News Scrapbook 1964-1967
Aztecs Risk Unbeaten ecord Against USD
n, San Die!,lo, Monday, December 5, 1966 RHOUSES MEET NEXT WEEK ic 0( a11 11 College basketball fans•• 11'-...., gan the countdown to l!poff today after San Diego State Collcg and Umvcrs1ty of S ee end. ''he Aztecs and 'I oreroes, "ho have 2-0 records, meet in Peterson Gym Dec. 15. Coach George· Ziegenfuss' ,tees turned in their bc~t early-•ea on showing in many years Saturday mght with a 10 70 Victory at Whittier. This followed a 78-55 victory over . orthwest 1\lis our1 m the -opener. The Aztecs play one game thi week, visiting 1' ullerlon tale aturday night USO defeated Los Ang ]es State, 86-83 in overtime Sat- urd y night in the • orth after tak1 g Cal Poll of Pomona, 59-58, in its opener. University o( California at San Diego Diego over th h \ d the1~ wares minutes before we were to go on the floor. And we ate ear- ly, too. Maybe that was part played a good first half and poor second half against Cal Poly, reversed the procedure They fell behind, 44-34, at against the Diablos. points at one point in the sec- ond half before coming on to etch a 73-73 deadlock at the end of regulation play. It was Rick Cabrera's medi- um-range looper in the final second of play which tied the score and a pair of free throws by Ted Fields \11th 3: 14 left in the extra ses 10n which secured the victor_. "Cabrera and Fields pla}ed of it." The Toreros, who had intermission and lagged 14 I don't believe," said Bon- California Woolpert, ' and a kid by the name of Jimmy Allen helped us with his rebounding In the overtime." Dennis Grey, 6-foot, 8-inch junior center out of Crawford High, rapped in 28 J)Cl'inls, in- cluding the basket which put his side ahead for the final tim(!, to lead Cal We tern past Long Beach late. Tlie Westerners trailed, 35-24, at the half end did not pull even until the fmal four minutes when they negotiated a 5fr56 deadlock. -Rick Smith ham. ''I think that Tempe is inex- perienced. This · a real ex- perienced ball club Ziggy has. This transfer (Bob Lundgren) 'has just made that ball club. tough The Toreros have doubleheader on the road this ·eek, Pepperdine Friday and Fre no State Saturday. University, We tern Cal defense our him, 1thout also 2-0 after an 83-72 victory aver Fresno Paci!ic and 72-69 would have only about a third of the job to do." at Long Saturday Victory ea iest the played "We Beach State, has engagements here this w kend with La Ziegenfuss, said teams," referring to the schedules of the citfs three collegiate rep- resentatives over the week- rnd, '·but I was very pleased Verne and Po ona. Aubrey Bon- Whittier co ham, whose team lost to Ari- mpe only in zona State way prayed." 71-53 lhe nig • bcwre, s a id Ziegenfu · has •·one of the lJ D c h Phil Woolpert could mile, too. That 11m at teams he's had.'' three be Bonham should kno11. He's Los Angeles State was a big one. played the Aztecs every year ince he be me coach of the in 1936. He and Ziegen- fuss have had a lylme-ar.d- "There's no comparison be- I tween San Diego and Tempe, / Poet e series smce 1947. I "We went out there kind of mesmerized," said Woolpert. "I got 'em dressed about 40 said , ' e cell nt 1 ~.,;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaalliiii11111•llllii•~~ Gu1d• tours of the campus will be eo11dtH·ted by ~tud e nts from 2 ,I. 4 p.m Student re i- dence apartments, c,ence labs, clas rooms, and th Knights of Columbus Librar will be open tor inspection. Vc•ry Rev.John Paul Cadden, pre ident of the College; for Men: Rev I. Brent F.agen, director of Sc•hool Relations, and Stephen DeSales, presi• dent of the A uciated Student Hody, wilradcin ss the parents at 4 p.m. The l niversity of San Diego Glee l',11b, directed by Rev. J Vincent Sullivan, will presen a chora, program. Parents' Day visitors will be served a ranch-style dinner from 5 to 6 p.m. in the Lark Cafeteria Parents and their families will b" the guests of the Associated St II tent Body at the USD frosh tnd rnrsitv games against San Fernando Valley State at 6 and 8 p.rn. in USD'sgym. S Faces Aussie Five Here Tonight The .Australian basketb11ll team currently touring the United States will be the guests of the University of San Diego Toreros in a game at 8 tonight (Thursday) in the USDgym. The Aussies are coached by Ken Watson, coach of the Aus- tralian Olympic team in 1956. Watson's teams have won seven national titles in Aus- tralia since 1950. The big man for the visitors is former 1 Auburn star Fred Guy, 6-7, 220-pound center and for- ward. Also playing for the visitors will be two veterans of the 1964 Olympic team. They are Lindsey Gaze and Bill Wyatt. Ray Watson, the coach's son, also plays for the visitors. Fast Game Seen The game was scheduled ast week and is not official for the Toreros, but promises to be a fast and exciting game. Admission is $1 for adults and 50 cents for students with student body cards. The game interupts a previ- ously long break in the Torer- os' schedule preceding final examinations. The ·Toreros will continue their current homestand against Fresno State next Monday, January 16, with a preliminary game pit- · ting the freshmen against the USD alumni at6 p.m. Fresno dealt the Toreros their first loss of the sea- son at Fresno in early Decem- ber, 71-61, when the Toreros ran into foul trouble, collected four technicals and had scor- ing leader Ted Fields tossed out of the game in the second half. Having evened their record at 7-7 with last Saturday's win over Loyola, USD hopes that the home floor advantage will keep them on the winning note. USD has won their last three tiome games and six of their last seven. Fields continues to pace the Toreros with a 16.8 average followed by Rick Cabrera with 16. Gus Magee and Dure! Carpenter have been the Tor- . eros' strong men in the re- bounding department with 92 and 85 grabs respectively for the seasvn. Rated Best Game · "We played our best total game of the season against Loyola," said Coach Phil Wootpert "We were consistent for the entire game on both defense and offense. I have to take the blame for our incon- sistency. the biggest problem we've had." After the Fresno game, USD will host Pepperdine on Jan- uary 28, Cal State, Los An- geles, on February 3, San Fer- nando Valley State, February 4, and Chapman February 10 before traveling to Whittier bruary 11. made good on nd USD mto a arkrl! gh ca" er. pla~'l!l oncos, fouled 'I '1ck e Torero guar 0 ond of two Ire pis 1o provide th 20 econds lo lock DIEGO UNION THE SA ields f, y and the ,n1c1de throw at- the slim or ros Loy la, 7 w n margm. {¼ror.co Cleo Robinson mi ;scd a two-handed jwnp • hot from t key in the dying s conds to g ve the Toreros their nar- ro escape. Ragged Ball-H ndling Ragged ball-handling pla- gued the Toreros, 1 ho turned over the ball to the Broncos 31 times. Cal Poly recipro- catrd l'dh 22 turnovers. 1"Je d , Cabrera and Alan Fay paced J;SD coring with 14, 13, and 12 points, re pec- hv . Dare Jones led the wa f t he losers with 19. li. D t 19-for-48 for 39 p r mona ·s 21-for--64 f r THE SAN DIEGO UNION H-4 i'lJSD Cagers Set To Face Pepperdine After a high scoring loss to Fresno State, 74-83, the Uni- versity of San Diego Toreros settled down to final examina- ~ions and light workouts. Finals are over and the USD cagers are out on the practice court preparing to even their record at 8-8 agamst the Pepperdine Waves at 8 p.m. this Saturday, January 28, at USDGym. Against Fresno, the Toreros started slow, allowing the Bulldogs to lead 13-2 after two minutes of play. At that point, Coach Phil Woolpert put the tarting unit on the bench and played the second unit including 6-2 guard Bol McCloskey. This was Mc Closkey's first varsity game. McCloskey and Bill Ferree, a 6-0 guard, rallied the Tore- ros in cutting Fresno's lead to 21-15 in the next sever/ minutes. McCloskey was the key man in the rally, hittin three field goals and two charity tosses. He finished the night with 12 points behind 6-7 center Gus Magee, who collected 14 with his tipins and board play, and Ted Fields, the teams' leading scorer, who had 13. The Torreros never led in the game, but cut the Bulldogs lead to five points twice in the second half after trailing at halftime, 51-34. Both the Toreros and the Bulldogs scored 33 baskets, but USD needed 15 more at- tempts than Fresno. The dif- ference came at the charity line, where Fresno dropped 27 of 39 tries and USD managed only 18 of 33. This was USD's worst game of the season in the free throw department. Against Pepperdine this Sat- urday, the Toreros will be looking to take the lead in the series between the two schools for the first time. The series is tied at four games each, with USO claimjng vic- tory in the last three meetings. PAGE EIGHT-A USD Auxiliary Lists Tenth Anniversary University of San Diego benefit horse show and inter- Auxiliary '11,i}] mark its tenth national bazaar. year as an active guild to • the university at an annual ~frs.. orsyth whose bus installation luncheon to be band is a co-owner of th held at noon Thursday at :itexican Village Restauran the Hilton Inn. in Coronado is sen-ing as sec T k . " . . t retary-treasurer f o r thre . a 1n° OH!r as pre 51 den corporations Fors :th B will be Mrs. A. J. c. Forsyth. • ) . ros. other officers include :Mmes. Inc., Forsyth EnterJ:>nse, In .R, ss G. Tharp of Point Loma, and Forsyth Imestment first vke president; Harold I~c.. } . Tebbetts, second vice pfes- She is past president o I ent; Raymond H. Suttles of the Soroptimist Club of Cor- '.a Jolla, r ecotding secretary; onado, Coronado HospitaJ S. Falck • "ielsen, of Point Auxiliary, Sacred Heart Par- Lo a, corresponding secre- ents Club and ~fills Colleg a • and John E. Handley, Mothers Club. Currentlv a di- -easurer. rector of the Coronado Cham- Directors who will begin her of Commerce, ~Iary Ka ·'h .r econd term as com- is also co-founder and fir 1 tee chairmen mclude president of the Coronado \ u es. Harry L. Benton, El- chapter of the American • :t M. Brown, Frank L. Field Service and several c "JO.k , Leo J. Durkin and l\Iur- times past chairman of the • :i, . Goodrich. annual Coronado Home Tou1 , hers are :'rimes. E. R. sponsored by the Americar n ,old, Ining W. Martin, A~sociation of Universit, l or ce L. Miller and Rich- \\ omen. ; J d P. Phillips. Newly elect- H f · · · ed members to the board of er ~c _miles )llCli:~• dir~ctors are Mmes. Eugene membership m the Children H DeFalco Sr Frank J Home Society and the Coro dconner, Lav.;~nce Oliver: nado Women's ~lub. Mot_he1 Paul A. Vesco and George w. of three, she still f!nds h!1)€ Wolfe. ~o pursue her hobb1e,s which Active ln Coronado affairs mclud~ . gourmet_ cooking, president-elect Mary Kay golf, fishing, huntmg and an Fors}'1h brings a wealth of annual trek abro.ad. experience to her new office. Mrs. John ~1_. lllurphf of he ls immediate past presi- La Jolla, r~~!rmg president dent of the auxiliary and was of the auxiliary has asked "eneral chairman of the 11965 frs. James _F. Mulvaney tc IN OVERTIME T reros Defe t ola, 74-66 By JOHN iY McDO~ALD skeU, 11 \ictones haven't come easy at University of San Diego th.ls season but wher the battling Toreros pull one off it's a :alu. -- Last mgh ju~ su h the econds to go in regulation. But case as the orerors surprisec! two turnovers by the Lions II a Lo}ola Umvcrsity in overtime, enough to change the game 74-66, before a creaming crowd around. Alan Fav pumped in a at .USD gym mm, jumper frommabout 15 leet Ted Fields, a spring-legged away with 52 seconds to play guard, a d Jong-shootlqg Rick and Carpenter supplied the Cabrera led USC in il.5 catch-up tying shot. sruggle_ 11!1h 25 a_nd 20 points, This was the Toreros' seventh respectively, but 1t was a fol- victory in 14 game~ and ended a low-up shot by cen(e Dural Car- slide which had seen them fall penter which provided the mo- four times on a five-game Mon- mentum. I tana road trip: Carpenter. a 6-5, 215-pound so- . phomore dropped in a f'eld . Also: this was only the second I . h' , 1 . .time m 10 years the Torero1 ?oa wit two se:onds ret?am- have been able to kno k ff th mg, after a pair of m1ssec! 11 . c 0 shots, lo send the game into the usua Y stronger Lions from th~ t Th . WCAC. ex ra session. 1s was thel . third time this campaign that Dick Sebek, a 6-5 junior, ar U D has been forced to battle eken.. Petersen, a 6-4 senio~ into overtime. provided the scoring punch fo Then, Fields and Cabrera !he visitors w.ith 23 and 2 took over from there and scored points, respevhvely However 11 of the Torerors' 16 overtime 6-B centel'. ~aul Dayden was un points. Fields bucketed nine of able to. carry his load becaus 10 free throws and Cabrera of the fine defen e work of Car- sank a follow shot and pair of penter..The big fellow failed to charity tosses. get a field goal and had onl Loyola, which appeared ready two free throws. to collect it eighth win of 12 The flfst ha .was _ a struggle engagements led 9.55 with 55 from the openmg Jump. Th~ -----•~- -~-. lead changed nine times and the - University Au , ,ary Will Install Ollic~c score was tied on 10 occasions. Biggest advantage was USD' 28-24 margin with five minute to go. Hwever, Sebek hit three free throws and a jump and Loyola left at intermission with a 32-31 lead. a LOYOLA 16tJ F p T USO (74) G F pl ~rti,en j ~g~~=~?er i Y i 2~ Peter~n 7 6 J 20 Fiv S l 5 ;f fc 0 h 9 i:i~~r g g j S 72 1 l Sebeboi< e 7 s 23 Sh~ridon 2 o Zem I 1 2 1 4W kflo l '1 3 4 Total~ 20 26 25 6' Totals 25 24 26 7~ ot~~!Wi':;'tTo~~ 0 Li~o~grtJ, 0 Jio~i 0 3 1. Enc1 USO Frosh (781 Felzenger Prodels Windfe !>Chr:,m serve as chairman of the in stallation luncheon. The au,- . y, or.;ranized in 1957 ha as its objective the furthe1 ing of the grov.,th of the Uni ver ity of San Diego as a cul tutal part of the communit :"."ever wait until the hole has worn through to darn socks. Darn when the sock has begun to wear thin. Tape adjoining legs of two or more card tables together · 1 for an improvised buffet ta- ble. If you dip the roasting fork In butter before tiding ' the marshmallow on it and hold the fork level hl!e 1 toasting, the marshmallows will slip easily off fork. phy of La pre 1d nt. G 1 3 I • 5 2 2 I 0 I ' Gamble Ustier Love/J~ Mlcassio Gllle-sP1e Sochoski Freglette Totals 2 3 2 8 29 20 71 Totals i.2. 1cor USO Ha~e
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