News Scrapbook 1964-1967

Entered At Second Clou Motter of the Po1t Office of Son o;ego under the Act of Morch 3. 1879

$4 Yearly

Symposium Set Sunday At College Plans have been completed for the University of San Diego's first jornt Colic e Symposium which will be pn• sented 10 cooperation with Loyola 1,;niversity ol Lo Angeles, Immaculate Heart College. '.\larymount College, and Mount St Mary's College The symposium on admis sion requirements, t1nancial aids, and choosing a college will be presented at 2:30 p.m this Sunday, November 20. in the theater of the University of San Diego College for Wom- en, Alcala Park. Principals Named The invocation will be g1'en by Very Rev. John A Dickie, principal of l ' nivers1t~ High School, and the addre,. of welcome will be given b, :.tether 'ancy Morri , pre i• dent of the College for Women . The panel moderator will be Rev. I. Brent Eagen. director of school relations for the College for Men. Panel member· and their topics are Mitchell L'Heureux Loyola University, •·why a Catholic College;•· Gilbert Swill. Immaculate Heart Col lege , "Admission Hcqu1rc mcnt ·," Sister Joseph dele director of admis 10n - a ,tount St. Mary's College "Selecting a College and 1 plyin for Admission ," anc \!rs. Irene Kelly, director ol financial aid at Marymoun College, Financial Aid Pro ~rams • Individual Questions The C

Cagers Own Potent Point Punch By PAUL COUR EVENING TRl8UNE Sporl$ Writer Take ii from Phil Wool pert, a man who has coached some great shooters, including Bill Russell and K. C. Jones, the University of San Diego Toreros shouid have no trou- ble finding the hoop this sea- son. , "We should be a pretty fair shooting club," aid Woolpert, whose Toreros open their sea- son Dec. 1 against Cal Poly of Pomona Ve ccurate USO includes m its scoring arsenal Rick Cabrera, Alan Fay and Ted Fields, th~ce veterans with deadly shooting eves. •The trio has been sharp in pre-season drills. The Toreros hope to physi- cally be in one piece by the time they open the ea on. They've been plagued with a series of · JU ies. njurles Strike "We he d .a hard scrimmage the other tiay and six players ·came up with groin injuries," said Woolpcrt •'And, guard Phil Sheridan had been slowed by a hairline wrist fracture and Gus ::\lagee, our 6-7, 21!;-pound center transfer, has just started to practice again after being troubled by knee mJurie • We should be well in a couple weeks, but I'm n?t fig- uring on , !agee early m the season." •Midget' • I rong With Magee, who 1s consid- ered a good prospect, side- lined Dure! Carpenter, 6-5, form;r prep tar at Chino, looks hke the starting center. "He's the smallest of our centers but he's strong and has good hands," said Woolpert. Bench Good If Sheridan i

San Diego, Saturday, December 10, 1966 ev. Eagen

Chaplain for Catholic Unit The Rev. I. Brent Eagen, director of school relations and public information at lhe University of San Diego Col- lege for l\len, has been named national chaplain of the Na- ional As. ociatlon of Catholic \\umni Clubs The . lo t Rev. Francis J Furey, bi hop of the San Die- go Cath<11ic Diocese, ap- pointed Father Eagen to the po t at the request of Thomas Dalton of San Diego. national pre ent of the associa hon. The C'lub~ are limited to un- married Catholics who are graduates of four-year colle- ge~ or who are registered nurses.

USD Home After Tour, Four Losses University of San Diego basketball coach Phil Woolpert probably was mut- tering today, "Why did J ever ~chedule that trip'/" 'rhe Toreros returned from a disastrous swing through Montana, in which they won only one of five games. The tour included a 61-55 loss to the Eastern Montana College Yellow Jackets in Billings last night. Free Throws Enough Three free throws each by Ernie Fortney and Don Rus- sell in the final two minutes provided the difference for the winners, who edged USD, 68-67, last week in the Holiday • Invitational in Anaconda. Chuck Kelly, who beat USD with a late basket last week, shared scoring honors with Jim Mota for the Yellow Jackets, each scoring 16 points. lost center Dural Carpenter on fouls at the start of the second half. Forward Alan Fay followed a while later. the losers with 14 points, followed by Jimmy Wilke with 12 and William Sheridan with 11. The Toreros play host to Loyola University of Los Angeles Sat- urday. To Foul Out USD, , now 6-7, Rick Cabrera paced

d John A. Dickie, principal of University High School; Mother Nancy Moms, president of the Colle11e for Women, and Rev. I Brent Eagan, director of school relations for the Colle11e for Men.

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Gu i-ld Plans Yule P rty tmas candles with red and green under- tones sparkll g through a lac) white fro tm 0 will center luncheon table when the Alcala Guild of the Univer- sity of an D1eg , 'ollege for :.ten ets the holiday mood at their nnual Chn tmas lunch- eon this Tue day, December 13, at the Hanale1 Hotel in 11 JOO Valley ,r . Frank D Helkenn, pres- ident of the Gu il d ha s a ·ked rs George J R he. Jr., to serve as general t'h~ irman of the holiday ev rt Mrs. Ro s E. Dingman, faculty wi fe, 1 m charge ofthl' d e ,ratwn. . The College Glee Club will smg C'hristma C'arol · under 'the dlr ct1on'OfRev J . Vincent Sull1 n, h d o t he iusic D partment al t College for en. cmb r d guests will participate in the traditional gill exchange a part of the program Very Rev. John Paul Gadd n, pre ident of the College for ,ten and moderator or the Guild, will extend his annual • greeting to members and guests An inntation 1s ex- tended to all former Guild members. Re cnations a re being ac- e p d by tmes Frank D. Helkenn, 276 4221 or 273-4569, and George J. Rahe, Jr., 276- 0950 Holly and Ch r

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de pit· . ufrenn.1: u leg tnjury. "l't·rhn1> the b1 •gest sur pr1 t o fur has been Bob 1:,1mhl •, unningham said "Hoh 1 5 10, very {JUtCk, the be t hall handler and tough " <,umble come from Judge 'Vlemorial High Nick 'teas in and Dan 1-'reg- lette ire troni: candidates for tarting guard . Nick I a 5 l l guard from SI 1-'rancis 111 . h tn La Canada, and Dan 1 a 6 2 vet ran of Notr Dame H1 h in Sherm n Oake . 0th ·rs lo watch for are Ma vln Gillespie , 6 3 forward from Central Comm ric111l High School 1n New York; Dick La ,. •lie, 6 2 forward from St. I natlu High tn an Franci co, Tun Gardner, 5.9 guard from re p1 High 1n Encino John Otoombnno, 6 0 guard from St. ui,:u tine High, and Jl'rry Sockowsk1, 6-3 forwart from Loyola Academy in Ilh no1s.

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Men's College Slates Exhibit

_. The l ni\ers1ty of San Diego Auxiliary's annual Chri. tma · C.. la will be celebrated Thursday, December 1, in the li.HY Room of the Bahia Hotel. Mrs. Floyd A. Wooden, chain an. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Whitney, co-chairman, have annoum~·d that a complimentary champagne punch social will precede the noon luncheon. · ,

Mmes. Manuel M. Ferriera and Robert E. Fitzpatrick are chairmen of decorations. Mrs James Barr.on is in charge of the Christmas basket Guests are 10v1ted to contribute a special treat to the holiday basket which will be given to a needy organization Santa Claus will be present to assist Auxiliary members in the traditional gift exchange. Christmas caroling by mem- bers of t Co f: r Glee Clu l.!''l»'ll'li<3o!On of Father J . Vincent Sullivan is a part of

Members of the committef' and hostesses include Mnw,. Leo J. Durkin, Murray D. Good rich, Thomas G. Lanphier, Sr., Carl E. Lengyel, Wulfrano Ruiz, Madalyn Smay, and Paul A. Vesco. Honored guests will rnclude Most Rev. Francis J urey, Very Rev. Msgr Donald F. Doxie and Father 1. Brent Eagen. director of school re- lations at the College for :.1en. s rv-1tions are being ac- e . eil R. Mac- Intyre: Francis C. Martin, and K neth R Whitney.

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Coach Woo/pert Optimistic

Strong SD Cage T earn Seen in Making Th Un1vcr~1ty of San Diego Torcros, last year's at-large other big Wilke is the top prospect from last year's freshman

reason for Wool- pert's optimism. There are five big men presently vieing for the center position on the first team. Transfers Gus •fagee (6-6, 215 pounds), Greg Long (6-8, 200 pounds) and Dure! Carpenter (6-5, 215 pounds) and two of last year's fresh- men, Phil Hand (6-7, 210 pounds) and Jim Wilke (6-6, 185 pounds) have been hand- ling themselves very well in practice. Air Force Veteran Magee comes to the Toreros via the Air Force, where he played four years of service ball for Mather AFB, Sacra- mento. Magee is a sophomore and has three years of eligi- bility lel1 but is presently laid up with a bad knee. Long played two years at East Texas State, Commerce, Texas, before returning to his home town, F;l Cajon, and enrolling at USD. He was a starter for East Texas and one of their lop scorers. Carpenter, who transferred to USD last year for .the baseball season arter attending Stanford and Mt. San Antonio JC, is playing his first yea~ of collegiate basket- ball and is some uflhat hidden talent coaches are always glad to find .

17 games, he had collected 110 points for sixth position and a 6.9 average. Backing up Cabrera, are two more juniors and a senior. The juniors, Ted Fields, (6-2, guard-forward) and Bill Shen- dan (60 guard), earned start- ing positions by mid-season last year. Fields has been called "one of the best guards on the coast" by Woolpert. Sheridan, whom Woolpert labels an excellent ball hand- ler with a fine basketball mmd, led the Toreros last year in free throw percentage with 79.6 percent. Lone Senior The lone senior starter re- turning from last year's squad is Alan Fay (6-5, forward). Last year, Fay was third in re- bounds (136). second in total. points (256) and second in ac- curacy from both the floor (41 per cent) and the charity line (73 per cent). After two varsity seasons, he ranks 10th among the all-time scorers at USO Other returning lettermen arc J 1rltmy Allen (6-1, forward), a juntor, and Bill Ferree (6-0, from last y ar's squad arc Mike ferrua, Larry Gaddy, and Steve Wojdows} i Tr,msfers and players from the freshman team are an-

repre ·entative in the NCAA re ton I play-offs in Fresno. ha two weeks left to prepare for their 1966-67 ba ketball against Cal Poly.

team. He scored 235 points for an 11.1 average in his fresh- man career and was second in rebounding (187 ). He has shown himself to be a team leader and an accurate shoot- er. Tough Schedule The Toreros play just 'about the same schedule this year as last. The tougher opponents are Cal State, Los Angeles; Fresno State, University of California, Irvine; Cal •Poly, Pomona, and Loyola. In inter-city competition, the Toreros ,meet the powerful San Diego State Aztecs at State's Peterson Gym on De- cember 15. The Aztecs started four sophomores and a junior last season and all five have returned. They are young and experienced and will be the team to he'at in their con- ference. The Toreros have beaten the Aztecs the past two years to tie the rivalry at two games each. The Westerners of Cal Western have two dates with USD late in the season USD hosts the Point Lomans on February 18, and then travel to Golden Gym the following Tuesday, February 21.

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3-WayTie In Debate The intercollegiate debate team of the University of San Diego College for Men tied for a second place in the Pacific Northwest Regional Tourna- ment held at the University of Oregon, Medford, Oregon, November 11 and 12. Fifty- seven colleges and universi- ties participated in the tour- nament. USD was one of three Cali- fornia colleges that received an invitation to the tourna- ment. University of the Pacific and Stanford University· also received bids. USO was awarded a three- way tie for second with Stan- ford and the University of Washington. Junion William Sink and freshman Everett Harry represented USO . The latter was Sweetwater High Scl\ool's outstanding debater

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Slowed by lniurie . T_he University of San Diego Toreros have sustained two in- Juries so far ~his_ season but the local cagers sl),ould be in good shape for their first game wi\h Cal Poly of Pom'\ma at USD December 1. gym h _Gua~d Bill Sheridan (6-0, 180) syffered a hairline fracture in

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oach is oplomi lie ab UI the Toreros c nee. to return to the NCAA play off· this year. "We have thl' potential to make it back to lh<' play off ," said Wool- pert, • and I thmk that barr,ng inJurtes, we will be a strong contender 6 Lettermen Back The Toreros return six let- ll'rmen th1 year aller losmg the same But those returning contain some of the cream of la l year'. crop. Rick Cabreca, a Junior, who was named to the United Press lnterhat1onal All West Coast team last year as a sophomore, i. back to lead the Tor ros. Cabrera took the scor1ng title last year with :105 points after taking over the f,rs(, trini,: spot vacated by ,l'llff Ashford for the second cmester Cabrera scored 195 pomt in those 11 game for a 17.7 average. In the previous Phil Woolpert

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1s wnst the first week of No- vember and has been refrain- ing from strenuous workouts. Dr. Gordon E. Stolzoff, the Toreros' team physician, will remove the cast from Sheri- d_an's arm Saturday. At that time he will decide whether the arm will be strong enough for Sheridan to play with the aid of a leather brace. Sheridan was a starter on last year's squad which won the at-large berth in the NCAA regional play-offs at Fresno last March. Sheridan and the other four starters who return this year have been pushed by talented new men to retain their positions and Coach Phil Woolpert hasn't mentioned a possible starting team. At present, heridan is a doubt- ful $ m the openmg gam9r f6i, ~a transfer to the T Tougaloo Col- l , ., y way of the Air

Force, where he played ba11 for four years, also is on the injured list, although he re sumed workouts with the squad last week. The 6-6, 215 pound center, had a recur- rence of a knee problem which resulted from a high school football mj ury, "His (Magcc's) knees are bet- ter aller the rest," said Wool- pert, "but we're still taking it easy with him. If he doesn't start for us, he'll sure add to our depth at center." Coach John Cunningham's frosh team also has absorbed two injuries, both during the past week. Dan Frel!lette, 6-2 guard, suffered fi muscle strain in his upper thigh· He is resting but should return in good shape next week. ick Nicassio, 5-11 guard twi cd his ankle in the fresh'. men's scrimmage with Mira Costa Junior Co11ege Friday, IL MORGAN

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Three San Diego basketball shooting for a econd tourna• squads will take on fi\'e ment championship to match other from across the ~oun- their 1964 record. try Dec. 20-22 to lend inter- .- sectional interest in the sev- The team to beat 'I\ 111 be enth annual Holiday Basket- the 1965 champions,. ·orther 1 ball Tournament to be con-1Arizona University's Lumber- tested in California Western packs, coached by Herb Univer ity's Golden Gym. ,Gregg. Last year the Lumber- Co-sponsors of the event jacks from F1agstaff eased are Cal Western and Phibpac. I Cal Western out of the cham• The Westerners are defend-· ion hip. 69-64. ing • "AI.\ District 3 cham- Cal Poly of San Luis Obis- pion , and the :\"avy's Phibpac po will be returning to Poin: lmaders are rated by many Loma tournament competi- coaches a one of the be~t tion after an absence of three organized ervice teams on years. In 1963. the , 1ustangs the West Coast. ended Whittier College's Coach Phil Woolpert's To- championship hopes, 79-64, reros from the University of only to be stopped short in San Diego make up the third the emi-finals by Cal West• local team. e\ will be ern, 64-53.

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