News Scrapbook 1981-1982

ARCHEOLOGIST Contlaued from Flnt Pare he said, "without bumping into a part of your heritage, your past. We are a land of immigrants, and in my view that has made us great." San Diego has made mistakes, not only in Mission Valley, Brandes said, but also in the "piecemeal or nonexistent" planning of some of its outlying communi- ties. "One additional disappointment," he said, "was the lack of public understanding over the need for a down- town convention center. It would have helped stimulate tourism, created more smokeless industry, helped the transportation system. Unfortunately, there are always some individuals against everything." Certainly, Brandes is not one of those. But he is against overcrowded universities, where classrooms are filled with "students you haven't seen all semester, sit- ting among their 300 classmates, with sack lunches, dogs, tape players, whatever." USD is not that kind of place. He likes its smallness, the fact that he can get to know students individually. In his mind, it looms "as one of the great private univer- sities in the country in years to come," In the meantime, Brandes can stand on campus or in Point Loma and see the skyline of San Diego. "I hope it always stays the same size," he said. "On some days, you can see all of it, to the back country and beyond, to the snow on the mountaintops. I love it." John i----~-------------- ~~

ember 22, 1981

Historical Work Published

Archeologist Unearths San Diego's Past

The Brandeses have developed , pride about their city, which the au lhor considers one of the mos beautiful he has seen. And he hai visited many - Barcelona, Paris, London, San Francisco. California's oldest settlement, San Diego, rP.- mains his favorite. He sees problems, but he also sees a city, for the most part, that has been fortunate and favored by both nature and man. "People like John D. Spreckels were brilliant," he said of an early San Diego pioneer. "He saw the relation of our harbor to transporta- tion - and to the environment as well. He believed you could have all kinds of thmgs and not harm the environment. Nolan, two of our earliest city plan- l,lers, were unique. Nolan, whose plan of 1908 is still regarded as a workable model by today's city powers, was a remarkable man." L.A.'1 Growth a Ble11ln1 Brandes has heard the compari- sons of San Diego to Los Angeles, how this city was "bie sed" by the PQrt moving north, and by the rail- ro d. San Diego may not have known it at the time, he conceded. but it did benefit. And the evidence, he said, is all around us today. "We've done a remarkable job of preserving the past," Brandes said. "From the Gaslamp Quarter to the Wild Animal Park and tlTe zoo. even Seaport V11lage, we seem to have a sense of where we've come from. "San Diego has done an awfully good JOb of keeping itself clean. Imagme what the steel and coal industry would have done to our city - have, in fact, done to other cittes. The kmds of businesses we have, have benefited us." Brandes has heard the talk of San Diego's having an "infenonty com- plex·• toward its neighbor, Los An- geles It's a myth," he said, "that papers m both cities started - feuding papers. The Chambers of Commerce have feuded. A game of one-upmanship has been played. But San Diego has no inferiority complex. It doesn't have the same attributes as Los Angeles, and vice versa. They're different cilles, with different landscapes. Both are cosmopolitan, with a wide vanance of cultural and ethnic groups." One o ;:;a o a th 'la lion's - tre ,hs, Brandes be- I I ts tural d1vers1ty. 'You cant walk down the street," S ARCHEOLOGIST, Page 3 "George Marston and

IKE GRA BERRY,

By

Tim s taff Wnter A DIEGO

Raymond

Brande has watched San Diego grow ince th 1920s, from 5th and Broadway 10 Hiller sl, lo North Park nd to Talmadg Heights and beyond. 'll gr w following the mesas " he s 1d, 'along fingers of land that rew to the east And Brande ees a potentially exp n 1v mistake m the commer- c1 1 dev lopment of M1ss1on Valley. Th flood of February, 1980, wh n shopping c nt.ers wer inun- dated, was nothing, he said, adding, "The next one could be a lol worse" If th city fathers had only read lh lett rs of Fath r Junlpero Serra, s Brand s often has, they would realize the potenllal for devastal• Ing floods In Mt s1on Valley "H and th Indians would plant crop , ' Br nd s aid, ' only to have th m ruined. One env1ronmenta: tragedy of n Di go 1s the building of a freeway In M1 10n Valley, a hotel-mot I compi x, shopping cen- t rs It could have been one of th gr t outdoor r creallonal areas anywh r In the world. with camp- grounds, swimming and boating area The rl v r there runs year round'

SAN DIEGO UNION DEC 23 198f

Gauchos Take Advantage Of Torero Turnovers 72-57 By BILL CENTER Staff writer, The sen Dtego Union SANTA BARBARA - Jim Brovelli Gaines, who averaged 19.5 points between them coming into the game, scored 21 of UCSB's first 23 points in the second half. From a 24-23 halftime lead, the Gauchos jumped to a 39-29 advantage in 5:25 of the second half. USD turned the ball over on four of its first six trips down floor after intermission

preaches team basketball at the University of San Diego. Individuals do not win games, teams do. Teams also lose them, as the Toreros proved last night. With guards Michael Russell and Mario Gaines combining for 31 points in the sec- ond half, the University of California at Santa Barbara blitzed USO 72-57 in the Toreros' first game outside of San Diego this season. "This was our worst game of the year, no doubt about it," Brovelli said. "We were a full step behind all game ... totally ID a daze. "I hadn't seen that poor an effort on our part at any time this season, either ID prac- tice or a game. Usually you might have one or two players come up with poor games. Tonight it was an entire team effort." If it was an embarrassing loss, Brovelli also hoped it might serve as a lesson for his club. "I think we have a little better idea of how we have to perform on the road," Bro- velli said. "If anything, you have to put out a little more effort on the road than you do at home." The Toreros shot well, 47 percent from the floor on 24-of-51 shooting. They shot well enough to defeat a team that came into the match with a 2-6 record. But USD turned the ball over 27 times. For the first 10 minutes of the second half, Russell and Gaines took turns picking the pockets of USD's guards. Russell and

Raymond Brandes, archeolog1st, historian and now author. I m quite proud of a I of them, and of the fact that many tend to remem- ber best the cours" that gave th m bl ters under their fmgern .ls Brandes g thered about 800 photographs for use 1r the book and that number, fmally, was pared to about 45C Among the th ngs he learned

The only USD lead was at 18-16 on a Rusty Whitmarsh jumper in the lane with 5:49 to play in the first half. Throughout the first half · with the ad- vantage not more than a basket the Toreros always seemed ready to break the game open. But turnovers, 13 of them, sty- mied USO, which got off just 17 shots in the first half, compared to UCSB's 30. "You just can't play that way and expect to win, or stay close," Brovelli said. His club proved him right. Guard John Prunty had six turnovers in 15 minutes for USO. His back-up, Rich Davis, and center Dave Heppell were guilty of five turnovers each in 25 minutes, and Gerald Jones had four, and John Bate- man and Robby Roberts had three apiece. UCSB, playing without second-leading scorer York Gross, got a career-high 25 points from Russell and 14 from Gaines. Six-foot-IO center Richard Anderson had 12 points. Whitmarsh paced USD with 17 points on 7-for-10 shooting. Don Capener came off the bench to hit for 12. Heppell didn't score a field goal until there was 8:39 to play. At that time, starting forwards Gerald Jones and Robby Roberts had a basket apiece. USO (4-3) returns to action Monday night when it plays host to California of the Pac 10 at 7:35 in Sports Arena.

Brande did his research over a 25-to-30-year penod. Using his knowledge of Spanish Brandes culled nforMat101' from ancient h branes m Mexico City and some of Mexico s tin1e t v1 !ages He a1~ visited arch•eves 1r Denver. San Francisco, Los Angeles a'.ld Wash- ir gtor DC One part of the book - a descnp- t1 n of he oc1a ard pohllcal 1f in Old , rown during the MeXIcan pe oa I I 21 1846 - trans ated fr m h pamsh of various ar- chlv The story moves from th beg nnmg of ma 's p e ence n S Diego to lhe present and onwar i to the 21s1 Century

a 011g the way was the talent of the • Mexican and Sparush officials at pre ervmg records Brandes also .earned that the eXIcans of 1821 were extreme!;, Jea ou about who would I ve m San Diego th 1 r pear on the Pac1f1c Thev enacted strong 1mmigrat1on Jaws, v..hich, ronically, w re much hke the ones that make many MeXI- eans outcasts o ·a 1ens" today. BrarJes h I am to 1ove an D e b g n e- l and his wife, k ( V Of

EVENING TRIBUNE DEC~~'.-.!·-~~~1---=====-=====-==-==-=..::.===..:::::::..:....--..::;

SAN DIEGO UNION DEC 2 2 1981

T oreros ( 4-2) Play Santa Barbara (2-6) SANTA BARBARA - The University of San Diego takes to the road tomght for the first time this season, traveling to the University of Santa Barbara. The Toreros, 4-1 at home and a five-point loser to San Diego State at Sports Arena in their only other venture from Alcala Park, take on a 2-6 Santa Barbara club that has beaten Northridge State and winless Loyola-Marym- ount. But the Gauchos do present problems for USO. UCSB's 6-foot-10 center Richard Anderson will be a tall test for USD's 6-foot-8 David Heppell. Anderson leads UCSB m scoring and rebounding average with 16.3 points and 13.0 rebounds per game. UCSB also has a dangerous forward in 6-foot-6 York Gross, who is averaging 14.1 points a game, and a backcourt standout in 6-foot-3 Mike Russell, who has a 13.1 average. Coming off 68-34 (Bethel) and 78-48 (Illinois Wesleyan) victories over NAIA powers, USD's balanced attack is led by guard Rusty Whitmarsh (11.9 points a game), Heppell (11.8), and forward Gerald Jones (9.6).

Aztecs attempt to add 49ers to list of victims The San Diego State Aztec basketball team resumes action tonight in the

DAILY CALIFORNIAN OEC.2 31981

USO LOSES/ UC Santa Barbara parlayed 7 Torero turnovers into a 72-57 victory over the University of San Diego Tuesday night in Santa Barbara. Guard Rusty Whitmarsh led the Toreros in scoring with 17 points. The senior hit seven of 10 floor shots. USO connected on 24 of 51 shots for 47 percent. But the mistakes killed the team. The Toreros' record dropped to 4-3. USO will play the California Bears Monday at 7:35 p.m. in the Sports Arena.

Sports Arena against Long Beach State, a 49er team coming into this contest with a deceivmg 2-4 record, having lost a tough game earlier to the Southern Cali- fornia Trojans and last night to an up- and-commg Texas Tech team 83-71. The Aztecs are 5-2, having won their last three games, the last being over the Umver~1ty of Oregon. Also tonight, the University of San Diego Toreros, 4-2 on the season, face the University of Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara The Torero foes have won only two of eight starts this season. Santa Barbara's only victories came over win- less Loyola-Marymount and Northridge State, but Santa Barbara's Gauchos do have a formidable weapon in York Gro s, a 6-6 forward averaging 14.1 points per game. The Gauchos also have a big center in 6-10 Richard Anderson. The Aztecs will be led by Don Plummer, averaging 13.3 points a game, Zack Jones with 12.7 per game and Keith mlth with 11.7. The Toreros, on the other hand will look to Ru ty Whitmarsh (119 points per game), David Heppell (11.8), and Gerald Jones (9.6).

LA JOLLA LIGHT

C-10 Thursday, Dec. 24, 1981 -------'----------

USO to host studies program Intersession 1982, a three- porary Judaism

DON PLUMMER He'll lead Aztecs

SAN DIEGO UNION DEC 23 1981

and its Historical Background," "Fun- damental Issues in Physical Science," "Social Class in America,'' ''Intermediate Spanish," "Principles of Ac- counting," and "Computer Principles and Applications." In the evenings: "American Poetry to 1914," "Immigration and the American Scene," ''Ethics,'' ''Comparative Political Ideology," "The Chris- tian Vision of C. S. Lewis," '' Financial Management,'' ''Production Management,'' "Organizational Behavior" and "Group Dynamics and Leader- ship."

Brandes, dean of USD's School of Graduate and Continuing Education, the intersession cur- riculum is "drawn from four- teen areas of study in order to provide students with a wide range of educational oppor- tunities." Classes during intersession meet either five mornings or four nights a week. Courses are as follows In the mornings: "Photograpt.y," a biology course called "Life and Health," "Computer Literacy," "Music Appreciation," "Logic," "Ethics," "Introduc- tory Psychology," "Contem-

week program of concentrated studies, will open at the Univer- sity of San Diego. Tuition ranges from $155 to $170 per unit, with a 50 percent reduction for clergymen and women of all faiths whose prin- cipal support is from the ministry. Room and board are available. Reservations enrollment are and prr- request;d . For further information, call 293-4800 or visit the Office of the Registrar, Founders Hall, at he Linda Vista Road campus. According to Dr. Raymond S.

Machurek, USD's Herbert Selected For Gold Bowl Former Madison High and San Diego City College quarterback Dave Machurek of Idaho State and USD safety Dan Herbert were added yesterday to the squads that will play in the Olympia Gold Bowl on Jan. 16 at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium. Machurek, a 6-foot-2, 203-pounder, completed 253 of 426 passes this year for 3,764 yards and 29 touchdowns in leading Idaho State to a 12-1 record, including a 34-23 victory last Saturday over Eastern Kentucky. He is the second quarterback signed by Team National. The first was Matt Kofler of San Diego State. Herbert 1s a Division III All-American, and he was selected by Team American.

RUSTY WHITMARSH Top the Toreros

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