonoma State 7~7 last night in the USO gym. The Toreros finished with an 18-6 record. led by only four points at the half, but pulled away in the final 20 minutes with a balanced scoring at- tack that saw Mike Stocka- pler score 15, Russell Jack- son and Joe Evans 14 each, and Bob Bartholomew 12. Sonoma State plays USD
for the Toreros.
/ 17
SMALL COLLEGES 2
Division II Region I BJ HA K . CH , TIie San DI Ua
/
UCSD tonight.
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Toreros Rout Sonoma State, 79-47, Await Word On Regional Playoffs 2/2. 'f 111 u" ,·c The Unlver. lty of San a alt an antic pated lnV1ta- Dlego ba ketball t am ti n to compf'te In the CA.J pull d away m th cond DI on II Western R gional hall to rout Sonoma State, P ayo!I n xt w k 7~7 last night at USD Four USD players Coach Jim Brov Ill' Tri• reached double figure scor- ton thu. put the wrap on an Ing In the Torero Victory. IH regular ason and now Alter I adlng by only four points, 33 29, at haUt1me D out d Its oppon n
JriN~ 1Eoo
2 S.D. Judges Named to Superior Court Gov. Brown Also Appoints 3 Lawyers to Municipal Bench
Torero nailed ltim 6-1, 1-6, 6- 4. Herrmann's n xt victim was Ashif Jlwa, a Canadian on the U.S. International University team, but it was a close call for Peter. After winning the IITSt set 6-4, Herrmann was !arced to rally for a 7-5 victory in t second "Peter grew too Jast when he was 15, and he was wkward as a t," USD Coach Ed Collins said. "He went from 5-foot-6 to 1--1 in less than two years. "He wasn' quick, but strength seem to be er commg that. I e worke on wcights to h Ip strength. P r has a Chance to a ery good player, but he still needs more ulckness on the court. 'I 1~ problem 1s etting to the ball Once he does, though, h ha no problem hitting It Desire and motl- vatlon to work hold th an- ·er to how far he W1U go in tennis. He's becom g bet- ter all the time as he grows stronger and more agile." Collms makes all Is team members do daily to lmp(o t ir qu1ckn ss and agihty. "'fhis makes 1t Pasier for them to change d.lrcct1on Co
Actually, Herrmann is making a comeback. At the ages of 12 and 14, he was a national champion. Then e the growing pains - and the delay In progress for him.
tt>e...,sy EARL KEL Now that Peter Herrmann apparently has stopped growing, th Uni- versity or San Diego student pro to develop into one of the best co 'eg1ate tennfs players in the coun- try He showed he's on the way yesterday as the sixth annual San' Diego Invita- tional Intercoll ·giate Tour- nament got under way at U D and San Diego State. He deciSioned two oppo- nents • Bow to the I y ar-old Herrmann tn his fir t match was larcf'J Fr man, on or UCLA:; top players and ranked o 4 among 18-year-olds m th country last year The
There were some big up- sets opening day. USD's Humberto Pino, from San Ysidro, spilled UCLA's Bruce Brescia 6-2, f>-7, 6-4. San Diego City College's No. 1 player in 1978, Pino has played tennis only three years. Andy Gordon, former Coronado High star now at Arizona, topped UCLA's Tom Loucks 6-4, 6-4. n- seeded Tony Trear ol Btlg- ham Young tum back Curt Stalder or UC Irvine 6- 3, 7-6 m another s rise. Pepperdine's Eddie Ed· wards beat Mark man of Long Beach State , 6-3 and also trimmed SD's Scott Lipton 6-3, 6-3. Robert Van't Hof or USC won from Derk Wharton and Jacques Mansel in his first tests. The tournament will win up tomorrow. --~
I n the final 20 minutes. Guard M1 e Stockalper n'
San Diego Municipal Court Judges Howard Bechefsky and G. Dennis Adams were named by Gov. Brown Monday to the Superior Court bench. In other_appointments, Brown named three attorneys to fill va~cies m the San Diego Murucipal Court: Patricia Ann Yim Cowett of Del Mar; Sheridan E. Reed of San Diego and Michael L. Burley of Vista. . Bech~fsky and Adams will fill two of five newly created JUdgeships that eventually will bring the Superior Court up to a strength or 43 judges. Th~ two new appomtees now preside over courtooms in El Ca}On whei:e a controversial experimental program has been moperation since September, l'!"J. Under the pilot program, the Mlll!)Clpal Court judges act as Superior Court judges to help relieve court congestion. The program has been called a success by Gov. Brown's office,_and Bechefsky and Adams partly attribute their elE:_vation to the exposure the court has received. Hech~!sky, 38, was appointed to the San Diego Municipal Co~rt m January, 1978. A 1965 graduate of Columbia Uruvel'Slty law school, Bechefsky was a deputy attorney general for two years. After that, he served in private practice for 10 years tmtil his appointment to the bench. Bechefsky was president of the San Diego Cotmty Bar Assn. m1977. He IS married and has a son and daughter. ~ Adams, 3?, graduated from the University of San Diego w school m 1965, after which he worked for Federal Defende~. and m pnvate practice until his appointment to e Muruc1pal Court in January, 1976. Adams is married and has two daughters. Appomtrnents to fill the two Municipal Court vacancies created by Bechefsky's and Adams' elevation have not been announced. Ms. Cowett, one of the three newMunicipal Court judges named !'fonday, heads the litigation section in the general counsels of~1ce of San Diego Gas & Electric Co. Before that she worked m the_Department o! Transportation and in the of ce.
Ms. Cowett, 31, graduated from the UC Davis law t!eh l and rep~es David Gill, who was elected last Noveml)erooto the SupenorCourt ~- repla~ Judge Thomas Sagar, who retired. Uruvel'Slty of San Diego law school graduate Ms Reed . !-- private practice and has worked as consu1tuig attornev~c'.:; the Mencan consul in San Diego. .~ley, 38, now in private practice, Is a former de ut district at~ey and a current member of the Indigep Yt Defense Policy Board. n A UCL~ law school graduate, Burley replaces Jud Charles Roick. who retired. ge
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