News Scrapbook 1968-1969

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er Eagen Succeeds Bo th, Cha e lor.

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To Launch Cage Play Coach Phil WoolpNl's Uni- versity ol San Uiego Toreros open their 1967 68 basketball season at 8 tomorrow (Friday) night in a home game against the Broncos of Cal Poly, Pomona. ThC' Toreros feature a host of returning lettermen, in- cluding lust year's two high. scorers. Ted Fields and Rick Cabrera . In addition. two other starters, Durcl Carpen, tcr and Bill Sheridan. arc back from last year's team. which compiled a 1411 record . Rebuilding Year It' will dl'finitcly be a re- • building yt•ar for the Broncs, according to the Cal Poly In- ' formation Service, but the Toreros appear to have im- proved The two teams split last year, the Torcro winning the season opener here in a thnllmg 59-58 game. Also back for the Torero this vcar are Jim Wilke. 6-5. who i'igures to start al forward, 1 and 6-6 Gus Magee. who is a tentative starter at center Cabrera, a 6-3 forward. was an all-CIF selection when he played al Loyola High in Los Angeles. and was voted Player of the Year by the Herald- Exam m r. Rick mad · the all- city frosh team in his first year al l SD. and has earned All Coast honorable mention honors both ,ears on the varsity 1 Ot~ in Scoring Last yl'a r Cn brPra averaged 14.4 points per game. im- proving thl' 113 average he had as a Sophomore. He is

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To dunk or not to dunk. that is th and it cone rns basketballs . not doughnuts. 9posi tion The four college coaches in San Diego arc div ided on their opinions a out dunking a basketball m the hoop. The anti-dunking rule, in effect this season in colle!;C ball for the first time is supported bv Coach Geor~c Zeigenfuss of

hancery for near- d as chancellor

Diocese of San Die o a ly two decades. has r

School in 1947. He attended Loyola University of Los Angeles prior to studi~ f'hll he priest- hood at St. Francis and Immllit-U1-a1e Heart seminaries. He was ordained fdr th Diocese For the next three years he filled the dual role of assistant pastor at Holy Rosary Church in San Bernardino and teacher of English and religion at Aqu111as High School in that city. Meanwhile, he studied for, and in June 1959 received his master's degree in English. For the next five years Father Eagen taught English and American Literature at USD's College for Men, theology and medical ethics at Mercy College of Nursing, and religion at Our Lady of Peace Academy. He also conduct- cd teacher training courses for the Parish High School of Religion and is the author of Released Time: A Necessary Adjunct to Secon- The new chancellor is a member of the Board of Directors for the Community Wel- fare Council of San Diego County, the. ational Conference of Christians and Je_w . the San Diego Opera Guild and the La Jolla Museum of Art. He recently was named executive board member of the Kearny-Vista Planning, Asso- Father Eagen is chaplain of the Univ rsity of San Diego Auxiliary; Phi Kappa \l'heta, a nal10nal Catholic fraternity, and w11s-n11t onal chaplain of the National Assocla.tion ofCatho- lie Alumni Clubs. He is also a chaplain of the ciation. of San Diego in May 1956. dary Education.

In accepting his resignation, Bishop Francis J Furey said the monsignor plans to devote all of his time to his parochial work and to preparations for the bicentennial celebration Old Miss.ion San Diego de Alcala. of which Msgr Booth ha been pastor since February 1954. will be a "focal point" of the observance. The Bishop named Father I. Brent Eagen lo succeed Msgr. Booth. Father Eagen has been director of school relations and public infor mat10n at the College for Men, University of Bishop Furey said. Msgr. Booth was graduated from Romes Lateran University with a doctorate in Canon Law, magna cum laude, in June 1952. He pre viously had served for one year in the Chan- cery Office as secretary of the malrimon ial On his return to the diocese, studies in an- other field and a successful examination in The Therapeutic Values of' Religion in Psy- chiatry led to his appointment as chaplain at Recalled to the Chancery, he was Itpmcd vice chancellor Ill June 1953 and chancellor Educated in the pub!Ic schools of his native Needles. Msgr Booth studied for the priest- hnod at Holy Cross College, Canon City, Colo- rado , and the junior and major seminaries of Los Angeles. He was ordained in 1946. of San Diego in H/69. San Diego tribunal. the State Hospital, Patton. in February 1954.

ego Stale and Bob bur" of California

\\Jule Phil Woolpert of the Uni\,,r~itv of San Dieao and Nhil Sto~er of the Urllxers - ity of California at San Di- ego ould like to ee the dunk ret urned . The N'CAA will eet in March and there is a move a f o o t , particularly b y coaches from Northern Cal- ifornia. to have the anti- d u n k i n g rule r epealed. Whether this will happen is dou btful and many coaches believe that if a change is

TORERO STARTERS - Scheduled to start in the Toreros' home opener tomorrow night are left lo right, Rick Cabrera, 6-3 forward; Ted Fields, 6-2 guard; Gus Magee, 6-6 center; Jim Wilke, 6-6 forward, and Bill Sheridan, 6-0 guard.

PHIL WOOLPERT made it will not be for two years when Lew ,\lcindor. the 7-1 UCLA gi ant, completes his college career. * * * Zcigcnfuss, a member of the N'C.\A Rules and Recommendations Committee. is a solid backer of the anti -dunking rule. '·The rule was not put into effect because of Alcmdor." the 20-year veteran of coaching at SD State d-eclared, and added . "First, dunking was wrecking equipment and a num- b e r of backboards were shattered; Second, the danger of in- j_ury is prese nt and t here were incidents of playe rs bemg hurt while dunking ; Third, and most logical, dunking makes the goa l-te nd ing rule inconsistent; Fourth, basketball was inknd- ed to be a game of finesse, and dunking is not really basket- ba ll. but an advantage given to the tall players:· * * * Kloppenbui-g, who has had much sut:cess al Cal Western oppo:ses dunking because of the injury factor and also due to the fac t th ere is no defense against the stuff or dunk shot. '' I do. however, feel that on a clear, breakaway shot that t he dunk could be allowed becaus-e spectators like it and it is exciting," he said. * * * Woolpert. the vociferous U . of San Diego coach . fe els t her. was no justification for outlawing the dun k s hot. "We have always discouraged th e dunk in game situa- tions a nd also in practice," he noted . "The only time you see t he dunk is when 110 one is around. and t he fans get a big kick oul of seeing it performed ·• Woolpe rt said his main obj P.ction to the new rule is ' hat the officials a re burdened with just one more judgment call when they al ready are overburdened by a host of rules. Woolpert explained that accord ing to the ru le no pl ayer can put his ha nd over the rim, which is cau sing some prob- lems on the direct drive in fr ont of the hoop. '·The most ridiculous section of the rule is that officials can call a tec hnical foul on a team fo r du nki ng in pradicc which me-ans t hat the game could start with a fre-e llll'O\\ :• he .-aid. Woolpert discounted the damage lo equipme nt and injury to ])layers as poor reasons for the anti-dunking leg islation ' r doubt if there as more than one backboard br oken in :rn.ooo gyms last year." he declared, and added, '·One thing is c,er- tain the ru lesmakers have takeni away one of the m.ost color-, ful asp,ects of lhe game." * * * Stoner. coach oi the newest four-year college team at UCSD. said. '·J think the dunk should be rnturned. 'l'hev\··? taken away spectator apprecia tion because the fa ns ei1jov the stuff-shot. · Th,e kids ha~e fun dunking and it is a good method o( teaching a player to jump higher, and besides there is usuallv no one around when the dunk is made. · "In my mind there just isn't ,enough j ustification for making the du nk an illegal shot:' The high schools and four-ye ar colleges have anti -dun k legislation while the professionals and junior colleges can dunk to their hearts delight. Bask~ tball rules have changed so much over the vears I at th e game has become complex for fans . :Much o!' the legis1a ti on has been aimed at curbing the big man hut n o matter wh at, t he tall boy who h as taJ.:c-nt r emains the most importan t ingredient in winning games. The Wilt Chamberlains, Bill Russells and Lei\ \lc-indors are (n th e minority ut _their impact on the gam-~ ha s been felt rn mo1 ·e ~a. s than Just on the CQurt The rulesmake rs h ave b~en cognizant of t~e 'giants' and hav attempted by legisla_tion to cur b the. big boys, but they s till lead in re- bound mi; and pointmakmg despite all efforts to the contrary

and Mike Pradels and Neal Schram, both sophomores. Schram was voted most valuable frosh on last year's 19-6 squad, while the 6-1 Pradels was a starting forward on that squad. Saturday USD travels to Pepperdine to play the Waves in an 8 p.m. game. The Waves are improved this year from last year' club, which had a 9-17 record. Hal Grant, a 6-9 all-confer- ence center, and 6-5 Steve Ebey, an honorable mention forward, will be the best of the waves' returnees. Tomorrow night's game with the Broncos will be preceeded by a JV game at 6 p.m. The JV's play at Pepperdine at 5:45 on Saturday.

USD, Alan scored over 650 points, and is 11th on the all- time scoring list. Depth is the Toreros best asset thi year, with capable replacements available at every position. Magee is back- ed up by Greg Long, a 6-8 senior, and Dan Wightman, 6-6 who was a starter on the Tor- ero squad two years ago. Wilke and Cabrera have able back up men in Carpenter, 6-6, who was last year's start- ing center, and sophomores Jim Usher and Jeff Filzenger, both fine players up from the frosh. Sheridan and Fields are backed up by Bob McCloskey, who performed well in the few times he played last year,

10th in USD all time scoring. Ted Fields was also on the a, I-city fro~h learn with Ca- brera. and increa ed his point average to 17.2 last year aher averaging 6.8 as a sophomore. He was co Most Valuable Tor- ero last year Sharing the award with 1''ields was Bill Sheridan, a 6-0 guard , who was a consis- tently sharp player last year after recovering from an early- season injury. Bill averaged 9.9 points a game. The Toreros a re stronger this year, losmg only Alan Fay from last year's starting five . Fay averaged over nine points a game for the Toreros and was a fierce defensive player. l n his three yea rs at

___ _:Cc..h_r_istian Family Movement in San Diego.

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Has Beconie Chancellor Jte~. l. Brent Eagen form- J.1gio11 at Uur Lvd,· of Pencn ~r dir·edol' ol_ s_cl100I rela- .\calLll1). •

lie also conducted teacher Diego training for the Parish }Ji,1 11

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fVENING TRIBUNE

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11.early ~O Years with the dio- rectors the Con1mumtv c~se. w1U devote full tim;., to Welfare Council of San Di<>g~ hr s_ dulies ag pa8~0r of the County, the regional co,mcil Ola M1ssw11 ;:ia11 Diego de Al- of the ~alional Countil of cala Christians and Je• vs. and .i He ~as S('l'1~ed as i::asto1 of member or lhl Sau Diegu the m1:;s1011 smce I9a4._ Opera Guild and th,e La Jolla Father Eagen a native of Museum of Art San B: n.1ardino. .attended He rec:eutly -~ as appomtecl Lo) ola l;111ve1s1ty ?f Los An- asalternatc member tu the ge~es pnor to ~tud1es for the, Kearn~ Vista Planning Asso- pnesthood at , t. Francis and· ciation. Immaculate lleart seminar- ie~. f·le was o 1 da ue for the Dwcese of San Di o in 1956. 111 !::an Diej!o. 'Father Eacr. en has ta gq :nglish 1nd Americ:an litera re al USD's College for •!en. thco!oa) for

Most Rev. Francis .J. r' urey will be an honored gu,· · .rnd pre- side at the installation of new office rs of the University of San Diego Au dian noon luncheon meeting January 11 in the Atlantis Rest;,uran' . Other honor ,:11e ·ts will be Very Rev. ,John E. Baer. presi-

AREA NEIL MORGAN

dent of the Co lege for Men. a nd Rev. I. Brent Eagen, direc- tor of school relation s at the college. l\lr . A. J. C. Forsyth of Coro- nado will serve a second term as president. Offic e rs serving with Mrs. Forsyth include Mmes. Harold F. Tebbett,. first vice president: Irving W. Marlin. second vice president: Lawrence Oliver. recording secretary: Leo J. Durkin. cor- responding secretary , and Ravmon ,l 1ttlcs, treasurer. Dire who will begin . Euge e II. DeFalco, E. R. Grisv.old and Frank J . O'Connor. 0 h rs include Mmes. Frank 1-. Ro se, Ross G. Tharp, Ernest P. Tovani, Paul A. Vesco, and George W. Wolfe. Newly elected members of the board of' directors are Mmes. R. E. Archibald, Clem their nd ie•m as commit- 11 are lmes. Elliott tee chai · M. Bro\

G. Berrill. George Herrick, .John M. Murphy, John T. Sch,lil anct Robert P. Steed. l\lrs. Fors~ th. who is current- Iv servin~ as president of the C""•lllado Cha'llber of Com- n,crcc. is a ·,st president of th e Sornptim,s• Club of Coro- nado. the C< .,n o Hospital Auxiliary , Sacretl Heart Pat- en t s Club . and t he Mills College Mothers Club.

COLIDTh'IST'. C ROU EL: The Unhcrsity o[ San Diego, which mixed bo~s and girls in the classroom for the first time last semester, ha,; made another ,-tep toward rocduration. )lrs. Dorothy Head Knode, a formrr national singlei, champ, is tennis coach of the Colli' or l\Jen. ... Sign at Art Way's hobby !>hop: "\\ II dope and get away \\ith it." (The clop b tile kind used on model airplanes.) . . . TomorrO\ night's boxing card at the Community Conco r will feature three former senice champs: ldez, all-Navy featherweight; Art Davis, all-Air For<'e midcllewcigbt, and Ken orton, all- Bobby

and medical ethics at i\Ier~y College of Nursing, and re-

Y~&NQJES

~ectures and coming events at the College for Women will feature the work of campus scientists. The Biology Department sponsored a whale watch- ing field trip Tuesday, Jan- uary 9. Students and profes- sors met at Seaforth Marina with Dr. Theodore Walker a' guide. Later in the week. Mother Bernice Farrens, chairman of the Biology Department, showed slides of the Baja California Natural history expedition. Mother spent her Christmas vacation in Baja California. Dr. Diana Stiggall will speak on "The Mechanism of Hydro- losys of Some Benzylboronic Acids" at 4 p.m. thi · Friday, m Room 53. Students and' faculty inter- ested in civic involvement will attend the San Diego Open Forum. This week's topic is "The Legal Mystique:· Speak- ers will be Robert J. Cooney. Irving E. Kaplan, and Carroll Waymon.

Mothers Irene Lawrence and Anais Pugh went to San Fran- cisco during the Christmas holidays to report on sociolo- gical and apostolic activities which have been going on at the college since fall. They met with other representative, from Sacred Heart college.;. and academies at the San Francisco College for wom- en. USD's area of servke is the "Town Council of Kearney Mesa" which attempts t,, elim- inate political and social apathy in Linda Vista.

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Tor os p Phoenix AAU Club, 81-11:l:}~: University of San Dilgo•~ bas- ketball team last night made one of its rare home-court ap- pearances the occasion of an 87-72 conquest of the Glenarm Land Company, a Phoenix AAU outfit. It was the fir t game in the USD gym for the Toreros since they outscored Cal Poly of Po- mona, 65-50, Dec. 1 in their opening game. Ted Fields, hitting most of his points in the second half, led USD with 23 points. Rick Ca- brera added 18 and Bill Sheridan and Jeff. Filzenger each contributed 12. , Sherid ' brother, Tom, played 1 the Phoenix team and m ciel 16 pofufs. Glenarm, now 1 rew 29 points from Jim , a 6.7, 240-pound forme Uiah State star

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l lo % Toreros Tackle Westrtlont Five University of San Diego's Toreros face the Westmont War- riors and the UC Irvine Anteaters this weekend after struggling through the first 11 games of the season with a 6-5 record. Last weekend the Toreros played excellent ball while defeating a Phoenix AAU team;lhe Glenarm Land Co.. 87 to 72. Coach Phil Woolpert's squad has had its troubles, including players at 6-7, and _USD had a injuries to key players. but the little tr~uble_ early m the game Toreros did play well enough preventrng J • m Rhead, _a form- during the Christmas holidays er star at Utah, from dnvrng to to capture their second Cal the basket. Rhead finished the Western Holiday tournament. game with 29. The Toreros defeated the West- Brother Plays erners, 70-61, in the champion- Tom Sheridan, brother of ship game. the 'Toreros' Bill Sheridan, Friday night USD hosts the played well for the visitors, Warriors of Westmont, who are dumping in 16 points. Tom was having a relatively poor sea- a starter for three years on son. The Warriors have only the St. Mary's team. ll

Results Told For USD in Bar Ex ms ,/ii[k~ ,Se,u.i Iner\'\ ~0~5 The August California bar results of the University of San Diego School of Law have been announced by Dean Joseph A. Sinclitico. Jr. June graduate achieved a 63 per cent average of first time pas- sage. The state bar average was 49.2 per cent wh1ch included first and second time candidates. The followmg USO gradu- ates passed the 1967 fall bar examination: Lawrence Patrick Boulger, Bruce Chandler. James Arth- ur Chanoux. Grant Conard , Le- land Curtis Dolley, Patricia Margaret Doyle. Donald, ew- hall Feld, Thompson Eetter, Craig Patnck Fitzgerala. ary Golden Gell. Also James Warren Hod es. :i-ohn Michael Hughes. Jr., ~homas William Hurnpn s, :;philip Deans lsaac, Robert Francis Kuhnert, George Hen- ry Lerg, II, Henry Rezin Mann, John Joseph McCabe, Jr., Michael R. McDonnell. Paul Clifford McEwl'n Jr Also James Henry Miller, Jr. John Peter ~ohn, D,nid Brownell Moon, Jr, Charles Emerson Row ii:dw rd Charles Sada, Mal}Q1;1e El•rne O'Reilly. Ray IL Shollen'bar- ger. Jr.. Eugene rnest Ther- i ea u, ,Jr., Thomas Wayne Thornburg, Richard Alan Townsend, Lewi· Richar 1- ton, and James Michael Welch.

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By JOHN KENNEDY doesn't have Berkeley's Sproul Hall on c it now can claim a student protest. The Legislativ of the Associated Student Body unanimously pa

lution last week to boycott the al Development Center's Readi ciency Program. The protest is lodged against a $50 fee charged for the six-week cour e. Student leaders contend the adminis ration prom- ised that the reading course would be free of charge. The student 11 solution asks !hat students now enrolled for the Feb. 5 session withdraw from the course. USD varsity basketball squad will be kept busy during semester break with a road trip to Washington and Idaho. The Toreros will meet Gonzaga and the Uni- versity of Idaho. The game with Gonzaga will be televised and shown in the San

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By JOHN KENNEDY

Classes reconvene tomorrow at the university and students begin two weeks of preparation pefore final examinations. USD students may feel a tinge of envy for Cal Western and

UCSD students who are on the quarter system and completed final exams before the Christmas vacation. Christmas vaca- tion has been a welcome respite for catch- ing up on assigned reading and writing term papers. Finals begin Jan. 18 and end on the 26th. Students returning to the College for Men after vacation may not recognize the ground floor of the college. Workmen have transformed a section of the first floor into additional lab space for the Bi- ology Department. Construction is almost completed on the E(\u ional Development Center on the thir floor of the College for Men's Hall

Diego area.

four back from last year's 10-15 club. However, Westmont has always given USD fits, the Warriors winning all five previous encounters. Travel to Irvine Saturday night the Toreros travel to Irvine to face the Anteaters in a return match. Earlier, Irvine bested the Toreros, 81-72, in the Anteat- ers' first tournament. Ted Fields led the scoring for the Toreros with 23 points against Glenarm Land Co., with Rick Cabrera adding 18, and Bill Sheridan and Jeff Filzenger each contributing 12. The Toreros started strong, leading 41-31 at halftime. The AAU team started three

The College for Men and the College for Worn sociated Student Body governments will combine their financi01 resour- ces for the 1968 Homecoming activities. The College for Men has traditionally organized and financed all aspects of Homecoming Week. The joint venture fs part of a continual attempt to draw the two colleges closer together. UCSD will represent the Netherlands and the Model United Nations of the Far West on April 24-27 at the University of :Arizona at Tucson. Students from the CW, CM, and the School of Law will attend the conference. Issues that ha ,•e faced the United Nations during the past year will be discussed by the delegates of some 125 participa- ting schools.

The USD JV team continued its excellent play by downing the Naval Training Center, 88 to 62, coming up with 58 points in the second half. The Toreritos were led by John Boone, who scored 19, 17 in the second half. The only other Torerito in double figures was Steve Oberholser with 14, as Coach John Cunningham sub- stituted freely. The win improved the JV record to 6-2. They play the San Diego State JV squad in tomorrow night's preliminary at 6, and meet the Irvine frosh in a 6:30 preliminary Saturday. The varsity games will be played at 8 both nights.

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of Science building. Facilities will include a reading efficiency laboratory, learning laboratory for individual study and re- view, ancl an efficient study program. • KENNEDY Dr. Gerald Sperrazzo is director of the Educational Develop- ment Center end profe or of psychology at the College f

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