News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

Toreros rest 1 'i,1it win Jl,e,

SMALL COLLEGES

Toreros, Tritons • • ga,n wins I/~I 71 1,-; 0!4-ll~ Universi[y of :,an Diego spurted from a four-point halftime lead and took a 85- 59 basketball victory over Manchester College (Ind.) last night In the winners' gym. Jn other local games, UCSD defeated La Verne ff/· 75 and Fullerton dropped Palomar 67-5.'i In a junior coll g contest. Bob Bartholomew S('ored 24 points to lead the Torero , who are 10--3 now USD trailed much or the lirsl 20 minutes, before gaining a 35-31 lntenn!Ssion lead on two straight baskets by Russell Jackson. UCSD's Triton our players In double fig- with 22 points, In gaining their home-court win. Palomar dropped to 7- night's MJSSlon Conference opener at San Bernardino. with Us ioss. Duane Gatson had 22 points in the Comets' losing effort. Summ:irlPs sen 6 .s 16; Jdvla>x 2:1-11. Grunah s 1-1 11:Jettersoo-oo:0maevi2210,DcuQtas H-412 Totals: J6 lSl017 Lo/l~fJ.t.Gorn1co,Ml6:Knl9ht7 10-10 u. Roes 4--7 u: McMara,s 10-02: Ro1>1~21-~•· Lett 10-02; PGrferio-o, L•/~ciu1:::·a,cici.,ii:"ii,~1~sclil 5 To1a11au1s-ucson,Lav.,.,,.20. placed ures, led Lee\ Brockett 7,headmg to Saturday UCSD (171 Brockett 110-0 22; Fra,itr 4' 19, Knud- L~gr.~~---~~--- ........... 41 46 -17 Maaarol I 01 l, Heoderson 6 0-0 12. OavtsUCl6,Schullz31-27,Henc onll-3 '1, Marris Sl 211. Wakellefd '0-01 •otals nl,,oav11a10-06.Babln0-1 1 I, Tatum 02-l 2, Golson II 0-1 22. Sanders 2 0-0 ,, Mo,wen 2 0-0 • Totals 247-12 55 Fulltrlun. ..... .... l9 31-'7 PalOmar..... •••••• • • •••• :S 11- SS °" - Nono. Technical lout - Bellin. Total touts - Fullerton 14, Palomar 12. MANCHESTER U,) Movtr 4 2-2 10. Brcmenberg 7 o- 1 14, Shoemaker 2 7, Olnwetl I 2-210. MtGtn- 2 l-J 6. Ho,,e 3 2·2 I. Jones I 0-0 2, Gurntll 10-01 Totals 2411 14 S'I USD(l4) Sfockalper 4 12, Piera SI 2 11. Joel ,or, S l-3 II, llorthOtomew 11-10 21 Evons 4 0-0 I. Wllllmarsh J 6. CQpener 2 1·2 5. TotoJs 31 26-72 M. Mand\esler .................... • 11 27-5' USD... ••• • •• l5 4'-14 FOll!ed FULLERTON mi fli.'~rn.s Hom

SMALL COLLEGES

Jriton Cagers Resp9nd To Support /,2 I ;"1 By HANK WESCH Division play, it was one of their top efforts of the season.

L~, 0 --ds T orero Band better job on the averaged 23 points a garre, boards we'll be able to bre~ second among county prep more. I think we started corers and as a rond do that In our last game. , • "I'm not saymg 1 can t team All-County choice. that Y (deliberate) Mostly becau or hi size (~ play wa ., 10 I O th n) collegiate of• but I'm just not u d to It. ' fers didn't ia Uy pour In On a peel or St ockalper s but Brov Ill a among play has not changed gre~t- hand!ul of coache who w ly Hts zone-breaking ability methlng In tockalper's to shoot from long range ball handling Ills and long- onen proves valuable, and rang shooting ability.. though h a~erages just over His choic wa vmd1catP-d eight pomts per ~ame, he hen Stockalp r filled a has conststently hit double :iuch•n d d spot opposite figures against opposing hooting guard Ron Cole and zones. led lhe team tn a I . Tonight's game against The positlo h plays lhls st. Mary's has special mean- )ear L~ the But wllh Ing to Stockalper and the on exception th team- Tor ro beeause the ir oppo- mates ar di r r nt nnd nents are members of the •tockalper (wl:o 1s ~ow a West Coast t~etlc Confer• pound ) ence, a group U Djoins next has had to make c nsider- year, and are members or ar!an High lockalper had we do "short" 6-0 and 1 s last year- 1 didn't have n xt year," says Stockalper, t~at big a role," says Stock- "we want to do as well as we alpcr. "We'd run and fast can this year, then reci:ill a break a lot, and my Job was couple or players so we ll be just lo get the ball down the ready to play that caliber of or compellti_~n consistently bl dj stm n the higher NC ADivision 1 a ,ew'l ~d m _gr at play- "We're not thin mg of

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mand In the first pal!, The win left the Griffins with a 2-1 league record, 11-8 over- all. Mesa played st of the game without sconng stars Jonath Nicholas a d Tim Wright, benched for undis- closed reasons, nd fell back 46-26 early. Me now is 1-2 In league a d 12-8 overall. Joe Naylor had 26 points, Howard Smith 20 d Greg Engler 17 in the MlraCosta win which gave tlie Spar- tans 1-3 league and 5-lS sea- son marks.

Anice win under its belt, University of San Diego drew a day of rest today before moving in to Moraga and a basketball game with the St. Mary Gaels tomor- row night. The Toreros, hitting 61 per cent from the field, launched their two-game road trip last night with a resounding 87-60 victory over Hayward State In Hay- ward. Bob Bartholomew had 28 points and Mike Stockalper, playing his best game of the year, contribut- ed 19 to the winning Torero cause. On the junior college front, Gros moot whipped Cerritos 67-58 and Fullerton knorked off Mesa 102 90 m a pair of South Coast Oonfer- ence tilts, and MiraCosta scored its first Desrrt Con- ference victory, a 100-75 conquest of lmperlal Val Iey Grossmont never was headP-d after scoring eight straight points to take com- William Wang, profe~sor of law at. t.hc University of an Diego, has been ap• pointed to the White House dom tic. policy staff, as a full-time consultant.. Wang's work will be during the sp_ri3/J semester. • 1/J. ,.?,!,! . : ~f !:~~-8!_1]1

"We ran our four-corner offense very well and only made 12 turnovers in 55 minutes of play," said Cunning- ham. "We've been up and down this year beeause we haven't gotten steady guard play. But our guards (Cox and Tom Omalev) dld a ve'ry good job runmns things, especially In the second half " Omalev scored a season-high 24 points, which eclipsed his previous best of 18 In the first game or the year "li we can continue to play like that, without making the big mistakes, we can be a real contender in the league," says Cunningham. "We are going to be at a disadvantage in height along the front line against most teams, but we've generally managed to hold our own." UCSD's front line includes &-6 Lehman Brockf'tl, 6-4 Stan Hopper and 6-4 Bob Frazier while &-6 Scott Knudsen has been the first front line player off the bench. Knudsen, who has been sldeUned with a pulled back muscle for th past two weeks, contributed 11 points against Cal Baptist. Brockett I ads the team tn scortng with a 13.5 average. . The Tritons· next asslgmmmt comes tonight against cross-town rival USIU at Mira Mesa Hlgh's gym. Although USIU's w~terners lost thell" league opener to Point Loma, and are 2-16 for the season, Cunningham ls leery. "I think everyone in the league realizes that USIU 1s a eeping giant," says Cunningham. "We will have to worry about rebounding against them and hopefully get good guard play again. We only made one mistake In 15 minutes of overtime against Cal Baptist." SMALL COLLEGE NOTE - Pomt Loma (1--0 in I ague, 12~ overall) takes on Azusa-Pacific (0-1, 6-14) at Point Loma in tonight's other San Diego small college contest. Polnt Loma guard Pat Hedman has already eclipsed the school's seasonal assist record with 12 regular season contests still to play. Hedman has dished out 165 as lsts while opUng to taKe only 56 shots himself. Jeff Armstrong held the preVI0US Crusader assist standard o! 162 . . USD, fresh from a pair of wlns on the road at SL Mary's and Hayward State last week, goes from the frying pan to the f e thls weekend when the Toreros travel to Bayou Oountry to take on Southeastern Louisiana and th University of New Orleans.

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By U K f CH !Off wrtttr, Tile San DltllO Un!Gn

As he was approaching the gymnasium for bis team's game last w nd, UCSD basketball coach Barry Cunn- ingham heard no· strange enough to give him pause. It was the sound of student voices, joined together and chanting "We're No. 1." "I thought for a moment I must be at Notre Dame," said Cunningham, whose roots go back to the Midwest. Hearing such chants wouldn't necessarily qualify as an oddity at most colleges. But at UCSO the students are better known for academics than athletic fanaticism. And year's basketball team, which currently has a 7-10 record, hasn't done much to generate a groundswell of enthusiasm. Hence Cunningham's surprise. What brought mu. le to Barry's ears, however, was the annual renewal of a spirit night to support the basketball u:am for its first league basketball game of the year. UCSD's four colleges- Murr, Revelle, Third and Warren- all tried to outdue each other in creating hljinx and noise. Consequently, what Cunivngham as'iCSsed as the largest crowd In UCSD history- around 1,400 - was on hand for the game. In the assembly were: -A number of male students in fP.male dress acting as cheerleaders, one of which was selected to reign as "Spirit Queen" for the year. -Students in costumes of various kinds which included the UCSD version of Supennan and the Triton equivalent of the "Coneheads" on television's Saturday Night Live ow. :ro UCSD athletic director Judy Sweet, it resembled a scaled-down Mardi Gras as much as anything. Ultimately the basketball game matched the crowd In entertainment value, however, as UCSD prevailed In three overtime over cal Baptist or River Ide, 83-81. John Cox made rive free throws In the final o ertlme ses.51on to dec1d the outcome. "It was a night like college basketball JS supposed to be," concluded Cunningham. "If anythmg's going to bring those people back for more, that game should." For the Tritons, now 1-0 in NAIA District 3 Southern

usd ~~{[64-~) Loffir;"~Ja Victb 1 ry HAMMOND, La. - Mike Stockalper climaxed a sec- ond-half rally and won the game with a 30-foot fi ld goal with O: 23 remaining last night as University of San Diego deleatr,d Southeastern Louisiana, 64~. in an inter.. ·ctional thriller The host Lions, 4-10 for th" season, led 41-29 at the half and were ahPad, 63-62 until the decisive shot by Stoc.kr alper, who scored 12 of his 14 points after intermi. ·ston. Teammate Earl Pierce also ·cored 12 of his 14 points m the second half, helping USD gain its. 15th victory n 1~ outings. USD (64) Stockalper 70-01', Capener 30-06, Pierce 7 0-0 1', Jackson 100 2 Barftlolomew • 3-4 !~ Evans81•217. Toto(s30H64. wUTHEASTERN LA. (43) Grigas 10-02, Bands~ 1S, Williams 5 0-2 10, Nard 4 2-4 10, Banta 6 4-5 16, Davis s 0-0 10. Totals 2611-1863. U,SD ............................. 29 35-64 SEastern La. .... ....... ...... 41 22- 63 Fouled Out Nono. Total Fouls - USO 18, SOUtheoslem La. 12. TTSD Wins 1//"l)Lt_ HAYWARD (UPI) - DiegoUniversity got 28 points from big Bob Bartholomew In running Its record to 13-4 with an easy 8'H O non-eonference basketball win over Hayward StateWednesday night. Mike Stockalper added 19 for the winners, while Terry Hobson hit six long bombs In the late going to lead the losers In scoring with 12 points. Hayward ls now 7-7. San

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I /1.,.. /"'?9 LA JOLLA . WILLIAM WANG, a professor of law at the University of San Diego has been ap- pointed to the White House Domestic Policy Staff as a full-time consultant. Wang's work in Washington, D. C., will be during the pring emester. He is on sabbatical leave from USO. Wang will be working on a congressionally- mandated "tudy of the federal prohibition of in- terstate branching by banks.

USO Is Defeated by New Orfeans NEW ORLEANS

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l tanned to sharpen lawyers' skills

!tlarpen legal skills or young attorneys by offering them structured, practical education rourses to help them bridge the learning and experience gap between law school lheory a'td Job markets here and elsewhere." While new attorneys out of local law schools are ti. ' primary subjects of the bar's asstst- ance effort, Wied noted that the program also will be open to newcomers from other areas wishing to sharpen their skills. Courses will include both lectw-e and semi- nar instruction, plus practical experience In the areas or: · - Pretrial criminal law procedures, with a heavy emphasis on plea bargaining and mis- dt'meanor jury trials involving - for example - sex-related offenses and drunken driving. - Will drafting, with considerable empha- sis on estate planning and trust law. - Domestic relations, including courses on divorce, child custody and guardianship. - Property issues, including residential sales transactions, landlord-tenant law, basic al'quisitions and the mechanics of escrow transactions. - Business organization, with an emphasis on the formation and operation of corpora- tloos and partnerships. - Law-office management and economics, which includes concentrated instruction on practical and ethical considerations in the flad. "This kind of concentrated, practical in- struction just isn't readily available to begin-• nillg yol!Ilg lawyers," said Wied. See LAWYERS, JU

By \\ ILi.JAM POLK Law schools m San Diego are continuing to turn out hundreds of new lawyers wilh no place to practice in a legal market already burdened by too many attorneys. This is the ronsensus among established members of the legal community here, most of whom are quick to emphasize they have no quarrel with the schools, which produce about 1,000 new attorneys annually. Obviously, lhey quickly acknowledge, turn- ing out new attorneys is the function of those institutions. But local lawyers are just as quick to point out lhe tremendous need for the legal estab- lishment here to provide some assistance to fledgling colleagues attempting to break into the tight local job market. That asststance may be closer now to becoming a reality, according to Colin W. Wied, president of the 2,800-member San Diego County Bar Association. He says the asststance will come in the form of a new program now being formulated to help yol!Ilg attorneys better cope with fierce competition in a job market that al- ready has more than 3,200 lawyers in a county population of 1. 7million. "The program is being staffed and coordi- nated by the bar association In cooperation with the University of San Diego School of Law and California Western School of Law, 'th a planned start in April," said Wied. "We haven't agreed on an official name for the program as yet. But it is being designed to

EVENING TIIIUNE

Trillulle llfto!O by Tony Doubell

Diego.The Bar Association is work- ing to help new gra

HEAD! G FOR A CRUNCH - Two future lawyers take a stroll between classes at the University of San

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JOB HUNTERS - Attorney C. Hugh Friedman, left, and Colin W. Wied, president or the San Diego County

Bar Association, go over their p an to help fledgling lawyers sharpen legal skills. - Photo by George Smith

*Lawyers CONTINI/ED FROM PAGE B·I "And, without some sort of post-graduate instruction along these lines, I really don't feel an attorney is competent to practice here or anyplace else." Attorney C. Hugh Fried- man, who also is a law professor at USD, will head the assistance program. He says he's currently recruit- ing a staff of established legal specialisL~ in various fields to serve as volunteer instructors "The actual dates and lo- cations for program seg- ments will be announced later," said Friedman 'But current plans are to offer the program lhr e or four times a year after we get started sometime in April."

·Bar association president Wied said it is hoped that graduates of the program would then be qualified -for placement on the organiza- tion's referral llsts, which it calls rotating panels. "Placement on the panels would provide these young attorneys with an almost automatic source of clients," he said. "Such placement on pan- els also would benefit the public in that it would pro- vide potential cllents with a much wider choice or bar- certified competent attor- neys for problems not re- quiring the services and ex- pertise of a more seasoned attorney "Drawing up a simple will would be an example of such a service not requiring

the expertise of a long-es- ta bllshed attorney and probably would result in a savings on fees. "Along this line, the bar association has plans to ex- pand into a computerized referral service that will more accurately match cli- ents with attorneys htmg their needs, at a fee they can afford." The Inns or Court, a pro- gram or mock criminal trial procedures, was cred ited with being the inspira- tion for the bar associa- tion's assistance effort. Superior Court Judge Louis Welsh founded The Inns of Court chapter here to give young attorneys courtroom practice.

A dinner last week honoring r.iembers of the Un iversity of San Diego's President' s Club r ew a number of La Jollans to the school ' s James S. Cop~y Library for the evening . Among them In photo top let, were Monette and Adam Kupiec chatting with Leo Roon ln photo at far left, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Westhem . n p,oto at left, Marla Lench. Above, Thomas Fleming Is In ~onversatlon with Christiane Halle. In photo above, right, Jfy and Tony Ghio. In photo at bottom right, Gloria and Ed Ser.

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