News Scrapbook 1980

SAN DIEGO UNION

JAN 2 71980

ARBOUR CUNNINGHAM STAR Bench Leads Toreros Over Falcons, 75-68

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back to our zone press. "And that was the only thing we could do. Without Bobby and Brad, it's very tough for us to get he ball inside." Fortunately, for USD, Bartholomew and Levesque will be back for Tuesday night's West Coast Athletic Conference game at Santa Clara. But maybe Torero fans will be seeing a little more of Cunningham, Whit- marsh·, and that little guy, Barbour. AIR FORCE(!!) Horris 63.3 15. Wosh111glon 23·! 7, McCo'· !erev 5 1-1 11, Jones 3511 11. Lo,11s O0·1 0, Christion ! 1·311,Simm~ 01-2 2, Ds'!lcon 2(). o 4. Tolols 26 11-12 !8. US0(75l Stcckolper9 H n. Pierce!0--0 6, Le,e;,;~e 2 0-0 4, Jockson l 1-2 6, Sortholomew J , l_ 10, Vlhitmor;h S ... 14, Borbeur J 2·2 8, CUIIOIM• hom 13 l5. Tolo 2811·12 75. HoH1,m, ~re - A'r Force '7, USO 33; FOi.lied oot -Bartholomew, Levesgue; Tolol louls-~ir Forcell, USOK

Levesque when they made their move. And still, USD won. "We did the things we had to do defensively," Brovelll commented after- ward. "We made them turn the ball over in the last few minutes when we went

free throw percentage (86 percent to 73), and turn- overs ( 12-13), also demon- strates that the Toreros were outshot from the field by a considerable margin, 58 to 41 percent, and were without leading scorer Bar- tholomew and rebounder

seconds), but a court-length pass was thrown out of bounds, and the Toreros held the ball before C.unn- ingham's final basket. Sounds like a win, to be sure. But the final stads- tics, which give USD the edge in rebounds (33-24),

By AILENE VOISIN Slofl Wrilet, TIit SGII Die9o Uniotl

During most or the sea- son, the University of San Diego (now 5-10) has been providing plenty of thrills - for the opponent's fans. But last night, in the cozy confines of the Alcala Park gym, the Toreros provided their own fans with an ex- citing evening of winning basketball. USD, trailing Air Force Academy by 12 points with six minutes remaining, went ahead for good with 42 seconds left on Darrell Barbour's free throws, a(Jd added two more baskets to take a 75-68 victory. But it was the way they managed to pull this one off that left everyone - includ- ing both coaches - shahing their heads. USD Coach Jim Brovelli credited the bench: "Keith Cunningham and Darrell Barbour came in and played just super. They were the ones who did it, no question about it." Cunningham is a 6-8 sophomore forward who plays sparingly, and Bar- bour, a 5-9 junior guard who plays even less. Last night, however, both played - and played well - after starters Bob Bartholomew and Brad Levesque fouled out midway in the second half. He also had kind words for playmaker Mike Stock- alper, who came through 'with some of his long dis- tance jumpers near the end after a shaky start, and Rusty Whitmarsh, the 6-3 guard who usually finds himself guarding a for- ward. The four of them, togeth- er with Russell Jackson, did it like this: - USD down, 65-55, with five minutes left, closed to 65-63 on a corner jump shot by Jackson, a Stockalper 25-footer, and a breakaway layup and two free throws by Barbour. - Air Force failed to take advantage of opportu- nities at the free throw line, twice missing the front end of a one-on-one situation, before Tim Harris made one (66-63), and Rick Sim- mons hit two after another Barbour basket to make it 68-65. - With 49 seconds to go, Stockalper hit another bomb (68-67), the Falcons' Dean Christian was called for pushing off, and Bar- bour calmly added two free throws. USD now led, 69-68. - Air Force still had plenty of time to score ( 42

President's Club Raises T ast To University Benefactors It was cocktail time in the University of San Diego library.

point d'esprit. Jacque Stewart was m black, too, and so were Ethel Aginsky, Sally Thornton, Esther Keeney, Rita Neeper, Mary Weber, Beverly Agnew, Esther Collins, Claire Tavares, Sara Finn, Agnes Crippen (in vel\'et studded with brilliants) and Dona Vojtko. Dona and George Vojtko arrived with Joe Hibben, a new member of the President's Club. Others sampling the seafood pate and caviar mousse at the hors d'oeuvre table included Charlotte and Falck Nielsen, Anna and Leo Roon, La Wanda and Morris Sievert, Celeste and Gene Trepte, Val and Jack Frager, Doris and Peter Hughes and Darlene and Lowell Davies. • • • The band played oom-pah-pah tunes, guests gamboled in costumes that were at least approximately Polish, and Sharon Hemus asked, "Who else has this much fun?" Members of the Contemporary Arts Committee of the San Diego Museum of Art kicked up their heels and learned the rudiments or the polka and other rollicking dances Saturday at their fifth annual cos- tume party. Frances Witkowski was cha1na.oman of the benefit, which offered a Polish dinner prepared by Evelyn and Ed\\-ard Panek (Continued OD C-3, Col. I)

"Well," said one guest to another, "back to the reference desk for a little more knowledge ... " The reference desk, as you may have surmised, served as the bar. Bookshelves formed an imposing back- drop for Saturday's black-tie party, the seventh annual President's Club Dinner m honor of USD benefactors. Study tables were covered with white cloths, punctuated with pink napkins, and centered with bouquets of tulips, daffodils and irises. After dinner there was dancing to Bernie Gallant's band, and a program of songs by Danielle Forsgren, Goldie Sine- gal, Jim Mercado and Gary Prettyman, directed and accompanied by Robert Aus- tin. Guests were received by Bishop Leo Maher, Marge and Dr. Author Hughes (he's president of USD) and Betty and Alex DeBakcsy (he's president of the President's Club) Louarn Fleet's pink spangled djellaba - cuffed in pink turkey feathers - was the night's head-turner. Sharon Siegan's fuch- sia jersey dress with a harem hem was a close second. You will not be astonished to hear that lots of well-dressed women wore black. Elsie Weston, for example, in ankle-length

SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE

SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE

1980

FEB

FEB

198 f Public Educalion-'·Can Public

tte-rman Gratle: Retrospective :seiecuons---- Expressionist drawings representing 50 ytars of Graffe 's work runs Feb. 19-Mar. 13. Founders

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Education Survive Freedom of Cho_1ce . ou~ e;. ' Ta'- C1edits or the Status Quo?." ,s the top•~s~ discuS'-H at a symposium sponsored by Schools of Law and Education . More Hall Court- room , USD , Feb. 14 at 8. Free. H d K Smith-1 V newscaster speaks at owar . SD F b 9 al 7. h fo : 29t- Camino Theatre, U • c · 6480 ext. 4590 . _ ---

,co/as Reveles, Dana e perform Op. IO No 3 lJSfJ A/· • Mar. 16 at cala Park. Tic~et.,· /0 I . , , .

Mysior and Michael Bahd

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Gallery, USD. Weekdays 10-4. 29/ -6480, ext. 426 1.

291-6480.

EVENING TRIBUNE

as is USD, talent is a prere- quisite. "One thing you can say , about our team is that ev- erybody is playing as hard as he can," Brovelli said. "But there's no question about it. If we had one or two premier Division I players, we'd be very com- petitive. That's why it's critical that we have a good recruiting year." Then, perhaps, the post- game questions will not be answered in bits and piec- es. Then, perhaps, the mouse will roar.

their final 10 points on 10- for-10 shooting at the foul line - overcame the Torero exuberance. "They had good poise there at the end," said Jackson of the visiting Bull- dogs (8-9 overall·. 3-3 in the WCAC). "That's what did it for them. We were like that at Pepperdine when we beat them. They kept com- ing bac!{ at us up there, but we held on. That's what you have to do to win." But you also need the bodies. When you are a mouse attempting to roar

CONTINUED FROM PAGE F·1 "You can't worry about 'the things you have no con- trol over," USD coach Jim Brovelli said of the loss of the above trio, all of whom were considered among the team's top six players in the pre-season. "There's absolutely nothing I can do about those things, so why bother with them? "I have never been a believer in instant success anyway," he continued. "We're lookmg at long- will - we want it to be a year-after-year thing." Ask Brovelli about his team and he will tell you things. That it is a bit short on skill. That 1t depends on scrappiness because of a lack of depth. That, emo- tionally, it may be winding down. "We've been making great comebacks all year and we've been exerting ourselves in all of the games just to stay in them," he said. "When you have to struggle like we do just to score, you tend to get menta11y fatigued. I think that 's what was wrong tonight. I think the guys are tired Not physi- cally, but mentally." In truth, despite Brovel- li 's assessment that "that was our worst game of the year," the Toreros could have won last night - men- tally fatigued or not. Paced by the scoring of Earl Pierce (16) and the equally distributed 30 points of Bob Bartholomew, Russell Jackson and Stock- alper, USO trailed by only six at 60-54 with 4:13 to play. From that point, how- ever, Gonzaga·s four-cor- ners offense along with its cool - the Bulldogs sr·ored

- Stott Photos bv Rick McCorlhv

Thornton, Ethel and Burt Agmsky; lower row: George and Don.t Vojtko and Joe Hibben, Louarn fleet, Jack and Val frager. The event honored University Of San Diego benefactors.

Gathering around the reference desk at the President's Club dinner, from left, upper row: Anna and Leo Roon, Doris Hughes, Dr. Author and Marge Hughes; center row: Sally and John

term goals. We want to es- tablish ourselves because when we do become a force in this conference - and we______

SAN DIEGO UNION FEB 2 1980

LOS ANGELES TIMES FEB 1 ,~su

ill be

Moral Values Teaching

1

1 •alues to young peop e "'

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USO Loses to Gonzaga, 72-62 Special ten.. Tlmn . SAN DIEGO-James Sheppard scored 22 points as Gon- zaga defeated the University of Diego, 72-62, Thurs- day night in a West Coast Athletic Conference game at the Sports Arena. The win improved Gonzaga's record to 3-3 in conference play and 8-8 over alL . , . San Diego, which was led by Earl Pierces 16 points, slipped to 1-8 in the WCAC and 5-11 overa!L

Diego Continuing Educa-

The teachmg of mora

5

x lored in a Umvers1ty o an eti~n Seminar from 7 to fl p.m. Tuesday in the School of N;~:~p::; be Richard Reichert, coordinator of the Green Bay Diocesan Office of Education m wiscon- si~:Ti~e at Mid-life" will be the topic of a t~o-

seminar for personal reassessment and reconc a- d_ay F b 9_10 at USD. Dr. Evelyn Eaton Whitehead ~nd lion e . D Whitehead members of the theological Dr. James . ' will be facilitators and the faculty of Notre Dame, workshop fee is $65. · d b Information about both programs can be obtaJ.ne Y calling 293-4585. ~~~-~-------~~=:::::::=.::=::::::-~--------..,~------.

EVENING TRIBUNE

FEB 2 1980 Notre Dame official sets USO lecture

Feb. 11. His announced topic is "The American Priest TQday." Bishop Thomas J. Grady of the Orlando, Fla., Catholic Diocese will speak on "A Bishop's View of the American Riest" at a 7 p.m. banquet Feb. 15. Among the other convention speakers are the Rev. rv.sgr. J. Warren Holleran of the Vallombrosa Center in rv.enlo Park; the Rev. James Gill, Harvard University p;ychiatrist; and the Rev. Robert Pelton, of the Notre :came Institute for Clergy Education. The convention is open to clergy and laymen.

The Rev. Vincent Dwyer, director of the Center for Human Development at the University of Notre Dame, will speak on "Guilt: A Christian Response" at 8 p.m. Feb. 10 at the University of San Diego. Proceeds from the lecture, for which the suggested donation is $5, will go to the National Organization tor Continuing Education of Roman Catholic Clergy, which is holding its seventh annual convention Feb. 11-15 at the Royal Quality Inn, 4875 N. Harbor Drive. Dwyer is author of the Genesis II scripture progra~, founder of Ministry to Priests, and a prayer symposia )ecturer He will also address the convention at 8 p.m.

as Gonzaga guard James Shep- pard, left, can do little l)\lt wa~ch. Gonzaga won conference game 72-62. - Photo by John Gibbins

BIG REACH Forward Rrad Levesqur of USD stretches skyward for a rebound in last night's game rn the Sports Arena -

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