News Scrapbook 1964-1967
Dr John F. McGeever chair man of the Education Depart- ment at the University of San Diego College for Men, has an- nounced the (ll(pansio of the Teacher Education Progl-am. Three part-time professors in education have been added to the faculty: Dr. John Mac- Donald, president of Mira Costa Junior College, Dr. Ro- land K Phelps, director of psychologital services and child development at Palo mar Junio: College and Dr. Stephen J a , guidance co- ordinator oft e Department of Education, an Diego County. The Teacher Education Pro gram was e~tabhshed in the fall of l • with cour es.iead ing to the Master of Arts m Teaching degree anil tho 'tan• dard Teaching Credential with a Specialization in Secondary Teaching. The Master of Arts in Teaching in English and his- tory were added at th egin, ning of the fall emester of 1966. The present expansion has enlarged the graduate division
with arr additional program of Master of Arts in Teaching in biology economics, inter- departmental ocial sciences psychology, and political sci'. ence The new program is effec- tive In h p Ilg semester of 1967 and the course offering include Seminar in Contem• porary United States History, Monday, 6 to 9 p.m , Dr. Bran- des; Seminar in 20th Century Literature, Tuesday. 7 to 10 pm., Dr Gerlach; Research Des, and Methodology, Tue d, , 7 to 10 p.m., Dr. Isaa minar in Ecology I, Wednesday, 4 to 5 p.m., Dr Dingman; Int rnational Pol• it1cs. Wednesday, 7 to IO p.m., Dr. Theil. Economic Theory, Practice, and Public Policy; The International Economr,. Thursday, 7 to 10 p.m., Dr Miller; Counseling and Guid ance, Thursday, 7 to IO p.m, Dr. helps; Principle and Cu riculum of Secondary F:du cation, Saturday, 9 a.m. to noon, Dr. MacDonald Part1 ipat1on Education . Th chedule for these course? s to be ar- ranged. Registl'll,lion oi the ·e class- •s will take pl during reg, ular college reg stration,.Janu ary 25, and at th first class meeting thereaiiar·:, Further obtatned by calling Dr. John J\kGeewr 291,0331,ext.51 ' I Secondary 9rmat1on ma
Ecumenical Step
nd n
At Men's
rs. For yth To Be Installed As President of WSD A·uxiliary
Theology courses at the Un1ver;s1t)" of San Diego College for Men wili receive a new addit10n this semestel'. A course in Judeo-Christian history will be conducted by bbi Joel S. Goor of Temple Solcl • Rabbi Goor's addition to the College for Men a major ecumenical stet> by the Cath()J ic institullo lty marks
Rabbi Goor received a Bach elor ol Science degree at UCLA and his B.H.L. and M.A. from Hebrew Union Colleg .Jc-wish Institute of H ligion. He 1s. working towar, n doc· torate degrPe In cd ut t10n at California WestNn Univcrsity. He served as a c·hnplain in the U S. Air ~·orce at bases in I• ranee Spnin 1 and Moroc co from I 59 to 1!!61. He is active in rnmmun1ty and civic affairs 1n San Diego. A past board mPmber of the Legal Aid Sor1ety and chairman of the Sun Diego Clergymen's Commt tl'e for ~·air Hous ng. he is 1n execullvL' t,-,ard mun her f the Cit1wn Interracial been at f1ilahe1 with Caltforrna \\ e t ern il1 ver ity as a J ewi Ch&tauqua lecturer and with the 1·niv,•r 1t of California visory Comm1ll e member. Rabbi G t appo1ntmen1 I '" the theology department for .. h.. econd e m••ster was pr t d ·d by the first semester app intment of Pr Leland Carl on, Prp . tant theolo- gian at th 'laremont Grad- uate School of Theology. Dr. Carlson, vi i n professor on the Collt-g o faculty, conducted sC'rics of mo1ithly lectures on the isto ,rnd de velopm nt of 1 10n in Ame Ra ==~ --.-:.~== Commt.let• Ha l>b1 <,oor ha as an Int Jth Center A
a ontinuation of the theology , epartment's attempt to in, corpor.utl! the ecumenical spir- it oi the Sc cond Vatican Council in the curriculum of the college.
Priest J ·ns In Confab
Dr McGeever will conduct courses in Stud nt Teaching ------, and Method. Observation &
MISS KATHY DAVIS Orphanage Aid Mapped B Fraternity Members of Alpha Delta Gamma fraternity, national Cathollc social fraternity. at the University of San Diego rollege for Men are staging .hei r annual drive for clothes, toys, canned goods, and other articles for the nuns and chil- dren at the Casa de! Nino Pobre Orphanage in Tijuana. Joining in the drive is Miss Kathy Davi~. a junior at the College for Women who is this year's fraternity "sweetheart." She also 1s the fraternity's cand elate for homecoming qut•eh Anwne having i,rt cles · to contnhute is asked to call 488 7495, 298-9239, or 295 3686 before February 19. ..i.,1.1cles will he picked up by 11 embers of he fraternity. Tht will be de vi.red to the Tijuan11 orpl)anage Feb ruary 25.
San Diego, Monday, January 30, J967
©
udents Plan
WOOLPERT SATISFIED
On Social
Toreros' Offense Outdoes Defense ByP ULCOUR Defensively, ttiough, it was
something else. "We didn't do the job th- ere," said Woolpert. And the Toreros were outrebounded, 51-39, by the Waves. "We had chances to pull away and win easily, but we couldn't stand prosperity and made mistakes," said Woolpert. "We had the lead and they had to come to us, but our kids forced things and made some bad passes which made it closer than it should have been." After a 45-44 halftime defic- it, the Toreros rolled to a 13-point lead with 13: 52 to play. Faced with a zone de- fense, they stopped running and ran into trouble. The Waves chopped the USD lead to 73-70 with 7:29 to play. And, at 1: 57, it was 84-81. Gift Shots Help t:SD staved off the threat by capitalizing on its opportu- nities at the free throw line, making 12-for-12 gift shots in the last four minutes. The victory marked the re- turn lo .scoring form of senior Alan Fay, who hit seven of 10 field goals and six-for-six at the free throw line for a total of 20 points. "Alan was shooting the way he did last season," snid Woolpcrt. Fay was deadly from long range with his pet overhead shots. Field~ Shows Way Ted Fields led the way witb 23 points. "Offensively, he did a fine job," said Woolpert, who also passed out compli- ments to sophomore center Dure! Caprcnter and guard Bill Sherid., Carpenter cou ed 13 points and Sheridan got 11 With Fay and Sheridan · back in gear, the Toreros could write a fast finish to what has been somewhat of a disappointing season. The Toreros face Los Angeles State in their next home game Friday night.
!VI.HING TRIBUNE Sport, Wrlftr Coach Phil Woolpert sat in his office after another trying evening. "It wasn't our best effort, ut I'll take it," said Woolpert in reference to University of San Diego's 94-85 victory over the Pepperdine College Waves in the USD gym aturday night. . Waves Torrid, Too Offensively, it was a rou~- fng success for the Toreros, who &hot 47 per cent from the floor and 72 per cent from the free throw line. The Waves, paced by &-9 Hal Grant's 26 points, were torrid, too, with 48 per cent and 71 per cent. The Toreros deserted their usual deliberate type of of- fense for a running game and looked good in the process.
S.inday,Ja
Cuncil To ·c Sel cfed for Talks at U
cent of
age drilled in 50 p
By JOW , Y McDONALD
performances. The l~ad changed during a rough first alf with Pepperdine I~ Ying at inter- mission with a 45-44 advant- age. Keither Club led by more than three pqints with the Waves oulshpoting the Toreros, 48.6 per cent to USD's 46. The Waves' re- bound advantage, 25-20 was a lfowever, USD struck fast in the opeiihg stages of the second half with Cabrera leading the way. Cabrera, used sparingly in the first ha!f, connected for eight pomts and ignited his club to a 66-53 advantage. The Toreros couldn't sfand prosperity, however, and Grant was able to find the range and help pull his club to within three, 73-70. It was during this period that the Waves moved into a zone de- fense. But from this point, the Toreros took advantage of several fbuls and came off "1th the i':Jportant victory. Pepperdme maintained a 48-47 per cent• shooting aver- age from the floor while USD had a slim advantage from the free throw line, 72-71. Al- though USD was the victor Pet>perdine controlled th~ boards, 51-39. PEPPERDINJFl,i;~uso (94) .. G F PT Whlteho... 0 I J I Sheridan J S 11 ~J~r 1 ?~1J~~~ira s2J1s Holme!' 4 0 5 I Carpenter i i n Flowers 7 8 .c 22Wllke 1 1 s 3 1 2 3 .C Foy 7 6 -4 20 · totlas 31 f3 8 J i?f~• i J f Totals 31 23 2HS Tolals 3.S 24 27 94 j ..,.~alfhme score - PePPerdine 4.5, USO 1 telling point. '
to
floor
from th
hots
hi~
Diego ,irst
of S
University truggled t,
pace his club with 23 points. The jumping-jacl( guard was aided by Fay, who connected for 20 points, and Rick Ca- brera, who canned 18. figures. They were center Dural Carpenter and guard Sheridan, who con- tribu~ed 13 and 11 points, re- Two other Toreros hit in double
, ,sl' a t 6 ,
. EV NINO:rl TRIBUNE Wire 11.llPOrt The Toreros of the Univ,ersity of San Diego hope to .elo~e their basketball season on a high note here IBVJNE -
}\
haff and held 6fF a Pepperdme
'\\ ,'.)
last
cond h~lf-
b.d in the
the Waves
to do\ n
1ght
~85, at USO 's G)mnasium.
, '\ •"
tonight,
The Torero
who evened
l'!I
T~e Toreros will
up
be
their season mark at 8-8 cashed in on 12 free throws i~ the last four rm utes to put he gam~ away. Alan Fay, 111 Sheridan and Ted Fields ¥ere the steal!y men at the
agamst th fornia bra
niversity of Cali. in their final
gaQ1e.
, The)' go inth the tilt after a surprise loss Pomona last ght. U D 0 held J a 12-point lead with less than • 11 minutes to play, then Cal ). Poly ran off 41 consecutive pomts and w t on to a 83·65 victory. t~ _Dave Jo_nes led Cal Poly • • " 1 tn 29 pomts, 27 of them in the second half. Rick Cabrera WJlS hight for the losers with Cal Po!v of 1.
specllvely.
Away F st, Nips USO CONTINUED FROM PAGE C·I a_ 76~5 lead at 5:50. The mar- gin prove oo mucb for the Toreros I ercome. Poor ( throw sHooting damaged UfID's chances. The Toreros made only 18 of 31 attempts. The Bulldogs outshot from th e T?reros from the floor, too, with 33 for 56 for 59 per cent, as compared to 33 for 71 for 46 per cent. G~s ~fagee led the USD scormg "1th 14 points, fol- lowed by Alan Fay and Bob :\fcCiuskey with 12 apiece • McCluskey. who has SpPni most of the season on the bench. tossed in some key long shots when the Tore 05 surged in the second half. The Toreros have until Jaii 28 to work on their fundamen- tals. That'll be their neu start. . against Pepperdine in th e gym. Summary: FRl;SNO ~l F'tl\ USD llf) ft:ririt!-d-, 9 6 " 1.A Sh~ridon R1tget 1I1 'i Moloney ' 1 J 9 Caroenter ri~~;ijn 6 A 5 16 Wilke TOlbot b J o t~,.,. A~~~bold 1 i ; •~ t!::e~ f~ft~ns t l 1 M~lic~key iotc;i/s l:3 27 27 U Tora11 33 1,,, 1 • l4. olftlme ,corf'!: Fr r, 0 stat~ , , ti
Big Hal Grant, an agile 6-9 center, and guard Tim Flow- ers kept the Waves in the contest with 26 and 22-point ---::---~ =:=-:::-:==:=,~
·haritv line.
the Ji ad man for
Fields',
_:he Toreros "ith a 16.5 aver-
ti.} V
18.
'
1
•
..?/,;, .. 7 Basketball Fad
•
11
t~.>-run
seventh m11n2a on II
PEPPEROINE FROSH (7i) F p T
USD FROSH (99)
ff f 1~
Schrom Schrom Gom~e Windle Fllznge.- Pladels N cac;slo b 0 vg/• K nev ~ordner Socho.wskl
• farv Galli.her.
by
homer
6, s 16 "' J 3 11 7 2 s 16 /J 8 1 J 23 3 J s 7 I o G 1 o . OO2 o J
8 2 3 l8Carr 7 Wo kcr 7 8 / 22 Prather & EgPrtr 7 3 I 11 Huffman O 1 1 t Macia-;, ff 'f Gote-s J I> J "2
D.ive Thompson a four-run filth innin" for the Toreros wi ble. In junior c.tppcd
t I
:
o 3 11 3 1 Oo 2 1 0 2 2
University of · San Diego closes out its basketball sea- son tonight and tomorrw DfRbi with games on the road. The Toreros, 1 ~9 for the Pomona ton_ight to face Cal Poly and swmg over to Irvine tomor- row nighl to play University of California. USO beat Cal Poly 59-W. in the first fame of the season. season, travel to
Tola)s 21 17 22 73 Hal!f•m~con: USO 3', P9PHrdint 31. C 31 23 1, '9 Totals
/
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