News Scrapbook 1980

4 Part 111-Frt. Feb. a. 1980 G :n.Qt'le&ti&"~unffiile~G:-:*;----------~-------~ Pepperdine Beats USD, 70-67 1 By JOHN SCHUMACHER Times Staff Wrlttr "Keith played well-over all he did a pretty good job" Brovelli said. • -J-

EVENING TRIBUNE FEB 8 1980

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

Brovelli believes that ~he Toreros line up well with Pep- perdine but that luck Just wasn't with USD this time around. "We match up real well with Pepperdine because we do play three guards and so do they, but we have to play three guards," the coach. said. "And Fuller plays more li~e a forward. One of these times our shots are going to drop." The Toreros managed to shoot 48% from the field but poor shooting late in the gaine wiped out any chance for a wm. Rusty Whitmarsh and Mike Stockalper normally USD's best outside shooters, both missed open' shots that could have brought the Toreros back. .. "We can't afford to miss the easy shot," Brovelli·said. We have to_ struggle for every shot we get." Although 1t was Fuller and Brown who did most of the damage, Pepperdine center Brett Barnett was the one who put the game away, sinking two free throws with 29 sec- onds left to give Pepperdine an insurmountable five-point edge. The loss dropped the Toreros to 1-9 in the WCAC and 5- 13 overall, but Brovelli isn't fretting. "We're doing the right thing," he said. "I've got no com- plaints about this team." r-------------- ~~·

LOS ANGELES TIMES

.SAN DIEGO-The Pepperdine Waves have been unpre- dictable for most of the season, but now the team that was considered a strong pre-season favorite in the West Coast Athletic Conference is exhibiting very normal behavior. After struggling to a 1-5 start in conference play, the Waves havebounced back to win three straight, the latest bemg a 70-67 victory over the University of San Diego Thursday night at the Sports Arena. The 'foreros had recorded their only league win at Pep- perdine, and for a while it appeared USO might beat the Waves again. The Torreros opened up an eight-point lead early m the second half, but Tony Fuller and Ricardo Brown led a late charge to keep the Waves slim title hopes ahve. wn fimshed with 16 points and Mer had 15 points and 10 rebounds as the Waves took advantage of free- throw opportunities and poor USD shooting down the stretch. Pepperdine wound up converting 26 to 33 shots from the line, while USO was seven of eight. "T~e free throws really hurt us tonight-we got beat at the line, USO coach Jim Brovelli said. "We were really hurting down near the end.We missed four easy shots. We had the nght people shooting the ball too." With starting f?ry,rard Russell Jackson recently declared academically melig1ble, USD's thin bench was evident But the Toreros got unexpec~d help from starting guard Earl Pierce, who scored 20 pomts and showed signs of coming to hfe after an inconsistent first half of the season "Earl's a great shooter, he scored most of his points against their zone," Brovelli said. "But we need a great performance from everyone." Brovelli also got a good performance from Keith Cun- mngham, a little-used reserve pressed into ~ervice because of Jackson's departure. Starting his firSt game, Cunnil18· ham had only four points and four rebOund. but played a strong defensive game. '

USD Finds Another Way to Lose One BJ JOHN SCHUMACHER Tim" Stiff WrHtl' SAN DIEGO-Although they took a different path, t~e University of San Di~o ended up ,in an all-too-fam1har destination Monday mght-the losers locker room. Usually Jim Brovelli's club g~ts in foul _trouble early and is beaten inside. But this time 1t was cnt1cal ~istakes th 350 at enabled North Texas State to post an 83- 73 win before fa~i!t ¥~I'e~os stayed even with North :rexas State until the game's final nine minutes when they turned the ball over four times on potential breakaways to end any hopes of pulling out a victory. Trailing 68-62 with 4,08 Jefl, USD _still had a chance . when Keith Cunningham blocked a pair of shots. B~t the Toreros committed two straight turnovers and the v1S1tors never looked back. T Forward Ken Lyons scored 23 points for North State and center Billy Don Hardaway added 17, but USD s inside tandem of Bob Bartholomew and Brad Levesque put up a game fight against their quicker opponents. "They both played excellent defense," Brovelli said. "l thought Brad played about his best game of the yeahr. 1 f~} we missed three or four breakaways m the second. a . we could have capitalized, it might have been a different sto¥i;;le Lyons and Hardaway wound up on top of t~e scoring list it was the contribution of 6-2 guard ChriS Re nard that may have hurt the Toreros the most. Reyn- arlhad 17 points, 12 of them coming in the ~econd half on outside jumpers that kept North.Texas Stat~.m comman

LOS ANGELES 1 IMES t.t-=. ,Leo Aztecs on Road, USD at Arena S-">l te TIMI Tlmn ,

SAN _DIEGO-San Diego State will be looking ror a rhangr m fortune when 1t plays at the Univermty of Ha- wan 111 a Western Athletic Conrcrence basketball game to- n.ght al 9,35 {PST). The Aztecs have lost nine straight g,imes. slipping to 2-7 m the WAC and 5-16 overall. • rhe Umver~tly of San D1c(!o. meanwhile. will attempt to • r,, "1 a thrre -game losmg streak when it plays host to I , la-Marymounl m a WC!'t ,'oast Athletic C'.onference h ,,tbaJI l!'~m•• .11 7'10 in thP Sports Al'\'na. The Toreros I 9 m tii( W(AC anrl 5-13 overall.

COAST DISPATCH FEB !) 1980 THE BEETHOVEN CYCLE: .. concert featuring Beethoven's Op. 10 #3, Op. 26 (funeral March) & Op. 101, 4 p.m. Sunday.Ca• mino Theater, University of San Diego. Alcala l'ark. Admission: $3.50; students, senior citizens & military, $1.50 291-6480. Feb. 17: Piano

DAILY t:ALlfORNIAN rre 9 .. 1990

FEB. 17 n°'. "The Beethoven Cycle": Piano concert fea urin~ Beethoven's Op. 10 3, Op. 26 (Funeral March) and Op . 101, 4 p.m. Sunday, Camino Theater, University of S~n ~i_ego, Alcala Park. Admission : $3.50; students, senior c1t1zens and military, $1.50. Information: 291-6480. - -·

block the shot and both Brad Barnett of the waves and Bob Bartholomew of the Toreros watch the action. (Story, F-3). - Photo by Bob Redding

THAT'S TWO - Brad Levesque (50) scores a basket for USD in last night's game against Pepperdme as the Waves' Jim Hill (32) tries to

C-3

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

Friday, February 8, 1980

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against those 6-7, 6-8, 6-9 guys. "But it's like I've said all along, we have to perform well as a team to knoc~ any of these teams off. And tonight, we just didn't capi- talize on the opportunities." The Waves, 4-5 and 12-11, got most of their scoring from tl;le three guards, Brown (16), Fuller (15) and Roylin Bond (14). The Toreros were led offensive- ly by Pierce with 20 and Bartholomew with 19. USD has today off before hosting Loyola tomorrow night at 7: 30 in the Sports Arena. PEPPERDINE (70) Brown 6 4-416, Bond 62-5 12, Fuller 4 7-10 15 Bornett 02·2 2, Scolt I 4-4 6, McCullum 05-6 5; Romsey 52-212. Totols 22 26-33 70 . Stockholper 4 0-0 8, Pierce 92-2 20, Cunning- ham 20-0 4, Levesque 5 0-0 10, Borlholomew 7 5-6 19, Borbour 2 0·0 4, Whitmorsh 1 f!-0 2 TotolsJOl-867. · Halftime score - USO 34, Peppetdine 32. Foule

FRONT-LINERS JACKSON, COONE~ OUT

BULLETIN

pperdine Downs Weakened USD, 70-67

SAN DIEGO UNION

f£8 1 3 1980 And for those who enjoy a littl_e classical music, there's alway~ t~1s week's installment of the con!mumg The Beethoven Cycle. This week 26 master's Opus 10 number 3, Op~s and Opus 101 starting at 4 p_.m. ~n the Camino Theatre of the University of . senes, finds . • ith the the piano v1bratmg w

98D

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Weary USD Engages Lions .In Sports Arena

several of them, Pepperdine got the rebound

tunities - actu~lly -

- And then Fuller twice failed to convert the front end of a one-and-one, giving the Toreros two more ·opportunities. But Rusty Whitmarsh, Pierce and Keith Cunningham missed from outside. And under- neath, the only Torero around was the 6- 7 Bartho- lomew. Senior center Brett Bar- nett added two free throws and Bartholomew, a final basket at the buzzer. "You can't blame this Joss on any one player" the coach said afterward. "Keith Cunningham did a good job for us defensively, and Rusty Whitmarsh got some rebounds for us

( Continued from C-1) The Toreros were hurt worse, however, by Brad Levesque's absence during most of the second half. Levesque, a 6-7 junior,. is usually the only Torero be- sides Bartholomew who does the job consistently on the boards. But when he gets into foul trouble, as he did last night, USD has a habit of losing the lead and the game. USD actually moved out to its biggest lead of the night at 44-36 on Bartholo- mew's free throws with 15:44 remaining. A few minutes later, Levesque left and the Toreros went into their three-guard offense. Only this time, the guards weren't hitting from the outside. "We had the shots, and the right people taking them, but they just didn't fall," Brovelli sighed. Pepperdine tied it at 52- 52 with 9:46 to go on a steal and layup by guard Ricar- do Brown, went ahead 54-52 on Danny Ramsey's two free throws, then were

caught by Bartholomew's breakaway layup. Pepperdine went in front for good on Ramsey's jumper from the side, and held USD off during the next five minutes. But USD still had oppor-

(66-63). Tony Fuller fol- lowed with two from the . line, to make it 68-63.

to pull this one

out m the closing minutes. It went like this: - USD was down, 66-62,

- After a USD timeout. and ~artholomew went to Darryll Barbour hit a the !me for two shots. He jumper from the top of the missed the second, and key (68-65).

The roster is reduced to 10 players, the coach's hair is getting grayer, and the Umversity of San Diego still . h.as seven games remammg. . The Toreros, 5-13 and 1-9 m the West Coast Athletic Conference, host league op- ponent Loyola tonight at

7: 30 in the Sports Arena. Loyola, which edged USD two _weeks ago (83-80), is commg off a 92-90 loss to usr The Toreros, mean- while, lost to Pepperdine, (70-67) two nights ago. The Lions are led by Jim Mccloskey, a 6-7 forward averaging 21.9 points, Jeff Moore, a 6-3 guard (12.7) and 6-6 center Michael An- toine (10.6 and 8. 7 rebounds). The remaining starters are guards Dan Davis (9.6) and forward Ar- thur C)aybion (3.6 and 5.4) .. Agamst USF, McCloskey hit for 32 points and :Woore 18. In the prev10us meeting between the teams, the for- ward scored 24, while An- toine added 17 rebounds. ''McCJoskey's a great shooter," Brovelli said "and that's something w~ have to be very concerned with. And we've got to keep Antoine away from the boards. He killed us last time." USD will counter with guards Mike Stockalper (10.8) and Earl Pierce(l2.4), center Bob Bartholomew (15.3 and 7.7 rebounds), and forwards Brad Levesque (6.6 and 5.7) and Keith Cunningham (1.5 prev10usly as a reserve). USD will engage North Texas State Monday in a 7:30 contest at USD.

San Diego. 291-6480.

READER FEB 1 41980

DEL MAR NEWS PRESS

FEB 141980 THE BEETHOVEN CY- CLE. a series of S11nda, concerts hy Univcrsit~ ;,£ -... San Diego faculty members will continue on Feh. 17 at .1 p.m. in the Caminn Theatre at the Universil\· of San Die- go. For progra~ and ticket information call the fine Arts Department 0

"Love" author Leo Buscaglia of USC will speak on the inter- relationship between emotions, love, and personal relationships, Thursday, February 14, 8 p.m., Camino Theatre, USD, Alcala Park. 291-6480 x4296. . .....,~•-

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:.- EVENING TRIBUf FEB 8 1980

USD coach maintains faith despite defeats By NICK CANEPA NCAA Division II status

VISTA PRESS rte 1 o 1980 uso·--b;~i;JJ by Loyola SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - , Sixth man Robert Worthy came in to score 29 points to lead Lo- yola of Los Angeles to a loo-82 victory over foul-plagued Uni- versity of San Diego in a West Coast Athletic Conference bas- ketball game Saturday night. Worthy, a 6-5 forward, also , pulled down nine rebounds as · Loyola improved its record to 5-5 in the WCAC. San Diego has a 1-10 league record.

CARLSBAD JOURNAL FEB 9

1980 THE BEETHOVEN CYCLE~ I ' Feb. 17: Piano concert featuring Beethoven's Op. 10 #3, Op. 26 (funeral March) & Op. 101, 4 p.m. Sunday, Ca- mino Theater, University of San Diego, Alcala Park. Admission: $3.50; students, senior citizens & military, $1.50. 291-6480. / SAN DIEGO UNION FEB 1 3 1980 Love, Emotion Lecture Set ill s eak on of Southern Callf~rnp~is:nal ielation- love emotion an at the Caz . ' t 8 p m tomorrow . f ships a · · t the University o Camino Theater a san Diego. . LA JOLLA LIGHT FEB 141980 aglia, professor .of t the university Dr. Leo Buse special educati~n a.

turnovers), led Pepperdine into Division I and the most of the way and were strong West Coast Athletic up by as much as eight Conference. points with 15 minutes to· The result: growing play. But when forward pains. The Toreros are 5-13 Brad Levesque got into foul overall and 1-9 in WCAC trouble, so did USD. Levesque was ticketed "Patience . . . at least . with his fourth foul with that's what I'm trying to 14:13 remaining and the convince myself and my lead was surrendered with ,. stomach," said Brovelli. 9: 44 left. The Toreros never "We're used to winning at regrouped, despite the USD. We had a good Divi- Waves' apparent willing- sion II program, but we're ness to give it away near play. .

READER FfB 1 4 1980 Lectures

When the season finally draws to a close for the University of San Diego's basketball team, there will be at least two dry eyes in the house. They will belong to Jim Brovelli, optimist. Even after last night's 70- 67 loss to Pepperdine in the Sports Arena, a game USD very easily could have won, Brovelli had no complaints. Complaining probably would be easy for the coach after what has happened to his club this season. He has lost four front-line players for the year. Paul Appleby and Ken Cooney went down with injuries, while Joe Evans (midseason) and Russell Jackson (last week) were declared aca- demically ineligible. So, Brovelli now has just 10 players to work with, and it couldn't have hap- pened at a more inoppor- tune time for the program. Because this is the year USD took the big step from

Fu nd ing of Public Education will ~e debated in a symposium entitled Can Public Education Survive Freedom of Choice, Vouchers T C d . , ax re its or the Status Quo?" . h • , ·1 Wit pamc,pants Jack Coons, Thomas Sowell, and Thomas Shannon Thursday, February I 4 8 ' Sch I f ' p.m., oo o Law Counroom USO Alcala Park. 291-6480 x4i 96 _ '

the end,

going to have a good Divi- sion I program, too. We're respectable in this league. Ask any coach. "When we made the move (to Division I), a Jot of people said no. But if we had the four kids we've lost this year, ·we'd be some- where in the middle of the pack. I'm convinced of that." Performances such as the one his team put on last night lead the coach to be- lieve that. The Toreros, very patient and cautious (they committed only eight

In the last two minutes, USD was forced to foul, but Pepperdine forward Tony Fuller missed two opportu- nities to ice things at the foul line. The hosts then worked for some good shots, but they wouldn't drop. "We couldn't capitalize on the breaks at the end," Brovelli continued. "They' missed free throws to give us the opportunity and we got the good shots we were looking for."

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EVENING TRIBUNE

HAZEL TOW TRIBUNE Sociely Ediror

San Diego Symphony - .Peter i:ros conducts violinist Yehu~i M~~uhin. 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat. anJf d 2:30 p.m. Sun.m Civic Theatre, 202 _c St. 23~-9721: The Beethoven Cycle - San Diego Umversi continues its Beethoven series with piano conce~t in Camino Theater, on campus at Alcala Park. 29\if' 6480.

_The .Friends ~f Music of the University of San Diego 1s sponsormg a musicale Feb. 24 to benefit the university's music scholarship fund. The 3 p.m. program will be given in the Mission Hills home of Mr._and Mrs. Thomas B. Robertson and followed by a wme and cheese reception. . Featured in the musicale will !>e Peggy Lister and Ruthann l_'remear, dual pianists, and the USD Fac~ty Tno,_Henry Kolar, violinist; rjorie Hart, cellist, and Nicolas Reveles, pianist. ~rs_. Albert Fischer is chairman of.tti~ vent and ass1st1~& are the Mmes. Joseph Brock, Philip Lar- sen, Lillian Berger and William B. Rick. Mrs. Brock is taking reservations.

CORONADO JOURNAL

FEB 1 4 1980

0 CYCLE"

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Feb. 17 "The Beethoven Cycle": Piano concert featuring Beethoven's Op. 10 No( 3, Op. 26 (Funeral March) and Op. 101, 4 p,,n. Sunday, Camino Theater, University of SanDi~o. Alcala Park. Admission: $3.50; students, senior citizens and military, $1.50. Information: 291-6.fBO.

"THE aeeT~~~;~ring see· Plano cone ~o No 3 op. 26 thoven's Op. 1 ' · o' 101 (Funeral Mt;:):;i. 1fat the 4 p.m. St~eater University ot Alcaia P_ar_k_. _ _ _

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