News Scrapbook 1964-1967

Rep. ·1 on favors War Declaration W,1 on hits efforts to cut Novy hous,ng--a-22 By PETER KAYE The Sao Dieg,o Union's J,>olitics Writer Rep. Bob Wilson, R-San Die- go, last night said he would support a United Slates declara- tion of war in Viel 'am. "I'm In no po ilion to say I'd advocate a declaration of war," Wilson said, "but I'm inclined to favor such a move if 1 presented properly." Wilson told a l.'nivers1lv of San Diego political forum·that he reel · a declaration of war would shorlen the conflict "and !el the enemy know we're not tooling." WOULD EASg ACTJON Such a declaration, Wilson said, would make it !'asier for the Pre idcmt to act against draft card burnmg and stopping troop trains - acts I hat would be sedil ion m wartime. '·When you Pr. tho e coffins come back," Wilson said 'you know we'n• 11'ally in a wa~. "We arc at war, :ind it would be better 11 our :n milita ly ' W1 son said the United ·ta'e should consid blockading or de lroymg the J\orth Vietna- mP~e port of Haiphong as a m1 itary action before negotla- tions

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Admiral Says Viet Is 'T ting Ground 1

reros Go After 5th Win Westerners Try To nap 2-Game Losing Streak nlversity of an Diego and I Western University will try to tend a wmnmg treak and tart one, re ped!'iely, tonight go after th lr fifth tra1ght victory wllhout a dc- fe I \I h ·n they entertain Pep- perdin Cal We. tern, lo er or I I two, pla ho t to hem Utah. ~ach game ch Phil Woolpert's n ror ro

program by the University of San r,ego's chamber orchestra, conducted by Henry Kolar. No admission will be cha1 .ed. - Tribune Staff Photo by George Sm''h

Tim O'Keefe, Laurie Meyers, George Pa- nel, David Farrell and 1 elda Nelson. The opera will be presented in the college thea- ter at 3 p.m. Sunday. It will follow a music

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EVENING TRIBUNE Calif., Thursd_ay, Dec:. 9, 1965 . ------ Pa~e 33

SECTION A FEATURES

METROPOLITAN AREA NE VS

0 To Offer 0

ECUMENICAL SPIRIT

ADVANCES HAILE!

ra

ishop Returns From Rome

Th Univer ity of San Diego

\\ omen w I pre-

Co lege !or

starts at 8.

By JDJ .\!cVICAR

, Am· hi

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Woolpert will

The little council wil, no have llie force or effect of lhe big counc,I but it will provide a means for Catholic hwrarchy to discu,s its busine,s, lhe bishop aid. , Papal Blessi11gs Brought Back. The b1shnp, w 10 brought blessings trom Pope Paul VI to· the parishioners in San Bernardino, said he felt there woula•bc no immediate fusion of churches. "It will occur eventually, but ii will be a Jong time," he said, Bishop Fure) called the new •·good feeling·· among relig1011s the ''Ecumenical spirit" and said !I 11as a manifestation o[· something deeper. a sincere Pffort toward discussion of prob- lems. World poverty was a major topic during the last lhree,month council session, and the bi•hops agreed that the church should do all in its power to alleviate the problem. "There wasn't anything the council could do directly or financially," Bishop Furey explained, ''So our eontribution con- sisted of using the prestige of the church to call attention to the problem to the people of the world through education." Related to the question of poverty was a discussion - not connected with council action - on lhe Catholic laws of fast- ing and abstinence. "As long as the bishops were in Home, the Pope decided lo get a cross section of opinions, and he received plenty of sug- gestions." . Law On Eating Of Meat Some bishops believed the law prohibiting meat eating on Fri- days should be abolished altogether except during Lent, and others felt only seminarians and people living in monasteries should abide by it. ''All the bishops from the united States were in agreement that if the law is struck from the books, there should be no distinction among Catholics - in monasteries or seminaries or not," Bishop Furey said. He said a ruling will be made, and he is conv1"Ced there will be some relaxation of the law. "It may be a while in coming because of the dtversified opinions," he said. '·But something must be done because in (Continued on a-27, Col. 2)

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San Diego t;nion Staff Writer

Tor ros o " 54--47 v.ln over V1 1to

by Gian-Carlo :Menotti unday m the co leg

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Coller at

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1 have m com or w1 h other faiths rather 1han the differences, lhe Mo t R v Francis .J. Furey said yesterday. "Thi. is he single mo. t important fruit borne of the Ecu- menical O nc1I " Bi hop Furey[ apostolic administrator of the San Diego D ocese said in an in crv1cw. Bishop Furey, fatigued after three months of hard W'Jrk n Rome as a member of the coun- cil and a 17-hour plane ride back home Satur- day. was n 1 he!~ s eager to talk about the counc I. its discussions and its deed . An interVIcw scheduled for 20 minutes in the rectory of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church here stretched o more than an hour. Earlier. the bishop had celebrated Pontifical :\lass in honor of the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. When th bi hop left San Diego last Septem- ber. he prom1Sed he 's tr:, Jo gel back to help Furey celebrate the feast here San Bernardino is part of he four- county diorese that also includes Imperial and R!verside Coun- resid~s At Nondenominational Rites "Four years ago, before the council sessions began, it would have been inconceivable for the Pope to preside at a nonde- nominational service at St. Paul's in Rome," Bishop Furey said " \nd yet he d,d, and participated w1lh ministers and priests of many other r~ 1gion,." . ·on-Catholic observers were in the council chamber for the first time. ties. Popz

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alignment tlre!l!l!l"'""l\lca

This

Wedn d,1y.

put and Clifford A hford UH) Ian Fay (&-5) at for- ward, Phil Price (6-7) at cen- crippl~ sheph~rd ter and Bernie Bickerstaff (6- boy, m the trad1twnal Chmt- 2) and Phil 'hendan (6-1) at ffi 5 opera. , 'elda , elson plays guard. his mother Pepperdme has dropped The opera t ls the story of a four games, but three of them vi It to Amahl s poor home _ by were to big-time clubs. The the Magi, who are following Waves I st to Iowa, 111-50, to the Christmas star St. LOUI , l0J.71, and to 1em- The Magi will be played by pti1s State, 85-66. Tim O'Keefe, George Panel Cal \ 'estem, which dropped and David Farrel . Lauri e a pair lo Pomona and Fre no Meyers i a,t as their page. S ate on the road earlier this Clayton Fox of the college'!i its foe. Southern utah was lne production. Featured will beat n by • ava) Trammg be the Alcala Chorale. The ac Center 79-70, la t night compamst will be Jeffner Allen got Litchfield w1ll play • ti- week, w11I be favored to L music department will direct •

-

ros day

I Thu

Preceding the opera, the Uni v rs1ty of San Diego Chambei Orchestra. conducted by Henri - Kolar, will play the "Concerti

T oreros Choice In Holiday Test •

l wversity or San Diego'l m G .Minor" by Chari~~ Avison undefeated Torero will be r·. and p vorcd 111 the sixth annual S'n "'h . 'r Hovhane Diego · 1 e pu 1c 1s mv1ted. Then tournament \\hich starts Mo will be no adm1~s on charge. l!olida~ basketbl\J Im and Fugue by Alai . bl" · - ·

High School Seniors At USO Program A counseling program for all seniors at University High School was held December 1 according to Father I. Brent Eagen, director of school rela- tions. Professors from each of USD's four academic divi- sions and the Department of Education were available to f he students for group and in- dividual counseling. The four divisions include natural sci- ·cnce and mathematics, social sciences, business administra- (i.on and economics, and hu- 1~anities, with pre-profes- ~tonal programs in medicine ?n. Mr. William Salesses, ed- uca on; Dr. Donald Peterson chemistry; Dr. Curt Spanis: b10logy: Father Charles Pat- ron. Business Administration· Dr. Paul Theil, assistant pro'. fessor of Political Science· Father John Myhan, history', and Dr. Lee Gerlach, English. The counseling program was scheduled_ and arranged by Rev W1ll1am Cornelison, di- rector of guidance and coun- seling at University High School Alcala Guild Plans Event The Mission Room at the Mission Valley Inn will be the setting for the December 14 Christmas luncheon of the Al- cala Guild of the University of San Diego College for Men. A social l\,our will proceed the 12:30 I ,.tn. luncheon. ' Chri~tmas carols sung by the College Glee Club under the direction of Rev. J. Vincent Sullivan arc on the program, along with the traditional ex- change of gifts by members and guests. Mmes. Paul MaJkut and Eric Woods arc co-chairmen.

day m C:.:a Western's Golden Co h Phil Woolperl's T rero have six members ck fro the team that de- ated Ph1hPac, 68-53, in last ye· r's final·. Thi )tar's meet will be the ~tronge t m history. ewcomers to the eight-team f eld are Eastern Washington tale, Eastern New MeA,co anrl Cali orma State at Hay- ward. Arizona Slate of Flag- staf will return to th meet for I 1e fir t time since 1961. Ser Ice entries are P Pac and Point \,Jugu, Host Cal Western figures to throw a strong challenge at U I). v.ith a veteran team mad up of eight lettermen. Four games will get the three-day event under way Monday. Point Mugu and Arizona State meet in the opener al 1, followed by the Eastern Washington-Phib Pac game at 3 University of San Diego draws Eastern New ~Texico at 7 and Cal Western plays Cal State of Hayward at 9. Winner of USD-Ea tern • ew Mexico plays winner of Pomt J\lugu-Arizona State Tue ·day al 7 wllh the Ph bPuc E ttrn Washington victor going against the Cal We tern-Cal Stale winn r at 9. The championship game Wednesday wi11 tart at 9, · pr reded by t)le third place game at 7.

T oreros Face E~ Montana In Tourney Special to The San Dieso Union A, 'ACONDA, Montana :Eastern Montana College fur- l mshes the first opposition for ymvers1ty of San Diego tonight m the Anaconda Invitational Basketball Tournament. . 'fhe contest begi.ns at 7 o'clock. . Carroll and Whitworth College from Spokane play in the sec- ond game of the four-team tour- ney at 9. The Toreros, who own a 7-1 season mark, will be Jed by Chff Ashford, the talented seni- or forward who has averaged 1 15.l points in eight games, He will be joined on the star- ting five by forward Alan Fay ,(s.y point average), center Phil Price (6.91, and guards Bernie 'Bickerstaff <8.3) and Bill Sh- Carroll College figures to be the ~mm to beat in the two-day 11Ua1• .The Helena quintet is i,~ced by sophomore Arnie And- erS0Jl, who hit 29 points in his la,t g~me and has averaged 16.2 this season. Tonv Sapit, a sophomore center with a 13.4 mean, and playmaker Jim Mal- lard, who has a 11.7 average also make the team tough. '

Special to The San Diego Union ANACONDA, Mont. - Diego sparked by sophomore guar Ted Fields, battled from behind in the final 10 minutes to defea Whitworth Coilege of Spokane Wash., 57-52, for the champion- ship of the Carroll College Invi- tational basketball tournament here last night. With season-Jong high scorers Cliff Ashford and Bernie Bick- erstaff off form, the Toreros never led until Fields triggered the late spurt that gave them the game. His jump shot with 10 minutes to play finally put USD in front after the score had been tied three times. Sophomores Rick Cabrera Bill Sheridan ~nd Dan Wight- man combined with Fields t help the Toreros protect 1h lead the rest of the way, Fields finished with 12 points to pace t USD scoring, with guard Mark Yavorsky contribut- ing 10 points. Center Rod McDonald, voted the tournament's Outstanding Player, had 16 points for Whit- worth, the event's defending champion. USD continues its Montana road trip tomorrow night, meet- mg Eastern Montana State at Billing.,. USO (57) The University or San

Toreros Head For ontana

senior ·J

170-pound

5-11,

The

guard dunked a ir of long I push shots early n the second;~ half to give USD needed mo- 1~ mentum. Meanwhile. Bicker- staff \\ a the master of !he J 1 :>0ard with 14 rebounds al- 'l J though hi club was !opp d in~ th1 depar ment, 43-36. 6 1 Bick(•rstaif paced USO 6 ~corers w,th H markers while!~ Yavorsky contributed 13. Top; 1 , pomt maker for the Aztecs was 2 ophomore R ck Evel-e h \I 1th 9 ,\ ere relatively quiet in the tight de- fen l\e ::iall game. Cliff A,h- ford, \( ho has averaged 22 pomls for USD and 18 for the pa t two se,.sons, was held to 1 seven markers while the hmky Al Skalecky collected only sev- 1,en for the Aztecs. Skalecky, an- other sopr.omore on coach reorge Ziegenfuss' improving squad catried a 17-poinl aver- 12. ' j The heral

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age mto the contest DEF~E DOlU

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