News Scrapbook 1956-1959

EVENING TR ,JBUNE

SAN DlliGO, CALIFORNIA Tues., Sept. 10, 1937 J'

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. 1st Students To Move In Next Month EDITOP.'S NOTE· San Diego is mov,ng toward realization of it, dr&am of becoming the educational cenrer of the Southwe,t. A part or this is de- velopme,it of the Un,versify of San D,ego. Funds for the Arts and S~iences Building needed to complete the basic campus wit: be scught in a public CO"j· paign shortly. The story of the un)versit;'! development is told in a series of articles, of which this is one. Another step in the develop- ment of the lJniversily of San Diego }viii be realized this fall with completion of the new three-story law building onl the campus i11 Alcala Park. Part of the building wili be occupied next month. Howard S. Dattan, dean of the schooif of Jaw, said. Final step · c_ompleting 1 the university's b sic campusl ls the canst 1 f p.n. Arts

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-Son Diego Unl0t1 Photo by Geor;e Lyon Field. USD failed to capitalize on this scoring opportunity but did rally with the help of Keyes to turn back the Barstow Marines, 20-13. Keyes scored one touchdown on a 65-yard pass.

Bob Keyes (20). University o! San Diego halibacl,, i tripped up by Marine Pat Ryan and was stopped bv Ernie Delco (65) after runnin,;: 11 yards to the rstow 9 in Saturday night's foothall game al Lane

Points For Second Win Against Arizona State Coarh Bob McCutcheon ap- before 3,000 fans at Lane aerial game. parently will have to over- F1elcl. :; USD will ha,e 1o patch The 1957 edition is far ahead up its pass defense othc1wtse San Diego Pioneers poinl !or dilion and fundamentals and to run up '110l'e lout"hdowns hi tie more polish should than the opposition in aerials. The Pioneers got of! to a 1 Arizona State Lumberjacks al a ·few salient points about the shaky start and were down Flagstaff. opener: 13·0 after 10 minutes Satur- 1 In the FlagstaH club, USD 1 ~ob Keyes' 48 net.) aids day. Valdez punt was blocked will be meeting a team which doesn t begm lo. explarn his on the fourth pl ay and_ tl:e rolled ug JU pomts while potential as a gifted runner. Marmes recovered on l:SD s ;1e also ran back seven punts 9. Three plays later Al Ey ,lOHl'iNY lllcDONAJ,D !the Barstow Marines . 20-1~. best offense should be its haul his running game this the University o! ·1 0! their second straight victory,a Saturday night against lhe week as last year" s club in con- it will be a matler of trying 1 bring a (vinning season Here's

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BUILDINGS GO"'rG UP-In foreground ·1s the law building nearing completion on the Univei;sity of San Diego campus. It will be occupied next month. At left is the library LI.'

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The Jibran• will have 46,000 fee1 of floor spa , tw~ floors and a penthouse Rith four apartments for profossors. It will ave room foi 250,000 volumes.

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December. The Jaw building will have 60,- 000 square feet of floor space and will house the law school anc. College f r Men. .

Opert to Non-catholics The University is ope both Catholics and non-Cath- olics, The Most Rev. Charles to

insurance men, city

daytimes, students live in the· San Di-,ficers,

occupied

university! erwlse

Francis Buddy,

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president and bishop of San Dattan said.

em_ployee , an

ego area, are married and are, and county

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Non . Catholic

said.

Diego,

IFBI agent, utllitieR company

law non-Catholic.

of . a day

Add1~1on

students are not required to

participate in any religious ac-lschool 15 env1s1oned m the Only two of the instructors executives, and retired busi- sup- a non-Catholic, although he sch'?°!. received his law training at a Most of th e evening Ca tholic school, the Univer- degrees from other schools From Other School e student~ hold ·11 t . . no The Unive;·sity's School of P!a~t Law was envisioned by Bishop We II dents could receive a profes- ti n h re ,. sional education which goes O e ·. the · sses Buddy as a scho?l Where stu- definit~ need for such instruc- 111 Y O e school attracts people,schools represented her1t are . who aspire to be attorneys, ,Harvard, Princeton. Univcr- Dattan IS the only full-time as well as those who are vo- sity of California, Uni\'ersity those of Southern C lifornia. U.. vides the student with a firm One of its origmal teache:s who wish merely to broaden ~arnl Ac ad em y, Georgia ethical outlook for the better- w~en th e schoo~ opened ~n their intellectual outlook and Tech, University of North ment of the profession and the 19 ~4 , he was_appomted dez.n mlthose who need knowledge Carolina, Penn tate, San Dl-i community, Dean Dattan said. January, 19" 5 · of law to aid advan ern.-nt in ego State, California Ve tern 4School Begins Operation Bats 100 Per Cent their present occ ans. rsity, and th Univer- The law srhool began op- Completion of the four-year The student ro er has In- sity of Iliinol~, I eration in 1954 with a mere course of study entitles a St\!· eluded a Jewish Rabbi, pub- This year, for hand full .of . t1.1dents. This dent to sit for the California lie school teac , use- there wll! be year, em !Im is expected State Bar examinations. To wives, legal seer ar doc- the law sch to reach 100. has acquired date. the school has a perfect tors, a federal re ue agent, pre-law cou at the Univer. a librar1, volumes., record before the bar exam j a personnel dlrec r I of- sity of San Diego . which is p 1>,to-date and I committee. 0 n e student,• / beyond the limits of pro- fessional or legal law and pro- !acuity ~emb1;r _of th e school. cationaliy dissatisfied, evenmg k e e P becll:use there is a sit f S t Cl · an a ara. and college~. Among the ti VI y a Buddy added t th ·t . · ·ty B"•'- not-too-distant future, Dattan are Catholic Dean Datton Is nessmen (! umvers1 ' 1,,uop I "d '·B t "t sai · u I Wl

1 was on the receiving end of tackle for the score. a 6:5-yard touchdown intercepted 2 Had it not been for five Valdez' pass on t11e Barstow dropped passes when players131 a~d ran to San Diego's 22. were in the clear, Barstow A chp;,mg penally put the might have evened lhe cotmt Marines back on the :n but · o won tile game. a Pat Ryan to Sttlik pass to j J Barstow has an excellent the one set up the former·s for a total ot 103 yards and Knighten slanted off I e ! t pass I USD was d~eper _m the hole !rom Vern Valdez. ,when Ed Hicks and four downs on the nine. USD closed the gap on Va J- 1 Valdez did a capable job dez' pass lo Keyes for a 6:5- at quarterback and was very yar? pass · run touchdown. sneak !or lhe

compiling an _8-2 record lasi

ear. The Anzonans opened line which held i.JSD for five quartc.1 back 1a,;t Saturda~ by routing Fort downs on the two ) ard line second score. Huachuca. 46-0.

supplemented by all national .James Marinos, took thp bar reporter ~ervices and law re- exam in April of this year anq view SPrvices from many ma-Ipassed it. jor schools. He has Pntered private rac- Instruction in the law school tice. and will continu his Is as up-to-date as any aca- studies at the university eve- demic school on the West nings to obtain hi la de- Law students in new schools, "That's because the men ,such as the Univers1ty of San who _teach ur c asses in the .Diego, ar required to take a evening a practicing attar- bar exa · n, administer- neys by da and must keepled by th a ommittee, at abreast o1 e latest decisions the enp of their first year in and legis ·on," he explained. such scl'lools. In two out of The 10 -time instructors three appe ranees before the are particu arly well.qualified com · tPJ! to date, University in the courses they teach by of San, 'Diego la" students virtue of the fact thay have scored 100 per cent. e third had a great deal of practical appearance netted .an 87 per experience, as well as aca- cent score, Datton reported. demlc •t r a I n i n g in those There have been no gradu- courses, h added. ates from the new school. Only.Ev Ing Classes First Degrees In 1958 Classes are eld only In the The first graduating class evenings - Monday, Wednes- will receive Bachelor ot Laws· day, and Friday. The school degrees in the spring of 1958. thus provi~es the oppo onityjThere are seven students in 1 for legal mstructlon to men, the current senior class. and women who must be olh- A majority of the law school 1 Coast, Dattan said. gree. Taught by Attorneys

U SD got off lo a winning start last Saturday bul it was 1

Five mmutes Into t11e sec• l ond period, USD tied it by driving 40 yards in seven plays with Valdez going !rom the seven on a keeper. Marine end Norm Wilson dropped three passes in t11e the second pe- riod, two or wl1lch c"uld have been for touchdowns Ryan·s poor punt set USD up for the deciding tally on Barstow's ?,6. Vald~z passed lo C. G. Walker in the right, flat who went to the lour and on the next play Valdez threw over center to Merele Reed [or the louchdown . , 13 0 0 0-1 U50 7 , O 7-1 eorslow \Coring, rouchdowns--Kr,ighr , , (.t yd<;1, R:yon (1 yd ,, quarltrbac ~r>~oo<). Pol-Bonng. USD scoring, touchdown, Kevl? (65 vd1., oass from Valdez), 7 vds,. ~zet~iATR_:~!ii:z. Y,l'· poss from Val- lcul'!J.1G YL Net Av,. TO Keves •• •• 12 53 s 48 ,._o 1, Rudzinski •••.. 11 37 I JG y-1 0 ~~1r;z ....... 1 ¼ n \ 1J Chrones . 7 4 0 .t • ,I) 0 Totals c2 124 u 1oa 2.s 2 ' 1 clear during

an uphill battle lo overtake elfecti,e on passes. USD's

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• September 17, 1957 .,

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Season Is Young, But USO Coach Gets Cheer For Sideline Antics The 19.i7 football eason is still a beardless youth, but Bob Mccutcheon already has earned one major distinction. On the motion of Paul Governali, Mccutcheon has been unanimously elected the champion sideline pacer of San Diego county.

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Mccutcheon, new coach at the University. of San Diego, is show- ing remarkable early foot. All 1hose who watched him prowling the lines at Lane Field Saturday night agree he gives ·promise of becoming one of the great two- legged pacers of the era. Recognition of McCutchcon's exceptional talent came from Govcrnali erday as the San Diego Qu rlorba<·k Club held. the first of it W<' IY meetini;:s at Mission Valley untry Club. It was agreed, hough, that the young USD coal:\1 had an advan- tage which may be overcome by other jittery character-builders

No Wonder COP's Favored It was much easier for Bull Trometter, coach of the football team at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot. Trometter's dub ran over Mal1

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"In all probability," Lewis told the Quarte~backs, good-humoredly, "we will never be a power m foot• ball." Lewis, formerly of Newhall high school, takes o_vcr ~. team which played a one-game schedule f agamst Cal BaptistJ last season. The prE:sent squad mcludes three lettermen and some students who have never plaved a down of football, any kind of football. "The people who attend our games are apt to s~e some startling and amazing things," suggested Lewis. This might be the understatement of the month.. Interesting things happen to football coaches m the smaller schools. Mccutcheon, imported from A"!ltelo~e Valley Junior. College, discovered_ that coac~mg his team was the smallest part of his Job on openmg day. If Red Sanders and Bud Wilkinson think they have problems, they should have observed l\kC"cteheon at Lane Field Saturday. First, the coach an? his players had to erect the blea r·hers, lifting them piece by piece over a high fence. Then Mccutcheon personally laid ralled for him to appear on a television program at a tation. He drove hurriedly to _the border, spoke his piece, and hustled back to San_ Diego. Now, he became McCutcheon, the tramer. Only after he had taped the entire squad did Mccutcheon' have a chance to revert "(o his role of head coach. Tijuana ou+~~r one phase of his job. Next the schedule

1' ,Jack lUurphy

of the craft. McCutcheon's team jumped the season by opening a week early against the Barstow Marine.. And the ;\Iarines gavE' him extra inc;entive by grab · g a 13-0 lead in the first period before USD came to win, 20-13. Thi!< was the Pioneers' first start, a big and im- portant night in the life of both the coach and the school. "It was a great thrill to see th~ kids come off the scat of their pan1s after bE"ing 13 points down," said Mccutcheon, emotionally. "II' a green, inexperienced dub, a team without a senior. I think the kids have donf' a tremendous job. I've got to give 'em a lot of crC>dit." That's football. A game of thrills. Six-Man Cal Western Expects Help Al Lewis, 1he nt>w coach a California Western, called his first workout recently and was greeted by a "squad" o[ six players. But'better days are ahead. Cal Western classes begin tomorrow and Lewis ex• pects to pick up another 25 or :lO students fro1;1 the

~-- ~J,

freshman class.

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