News Scrapbook 1980

SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 2 5 1980

SAN DIEGO UNION

BLADE TRIBUNE JAN 2 5 19~0

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SAN DIEGO UNION

JAN 3 0 1980

USO Offers Christian Seminar Feb. 9-1 SAN DIEGO - Personal reassessment reconciliation and . care f?r "The Christian at Mid:Life" will be stud1_ed . durmg a . two-day University of San Diego Contmumg Education workshop. The workshop will be held Feb. 9 and 10 in USD's Salmon Lecture Hall. ~orkshop leaders will be Dr. Evelyn Eaton Whitehead and Dr. James Whitehead both members of the graduate theological faculty at 'the University of Notre Dame. They are co-authors of "Christian Life Pat_ter~s : .Psychological Challenges and Religious Invitations m Adult Life." Both are also consultants for Notre Dame's Center for Pastoral and Social Ministry. Fee for the workshop is $65, which includes a lunch on Saturday. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturd·ay and 10 a.m. to noon Sunday. For registration information call USD at 293-4585.

JAN 2 4 1980 90-76 VICTORY

IN WCAC CONTEST Santa Clara Tips Toreros, 59-57 Speeiol to The Sll! Diego Union

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Dons Score Easy Win Over USD

College Tennis Tearns Prepare For Highly Competitive Year _ Professional scouts do not haunt the practices and competitions. Television networks do not clamor for the right to brmg television cameras to the big rivalries. For the players, the draft is something President Carter may be reinstating, not a ritual which could propel them to instant riches. College tennis does not share the trappings of football and basketball at the same level. Its impart on the

5Pecial lo TIie San Diego Union

Barbour four, and Russell Jackson two from the line. USD was down only 57-55 with one minute to go. But John Kovaleski was deliberately fouled by Bar- bour, and this time, the Broncos capitalized. Ko- valeski hit both. · USD scored its final bas- ket with 12 seconds left after Jackson intercepted an inbounds pass and fed Bartholomew inside for a layup. Kurt Rambis led Santa Clara, 9-9 and 5-3 in the WCAC, with 27 points and 17 rebounds, followed by Londale Theus with 10. Neither team shot partic- ularly well - USD was 42 percent from the field, Santa Clara 41. But the Broncos had worse prob- lems at the line, shooting a miserable 38 percent to USD's 86. USD returns home today and hosts Gonzaga, another conference foe, tomorrow at 7: 30 in the Sports Arena. UID 1571 Jackson 2 &-6 10, levesQue I 0-0 2. Bartholo- mew IOH 11, Stockolper 41-19, Pierce I0-0 2, llhilmorsh 2 0-0 4. Barbour 22-2 6. CuMmg- hom O 0-0 0. TOIOIS 22 iJ-15 57 SANTA CURA IS9) Bowers O 0-2 0. Carpenter J 0-0 6. Rombis IJ 1-417, Gower I0-12, Thevsl 2-512. Whilinglon J 2-2 I, Kovaleski O2-2 2, Mendenholl l 0-1 2. Totors267-1759. Halftime score: Sonlo Cloro JI. USO 23. Fovled ovt - Le,esciue. Cunn ng\om Toto fouls- USO 21, Santo Croro 14

SANTA CLARA - The University of San Diego has this habit of staging second- half comebacks against West Coast Athletic Confer- ence opponent Santa Clara. In an earlier meeting be- tween the teams, USD ral- lied after 'trailing by 15 points, only to lose by a wide margin. Last night, the Toreros fell again, 59- 57, but not before extending the Broncos in the final minutes. - USD, now 5-11 overall and 1-6 in the conference, was down by 17 points with 10:27 remaining. But the Broncos failed to convert the front end of six consecutive one-on-one situ- ations, Center Bo·b Bartholo- mew, who finished with 24 points and 13 rebounds, contributed eight points during that stretch, Darrell

SAN FRANCISCO- The towering University of San Francisco Dons over- powered the University of San Diego, 90-76, with ease in War Memorial Arena here last night. While both teams were hitting 35 field goals, the Dons won the game with a pronounced 20-6 edge at the free throw line as the smaller Toreros were forced into foul after foul trying to rebound against the winners. The Dons led throughout and had five players in dou- ble figures as they were winning for the 14th time in 18 games this year. Three USO (71) l"'esque 4 0-0 8, Bartholemew J 1-2 7 Jackson 9 2~ 20, Stockolper 4 0-0 8, Pierce 9 3-j Il•1,-~fr"' • 0-0 8, Whitmarsh 2 0-0 4. Totals USF (911) He9wood 71-115, M4'-lisler 71,-120, Bryan! ,~ 15 4 Re,dJJ.O, Dmlev7S-. J9, Williams5 2-2 12. rotQls 35 20-25 90. Holttrme score: USF 50, USO 3'. Fooled out: l"'esque /USO). Tolol fouls· USO 20, USF 13. .

of the four losses, however, have come in West Coast Athletic Conference play and the Dons are only 4-3 in league. USD fell to 1-6 in WCAC while dropping to 4-10 over- all. Starting 6-7 center Bobby Bartholemew of USD was removed from the game early in the second half and did not return _to play. There was no report from the team's trainer as to whether he was injured. Ken McAlister aand Quintin Dailey scored 20 and 19, respectively, for the Dons while John Hegwood and Wallace Bryant added 15 apiece. . Earl Pierce led the Toreros with 21 and Russell Jackson tossed in another 20. The Toreros return home to meet the Air Force Acad- emy at the USD Sports Cen- ter Saturday night.

consciousness of the general public is minimal in cornparisor to those major sports. A few facts, however, point out that the college game is · not only solid, but growing In pres- tige year by year. - Of the American male players currently ranked in the world's top 20 all but one, VUas Gerulaltis, earned college All-American hon- ors before turning professional. And among the game's biggest name are orw. coll e singlr~ champions like John McEnroe (Stanford '78), Jimmy Connors

EVENING TRIBUNE

Toreros' center is doubtful

'65) and a doubles

'71), Arthur Ashe (UCLA

(UCLA

champion named Roscoe Tanner (Stanford '72). - During the 1970s, tennis rose to second place (bf'hind basketball) regarding the number of colleges sponsoring teams (674). Sixty-six schools began fielding tennis squads from 1972 through 1979. It's worth noting, then, that the 1980 men's season is just getting undf'rway and that women's teams will begin in early February. Of the men's squads locally, San Diego State and the University of San Diego will compete at the highest (NCAA Division I) level and between them will be battling many of the top rated teams in the nation. The Univerity of California San Diego, Point Lorna and United States International University, meanwhile, will pursue National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) honors. · Alook at the prospects : Sao Diego Stale opened its season with a 9-0 win over UCSD and will get a look at its most serious rivals in a Western Athletic Conference preview tournament in utah this weekend The Aztecs were picked to win the league last year, their first in the WAC, but wound up fourth. "Utah is supposed to win it this year, but if anybody beats them we're supposed to do it," says SDSU coach Skip Redondo. Redondo rates t · _y__ear's team an im rovement over the 1979 model. Important Aztec newcomers include Dave LaFranchi, a freshman from Palos Verdes who has taken over the No. 1 singles spot and Graham Robertson, who was a California junior college doubles champion last year. Junior Ken Goldman returns after redshirting last season and has the No. 3 singles spot in early matches. Kevin Keenan, Vali Moezzi, Mark Paolucci and Brian Sours are returnees. "We're a lot better this year depth wi e, talent wise, and they're hard workers," says Redondo. "La Franchi has been playing No. I for the past three or four monihs. He hits very hard with a lot of topspin and he's got wins over a lot of good San Diego players." The Aztecs are at Arizona and Arizona State early next week before returning to battle at USD next Thursday. Their first home match 1s agamst Bakersfield on Feb. 2at 10 a.m. USD finished second nationally in Division II but the step up to the Division I level is a big one, particularly for a school located in Southern California. ''Being Division I means a lot in terms of post-season play," says Torero coach Ed Collins. "If we were still Division II we'd have a good chance in the nationals. But of the top 20 teams right now, five of the top eight are from Southern California and our chances of beating them are slim." The rankings of which Collins speaks have UCLA No. 1, Stanford No. 2, Cal Berkeley fourth, Pepperdine sixth and use eighth. USD figures the strongest of the San Diego schools. The Toreros' top singles player, Scott Lipton, had considerable success in county Grand Prix tournaments, eventually securing the circuit championship. Lipton, a junior from San Jose, was a Division II All-America selection for the past two years and is ranked among the top 10 on a computerized list of this year's college pla:, crs. "He has improved a great deal," says Collins. "He's steadier, has more depth on his shots, and for the first time he's aggre~sive with short balls - he puts points away now when he gets the opportunity." Behind Lipton, the Torero lineup inrludes sophomore Peter Herrmann, freshman Chris Jochum, senior Par Svensson, sophomore Terry Ward and junior Mike Rodri- -guez. Herrmann, like Lipton had a highly successful San Diego Grand Prix tour and is - according to Collins - stronger and more mobile than during a promising freshman season. Ward, a transfer from Texas, was a national junior college semifinalist but has been hampered by hamstring problems: USD begins its regular season with the date against San Diego State next Thursday. UCSD has a returning NAIA All-America in senior Paul Metsch and two other players who qualified for the NAIA nationals last season, senior Billy Hein and junior John Rosenberg. USIU's contingent features junior Chuck Kuhle, who developed his groundstrokes as a member of a prominent family of Las Vegas teaching professionals, and Tony Brock, a transfer from Hampton Institute (Va.). In keeping with the school's name, coach Al Hoppe may employ players with homelands from Canada and Japan, and last year's No. 1 player, Thailand's Olar Issara, may join the team later when healed of an injury. Point Loma has a new coach in Bud Harbin who will rely on veterans Phil Hasse, Bob Davenport and Terry Chan ce and newcomers Steve Ante and Larry Swartz.

Leading scorer and re- bounder Bob Bartholomew will be questionable when the University of San Diego plays host to the Air Force Academy tonight at 7:30 in the Torero gym. Bartholomew, with a 16.5 scoring average and 7.8 re- bounds per contest, suf- 1 fered a cracked disc in his I lower back, an injury which 1 forced him to leave the re- I cent USF game with pains I in his leg. I Coach Jim Brovelli hopes I the 6-7 Bartholomew will be 1 able to tip off against the ( Air Force's Reggie Jones, I who stands exactly as tall I as the Torero center. Air Force, 3-10, is led by 6-6 forward Tim Harris (15.6 points and 6.6 rebounds), 6-2 guard Dean Christian (12.1), and 6-4 for- ward Pete Mccaffrey (9.9). In small college action tonight, UCSD (10-10) en- gages Whittier College in the Triton gym at 7: 30. The Toreros are coming off a C 91-77 loss to Point Loma 1 College. I

LOS ANGELES TIMES JAN 3 0 1980

DAILY TRANSCRIPT

SAN DIEGORALLY IN SECOND HALF JUST FALLS SHORT I SANTA CLARA -A second- half rally by the University of San Diego failed to turn the tide as for- ward Kurb Rambis sparked Santa Clara to a 59-57 Western Collegiate Athletic Conference basketball victo- ry Tuesday night. Rambis hit for ZT points, backed by senior guard Londale Theus who scored 12. Santa Clara led by 19 points with 9:00 remaining in the second half when San Diego, fired by center Bob Bartholomew who scored 24 points, put on a strong aggressive thrust But Santa Clara's defense held together and its offense got back on the track in the final three minutes to seal the victory. San Diego forward Russell Jackson hit for 10, backed by guard Mike Stuckalper who scored nine points.

LOS ANGELES TIMES JAN 2 6 1980

JAN 2 5 1980 Broadcaster to Speak 7o/ --- - - ------

~~-- USD Plays Host to Air Force From • Tlmos Staff WrHtr

Howard K. Smith, veteran television news broadcaster, will speak at the USD Camino Theater on Feb. 9 at 7 p.m. on "The Changing Challenge for America." Smith's commentaries and newscasts have earned him a reputation as an un- predictable journalist. He was the first broadcast journalist to call for Richard Nixon's ·resignation or im- peachment. The lecture is free.

SAN DIEGO-The University of San Diego will play host to the Air Force Academy in a non-conference bas- ketball game tonight at 7:30 in the USD Sports Center. The Toreros have a 4-10 record as they take a break from West Coast Athletic Conference action.

EVENING TRIBUNE JAN 3 19,

USO home for game · with Gonzaga tonight _Unive~sity of San Diego will bid for its iirst home victory m the West Coast AthlPtic Conference tomght engaging Gonzaga's basketball team at 7:30 at the Spo~ Arena. T~e Toreros' ?nlY win in eight WCAC games came agamst Pepperdme at Malibu two weeks ago. Therr overall record is 5-11. 'Tm hoping_ ~.start rolling because I'm getting too many gray harrs, USD Coach Jim Brovelli said "\\'e have been playing well, but just can't win. We oo~nced back against Santa Clara, only to lose by two pomts this week." USD again will count heavily on 6-foot-7 Bob Bartholo- mew, ".l'ho is sh~ting 56 percent from the field. He's averagmg 16.4 pomts and 7.9 rf'bclunds. Closest to him is Brad Levesque with a 7.0 scoring average and 5.5 on rebounds. Bartholomew will collide with 6-10 Duane Bergeson T?P scorers for the Gonzaga quintet are 6-7 forward Carl Pierce, who has a 14.2 scoring average and is 8.3 on rebounds; 6-4 forward James Sheppard, with a 13 4 sconng average, and 6-5 guard Eddie White, who has a 13.2 average. Gonzaga comes to town with a 2-3 WCAC record and is 7-9 overall.

SAN DIEGO UNION

JAN 2 6 1980

SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 2 6 1980

Law School Sets Admissions Class The University of San Diego will present a 12- session course on the Law School Admission Test be- ginning on March 4 and March 6. The course will be held from 6:30 to 10 p.m. ~n Tuesdays and Thursdays 1~ Room 151 of the unive,s1- ty's cannon Hall. - Orientation classes for the LSAT course wilJ .be presented in Room lal of Cannon Hall on Saturday , Feb. 9 at 10·30 a.m., Wednesday, Feb . 13 at 7: 30 p.m. and Saturday, Feb. 16 at 10 a.m.

USD Hosts Air Force, Bartholomew Ailing

r,

points and 5.8 rebounds) and Russell Jackson (12.3 and 4.1), guards Earl Pi- erce (12.2) and Mike Stock- alper (9.6),' and the 6-7 Bar- tholomew in the middle. Air Force, 3-10, is led ~y 6-6 forward Tim Ham~ (15.6 points and 6.6 rebounds), 6-2 guard Dean Christian (12.1), and 6-4 for- ward Pete McCaffrey (9.9) . The other starters are 6-7 crnter Reggie Jones (8.2 and 10.9) and 6-0 guard Erwin Washington (5.3). In small college action tonight, UCSD engage_s Whittier College in the Tri- tons' gym at 7:30. UCSD, lO-lO, is coming off a 91-77 Joss tQ Pt. Loma College.

The University of San Diego takes a break fl_'Om conference action tonight when it hosts Air Force Academy at 7·.30 in the USD gym. But the Toreros, 4-10 overall and 1-6 in West Coast Athletic Conference, receiYed more bad news yesterday. Leading scorer and rebounder Bob Bartho- lomew (16.5 points and 7.8 rebounds), who left in the second half. against USF with pains in his leg, was informed that he has a cracked disc in his lower back. If Bartholomew is able to play, USD's starting lmeup will remain the same : for- wards Brad Levesque (7.6

"' BLADE TRIBUNE JAN 3 1 798n

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Veteran Newsman 11'} To Speak Feb. 9 Howard K. Smith Slated At u.: _ mf:t dD~Eio ·ti; V~llteran tel~vision news broadcaster 0 . , · . mi wi speak m the University of s iego C~mmo Theatre on Saturday Feb. 9 at 7 P an A~m1ss1?n to the speech is free , but the~e is ii~ited seatmg. Tickets may be obtained after Feb 5 in USD ' Serra Hall , room 200, maximum two tickets per erson 8 T~e 65-year old Smith has worked the last 4l ea .. radio and television news, with both CBS and ~Bg 1 graduate of Tulane University he has cov ed . maior news stories in the last' four decadetr andmh st ~f;::edD;l~:e~~r Aawa~ds f and honor~,. incl~ding t~! 0 war or newswr1tmg and four ti;: 1 it:osrs::s:ff;l~s~ Awards for television' interpreta- Smith 's_ commentaries and newscasts have ear d h' a reputahon as an unpredictable journalist H ne im ~itteJ~:i~: r ~~:::ierJrxao~teda~~ ehclusiveein~!;vfe"; ~roadcast journalists to call f~r Nixon~ ~~!g;~~o~1rst 1mpe'.' chment duri ng the Watergate affair or A!:-~~~ ~! 1 !~:~:s" a~•11~Changing Challenge for S Thek speech is co-sponsored .by the USD Stud t pe_a ers Burea u and the Universit f en California Continumg Education Departn{ to Southern en.

LOS ANGELES T IMES JAN 3 0 1980 The University of San Diego Founder's Gille11 JS show- I ing "Herman Graff Retro.,>ective Selecti~ns~ F~. 18 through March 13. Graff is a prolific express1oniSt painter, draughtsman and engraver who has been an influential and , respected artist In Southern California for 30 years. He teaches at Cal State Long Beach, Both figurative and ab- ract · 1

LOS ANGELES TIMES JAN 2 9 1980

Toreros Play at Santa Clara Tonight special te TM -n- CLARA-The University of San Diego -~l SANT~ w t Coast Athletic Conference wm m shoot for its sego 0 \ m:ts Santa Clara tonight at 8 o'clock. eight 75-68 win over the Air Force Academy in a CoDllng ncea game Saturday, the Toreros .are 5-10 non-confere overalL

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EVENING TRIBUNE JAN 3 O 198(;1

LOS ANGELES TIMES JAN 3 1 1980

Haynes, Johnson go on spree, pace Triton win_·

READER JAN 3 11~80

U. of San Diego Plays Against Gonzaga Tonight F,_, •-Stiff ...... SAN DIEGO-The University of San Diego will play host to Gonzaga in a West Coast Ath- letic Conference basketball game tonight at 7:30 in the Sports Arena. The Toreros are 1-7 in the WCAC and 5-11 overall as they begin a string of five straight • home games.

f th w t Coast Athletic Confer- Crusaders led b three with less than two minutes to e es

that margm was down to Center Bob Bartholomew chalked up eight of his 24 two.

up to lead Point Loma. The Crusaders will be home to Southern Califor- nia College Friday night. USD turned in a strong enough to prevent_ a sixth league defeat agamst one

Top performances o

play. However, the Lancers climbed to within one enter- the closing minute. A b:Sket by Ron Sanfilippo decided the game in the in

season by Gary Haynes an~ ence test. Sherman Johnson en~ble" UCSD's basketball team _to Pay, was e . Y gain its first NAI~ District who dumped me 2~igo1,t~~ 3 victory lasdt bmgts Tt~~ ~t:nasdw~~e~ s~o~·in/aver- -2 in lea ue l UCSD, n~wd1b Hayrlles -. ' Meanwhilde,UPomt Lotmaf iPtsmseoi ! 0 ~Jla:: at UCSD _ San Plego were losing-road Saturday mght. games. -.'.fhe . Crusaders Point Loma ~roJ)ped _its bowed to Cal·Baptist 56-55 ninth game agamst 15 wms in another NAIA District 3 because :the Cr_u saders contest and the Toreros lost committed 21 personal to Santa Clara 59-57 in a fouls. Despite that, the mvers1 y o o Tritons turne ac ou , ern California College lll- :ep~~n~;·\t~h;5f!p~~~:~ 101 at horn~. College a.n . . · to l2-l0

In Recital, mezzo~sop rano Jane .,,,.. Westbrook and pian ist Michael Jackson Parker will perform works of Purcell, Haydn, Gluck, Brahms, and Rachmaninoff, Sa turday, February 2, 8 p. m., French Room,

h T

· t d ·

second half, but it wasn't :~e1ac':.mg t e oreros'

Lancers' favor Sanfilippo

Santa Clara, 5-3 in the WCAC, shot only 38 percent at the foul line, compared to USD's 86 percent.

ied scoring win. The _Broncos led by _17 with 21 points, seven more pomts with 10:27 remam-

Founder's Hall , USO, Alcala Park. Reservations: 293-4585.

ing, but with a minute to go

than Jim Freeman picked

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