News Scrapbook 1980
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SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE JAN 1980
SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 6 198Q Seattle Raps USO, 99~7 6 S!lecial to lite San Diego UniGII SEATTLE - Jawann Bernard Hill Larry Brooks (12) -
LEMON GROVE REVIEW JAN 3 1980
YSD at Portland
National History Day Contest Open to 6th To 12th Grade Students Registration is now open for students in grades 6 thru 12 to compete in the San Diego region's National History Day, set for April 12, 1980, at U. of San Diego. The theme for National His- tory Day 1980 is "The Indi- vidual in History." Students entering the contest may pre- pare papers, films, demonstra- tionss, plays or an y other form of presentation to ex- plain their theme. The University of · San Di- ego will act as the host uni- versity for the competition, which will be judged by pro- fessors of history at colleges ; and universities, professional staff members of historical societies, social studies teach- ers and members of the com- munity. "For more than a decade, enrollment in history courses has been decHning," notes Dr. Ray Brandes, dean of UCD's Graduate School, and coordi- nator of National History Day. "This program is de- signed to help revive interest in history by allowing stu- dents to work outside the classrooms in an imaginative and creative manner. We hope that it can generate the same type of interest that science fairs do." Teachers and students in- terested in participation in National History Day 1980, can call the Graduate School at 29J.4524.
itS concert
Beethoven Cycle--USD continues
Si,edal to TIie Times .PORT~D-The University of San , will open its West Coast Athletic Co~ference b~ketball season on the road· tomght at 8 oclock against the University of Portland. . The yisiting Toreros are 3-4 as they be- gm thell' first season in the WCAC.
series presenting the cycle of 32 Beethoven Piano Sonatas. Father Nicolas Reveles, Ilana 1 Mysior and Michael Bahde perform Op. 14 No . 2, Op. 31 No. I, Op. 54 and Op . 81a (Les Adieux) Jan. 20 at 4. Camino Theatre, USQ,. Alcala Park . Tickets: 291-6480.
from the field in the torrid 22-3 surge that decided the final outcome. USU could come no closer than a 15- point deficit in the second half despite 20 points by Rusty Whitmarsh in the final 20 ·minutes. Jac'kson led ll§1l with 22 points while fhree other players - Carl Ervin (16),
( 13) and
joined Oldham in double figures for Seattle. Q§Q is now 0-2 in confer- ence play and 3-6 for the season. Seattle is 1-1 and 3- 6. The Toreros return home to host St. Mary's in a con- ference test at the Sports Arena Wednesday at 7:30.
Oldham scored 28 points including 16 in a first-half spurt that carried Seattle University to a 99-76 West Coast Athletic Conference victory over the University of Ban Die[O here last night. Russell Jackson and Bob Bartholomew led the Toreros to an early 18-11 lead but Oldham and his mates then outscored the visitors, 22-3, and forged a 46-26 halftime edge. Seattle hit 18 of 25 shots USD (76) JOd(son l 12·1412, Pierce 6 1-313, BartflOlo- mew 33:31, Levesque I J.2 3, St(ld(olper20-1 4, CunnmgflOm l 1·2 3, Whitmarsh 8 4-4 20 Barbour I0-2 2, RobinsonO 0-0 O, Motes o 0-0 o'. S 8oum90fdner 0.1).() 0. Totals 'll 12·31 76. EATTLE (19) Oldham 13 2 • 21, Ervin 72·3 16, Barnes JJ.l 9, Hill l J.S 13, Manuel 22-2 6, Fears 4 0-2 8 P~ricin 11).() 2, Martin I 0-0 2, Brooks 4 4-7 12'. Miles I I).() 2, CoPOn O I).() 0, Kennedy O J.2 I Totals 4117•3019. · Halftime Score-Seattle 4.l, USO 26. Fouled out-Levesque, Borlhoiomew. Totol foutr- USDU,Seattle12, Technicals-Hill. A-1,500. tiSJ2 BASKETBALL Jan 9-St. Mary's (arenol, 12-Santo c• ,, !arena) l&-ot Lorolo, 19-ot Peppera , , 23-ot USF, 26-Air Force, 29-ot Son, Cloro, 31-Gonzago (arena). Feb 7-Pepperdine (orenal, 9-Loyo: larenol, 11-Norlh Texos Stole, 16-USF lareno), 19-ol St. Mory's, 21-ot Gonz090, 2&-Seattle (arenol. Mor I-Portland (oreno) KEY-Santo Clora ond USF home games I P.m., rest begin at 7:30.
SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 3 1980 -~--- MEETS PORTLAND IN WCAC DEBUT
.USD Finds Itself In Underdog Role
By AILENE VOISIN Special To The San Oie,io Union
pear to have a big edge up front. They start 6-5 Rick Raivio, All-WCAC last year and one of three Pilots av- eraging 16 points per game, and 6-5 Bill Krueger at for- ward, and 6-7 Russ Dyer at center. The other scorers are guards Darwin Cook, 6-3, and Jose Slaughter, 6-4. Portland, and the other fastbreaking conference teams, will be aided by two WCAC innovations: a 45- second clock and counting player control fouls as team, rather than personal infractions. The time limit is not in effect during the final five minutes or overtime peri- ods. "That's going to hurt be- cause most of the other teams are quicker, and have a lot more talent than we do," he admitted. "I think the race will be between USF, Portland, Seattle and Pepperdine." As for his Toreros? "I'm not a very good prophet. We'll just take the games one at a time." Like any underdog. • • •
tournament. All they can do now is win the conference. Dan Belluomini, in his sec- ond year as head coach, has probably the league's top player in forward Guy Williams (6-8), and several other outstanding young- sters in Billy Reid (6-5), Wallace Bryant (7-0) , Quin- tin Dailey (6-3), Raymond McCoy (6-1), and Mike Rice (6-7). The 9-1 Dons have depth (Bart Bowers, David Cornelius, and John Hegwood), speed, size, and just about everything else. They should even survive the loss of All-America Bill Cartwright. Seattle- In Jawann Old- ham, a 7-0 senior, the Chief- tains have the best center in the conference, and one of the best guards in Carl Ervin (6-1). They also have size up front with forwards Bernard Hill (6-8) and Scott Copan (6-7), and depth with reserves Oliver Manuel (6- 6) and Larry Brooks (6-8). Ervin is the top scorer (19.4), followed by Oldham (16.2) and Tony Barnes (6.4). The Chieftains are only 2-5, but Coach Jack Schalow thinks it's just a , matter of time before they're in a class with the conference powers.
have turned it around and won seven straight. New Coach Jim Harrick, an as- sistant last year to UCLA's Gary Cunningham, has plenty of talent in guards Ricardo Brown (6-1) and Roylin Bond (6-2), forward Tony Fuller (6-4), and plen- ty of height in Scott McCol- lum (6-9) and Brett Barnett (7-0). Brown and Fuller are averaging 20 points per .game while shooting 55 per- cent. Consensus is that Pep- perdine, runnerup last year, will be right up there with Portland, USF and -Seattle. Portland- Although the Pilots have lost three straight (to Hawaii, Pacif- ic, and Fresno State), they have three outstanding players in Cook, Raivio and Slaughter. They Jack a dominating center, but could still be the team rep- resenting the WCAC in post-season competition. St. Mary's- Bill Oates, former coach of Athletes- In-Action, takes over a
Jim Brovelli, the ~r- sity of San Diego basketball coach, laughed when one of his :!Ssistants bemoaned the recent Chargers loss against the Houston Oilers. "I told you guys not to count the Oilers out,'' he said. "They've got a good defense, a lot of depth, and besides,·' he grinned, "I like the underdog." You knew there had to be a reason. Brovelli, whose Toreros begin West Coast Athletic Conference competition to- night at 8 at the University of Portland, are like the Oilers - obvious under- dogs. Only they don't have the luxury of a recovering Dan Pastorini and Earl Campbell on their roster. Or even a Rob Carpenter, for that matter. Not this year, anyway. Instead, the 1980 Toreros are a healthy, but dwin- dling group of players who have some obvious disad- vantages on the morn of thei, first-ever conference game. Since the season began, Yfil)..has: -Lost starting center Joe Evans, formerly the team's leading scorer and rebounder. because of aca- demic inehgibility. -Lost potential starting forward Paul Appleby, a 6-5 junior transfer from Cen- tral Arizona, with a knee injury. -Had to adjust its of- fense considerably, moving forward Bob Bartholomew to center, and junior col- 1ege transfer Brad Levesque from a reserve to starting role. "There 's no question about it, this could be a very long season," Brovelli said, noting tile current 3-4 record. "We'll be the small- est team in the conference, and without Evans, we lack bulk in the middle." Without Evans, USD starts a front line comprised of the 6-7 Bar- tholomew (16.3 points and 9.6), 6-7 Levesque (3.6 and 3.9), and 6-5 small forward Russell Jackson (8.9 and 3.0). The teams' strength, thus far, has been the backcourt of Earl Pierce (15.0 points) and Mike Stockalper (10.4). Pierce, in particular, has come on after a slow start. But the Pilots, 6-4, ap-
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YS.ll Loses, 99-76 SEATTLE (Al)-Jawann Oldham a 7-foot senior center, scored 28 poi~ts "' and don:imated inside play as Seattle I Urnvers,ty scored a 99-76 West Coast Athletic_ Conference victory over the Urnvers1ty of Sao Oif,i'll Saturday 111 1 mght. S ) After Russell Jackson and Bob i.S Bartholomew led San Diego to an 1t I early 18-11 lead, Oldham scored 16 - pomt~ as Seattle went on a 22-3 scor- g I mgbmge. J;, . Seattle led at halftime, 46-26, hit- ...., tmg _on 18 of 25 shots for 72% from J thef!eld. Sa!"' Diego was unable to cut its def1c1t to _less than 15 in the second half, despite 20 Points in the half by guard Rusty Whitmarsh. Carl Ervin ~ored 16 Points for Seattle, which is 1-1 in conference and 3-6 overall. Jackson had 22 to lead San Diego, which fell to 0-2 in the WCAC and 3-6 overall.
SAN-DIEGO UNION
JAN G 1980
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:;~.:~~· Gallery: Closed during holidays. Univer~ of San Dieqo.
SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 5 1980 r------- lN WCAC ACTION
team that will rival USO as the league's small~he only starter over 6-5 is for- ward Peter Thibeault (6-6). But three of the Gaels, in- cluding David Vann (6-4), Here's a brief look at the Allen Cotton (6-4) and Ted WCAC teams : Wood (6-2) are shooting Gonzaga- Like l.!fil2.. the over 50 percent. The Gaels, Bulldogs (5-5) are new- 3-7, finished sixth last sea- comers to the conference. son. They finished 7-7 last year Santa Clara- The Bron- as members of the Big Sky cos sorely miss John Conference, and 16-10 over- McNamara, last year's 6-10 all. Forwards James Shep- starting center who trans- pard (6-4) and Carl Pierce ferred to Cal. With (6-4) lead the offense with McNamara, Londale Theus 13.1 and 11.1 points, respec- and Kurt Rambis, the Bron- tively. The other starters. cos (4-5) had a lineup that are guards Don Baldwin (fi.: could compete with any- 2) and Eddie White (6-5), body. Without McNamara, and 6-10 sophomore center th- 's :-re still tough, but not Duane Bergeson. They 're 1;.!l!'rly as physical. Theus looking ahead. . Jl-3) and Rambis (6-8) are Loyola- New head coach · the top scorers with 19.7 Ron Jacobs has his own and 17.3 averages. The solution to the height prob- other starters are John Ko- lem - he starts three for- valeski (5-10), Ted Whitt- wards. The Lions, 4-7, play ington (6-7) , and Gary Car- Jim Mccloskey (6-7), Ar- penter (6-5). They have thur Claybion (6-7) and Mi- experience, but no big man. chael Antoine (6-6) up Could surprise a few peo- front, and Jeff Moore (6-3) pie, though. and Dan Davis (5-11) at USF- If the Dons guard. McCloskey is the top weren't on probation this scorer, with a 17.5 average, year, they would probably followed b'y Moore (10.3) be the team representing and Davis (9.6). But realist- the WCAC in the NCAA
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Sentinel
HISTORY DAY Students in grades six through 12 may register for . the, San Diego regions s National H. istory Day, April12 at th_e University of SsYJ D1e1zo. students entering the contest may prepare papers, films demonstrations, play~ or other forms of a presentation to explain this year'. theme "The Individual in History." Entries will be judged by professors of history from various colleges and universities, along with social studies teachers and members of historical societies and the community. For information, call 293-4524.
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Toreros Battle Seattle Tonight Special To The San Diego Union S~ATTLE - The University of San Die o Toreros won t have to battle the fog tonight in Seat~ but the tt!vyehaadn Tehven dtougher_ time against the Chieftain~ . urs ay agamst Portland. . ~ . which dropped its West Coast Athletic C011ference aathaPlofrhtloaunrdb (£98-76), was delayed en route and · . e ore game time. The team made It to Seattle University intact how andf ready to meet a Chieftains' team tha't Jos~v~f~
Sunday, January&, 19 80
UN~VERSITY OFFERS MUSIC COURSE Twentieth Century Music is the subject of Michael Bahde's Intersession '80 m . ff d ' USlC course o ere by the Umversity of San Die"o starting Monday. = Bahd~'~ course will study a survey of modern composition methods, including the evolution of new scales, _meloclf~ lines, chordal combinations and rhythm, m addition to studying composers past and present. Persons interested in taking the music course should call the university at 293-4524 f . tration information. or reg1s-
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con erence opener to Uni- versity of San F;ancisco i:1 overtime, 82-74. The Toreros (3-5) will start regulars Mike Stock- alper (10.0) and Earl Pi- erce (15.4), Russell Jack- son (10.5) and Brad Levesque (3.5), and Bob Bartholomew (16.3). Jackson, a 6-5 senior had his best game of the s~ason against the Pilots Thurs- , day, scoring 22 points and adding six rebounds. Bar- tholomew, moved to the middle last WPP!( continues to play consistently. He c_ontributed 16 points and fnushed with six rebounds. But at 6-7 and 225 pounds t~e f~rmer Kearny High st ar gives up considerable height to Seattle's 7-0 cen- ter Jawann Oldham. And neither Jackson or Lflvesque are strong rebounders. The lack of board strength was apparent agamst Portland, with U&> bemg outrebounded 44 to 29. Se_attle, conversely, is considered a good frontline team. Against USF, Old- ham scored 18 and received ample support from for- wards Barnard Hill (6-8) and Oliver Manuel (6-6). The Chieftains, also 3.5
EVENING TRIBUNE JAN 7 1980
San Diego, Monday, J,
Hard wo'l\k paying off fol! Azt Toreros, Crusaders and Gulls find going rough on weekend
ically, Jacobs feels the Lions are a few years be- hind Portland, USF and Pepperdine. Pepperdine- After a slow start (1-3), the Waves
FOOTBALL ODDS AFC Plo1offs Pittsburgh 10 over Houston iFC PloYOff Los Angeles 3 c,er Tampa Bay
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The University at San Die~D had an uneventful trip to the Northwest, where the Toreros lost to Portland Thursday night and then were pasted Saturday ~y Seattle 99-76. Russell Jackson's 22 points paced llfill which now stands 0-2 in West Coast Athletic Conference play and 3-6 overall. The Toreros are back in town this week to battle St. Mary's in a league contest at the Sports Arena Wednesday night at 7:30, Point Loma College reached the finals of its Point Loma Invitational tournament only to be turned back by Biola, 61-52 Saturday night. The Crusaders (10-7), who were behind most of the way, were led by Jim Freeman and Mark Peyton, who collected 11 points apiece. U.S. International University (3-7) knew it was in for a rough time Saturday agamst Boston University (7-1) and the visitors lived up to their billing, thumping the Gulls 111-80. USIU, which will play the first of five straight road games Wednesday night at Northern Arizona in Flagstaff, was paced by Presnell Gilbert's 24 points. UCSD lost to Northridge 87-76 last night, a defeat that brought the Tritons record to 7-7. In junior college action Saturday, San Diego City and P~omar got off to good starts in Mission Conference play as the Kmghts (9-2) whipped Chaffey 96-81 behind Zack Jones' 40 pomts, and Palomar (7-8) upended Citrus 82-74 as Terry Jones tossed in 34. Another Mission Conference member, Southwestern, was not as fortunate as the Apaches (3-6) dropped their league opener, 97-89, to powerful Riverside, despite Harold Meredith's 21 points. Meanwhile, Grossmont College opened South Coast Conferertr play Saturday and the Griffins found the going tough, as they dropped a 114- 93 decision to Santa Ana . The Gi'iffs were paced by center M~rk Price, who scored 32 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. In Desert Conference action, MiraCosta College opened league play on a sour note osing to Mt. San Jacinto 70-64. Mesa College, another outh Coast Conference member, was idle Saturday following its 85-83 nonleague loss to Golden West Frfday. The Olympfans opPn league play Wednesday night when they-play host to Grossmont.
If someone had told Dave Gaines a week ago that his San Diego State basketball team would be going for its third straight Western Athletic Conference win tomorrow night, the coach probably would have ushered that person to the nearest doctor. After all, the Aztecs were 3-7 heading into their WAC opener against Colorado State Thursday night and had showed no signs of pulling out of their slump. So quite a few people were surprised when the San Diegans played well and defeated the Rams 86-71. Then, Saturday night, the Aztecs found themselves underdogs once
SAN DIEGO UNION JAN 4 1980 Portland Builds Lead, Bombards Toreros PORTLAND - Reggie
again as the University of Wyoming (10-3) came calling at the Sports Arena. But with three freshmen playing most of the second half, San Diego State rallied from behind to club the Cowboys 65-57. That
Area Roundup
Earl Pierce scored 18 points for USO and Bob Bartholomew added 16. The loss was the fifth in eight outings for the Toreros. The impressive victory by the Pilots was their seventh in 11 games. USO (76) Sfockalper 1Sl 7, Barbour I0-02, Cunning- ham I 1-3 3, Coone, I I).() 2, Pierce 81-2 18, Jockson 86-912, Bartholomew72-216, Robin- son I 1-2 J, Leveme OJ.; J. Totals 23 20-27 76. U. PORTLAND (98) Ohver 11- • 4, Willioms 22·26, Cook a 2-218, HO!PZ O1-21, Krueger 20-0 4, Johnson I0-0 2, Sloughler 50-010, Over60-1 IZ Roidio 5 7-817, Logon 74-4 18, Welson OH 4, Beord 11).() 2 Tctols 3812-27 98 · Holffime Score: U. Portland 52, USO Jl. Tofol •ouls: USO 21 Portland 21. Technical foul: Slaughter (Pl
makes Gaines' men 2-0 in the conference with a chance to go 3-0 when they meet Hawaii here tomorrow night at 7:30 in the arena. "Isn't this something?" asked Gaines. "We're playing better - much better. We're working hard, that's the key. If you play hard in practice, you play hard in games, and we've been doing that." The Aztecs got off to a horrible start against Wyoming, falling behind 9-0 in the early going. But the hosts scrambled back to make it respectable - 29-25 - at the break. · It was then that Gaines decided to go to his young team in the second half. He had freshmen Eddy Gordon, Eddie Morris and Paul McKimmey up front, with juniors Tony Gwynn and Joe Mendoza in the backcourt. With that group playing most of the way, the Aztecs rallied to bury the Cowboys. Mendoza had 15 points to lead the way, followed by Gwynn's 14 and 12 assists and Gordon's 13 points and game-high 12 rebounds. At 6-foot- 6, Gordon was the tallest man on the court for the San Diegans through most of the second half. Meanwhiler there was plenty of other action over th~ weekend ~ nvolvibg area colleges and junior colleges. -~-----~--...._ ___ ._.__,
Logan and Darwin Cook led a well-balanced University of Portland attack that car- ried the Pilots to a 98-76 non-conference basketball victory over Uniyersjt)' of San Dieey last night. Logan and Cook each scoredl8 points and three of the1r teammates also were in double figures. -. Russell Jackson had a high of 22 points for the losing Toreros, who were never a serious factor after falling behind, 52-35, by halftime.
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open with Oldham, Hill and Larry Brooks (6-8) up front, and guards Carl Ervin (6-1) and Scott Copan (6-7). Ervin led Seattle at USF with 18 points. The Toreros return to- moi:row and will begin pre- paring for th.eir WCAC home opener Wednesday against St. Mary's.
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