News Scrapbook 1956-1959

TIJUANA, B. C., SABADO 20 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 1958

THE SAN DIEGOUNION 20 O Sat., Sept. 20, 1958 a SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA TODAY IN SPORTS FOOTBALL Balboo Stadium - University of San Diego \Is, University of Mexico, I p.m. HORSE RACING Mruo Caliente Race Tra,k1 Tiluana, first po.st 12 nooJA, ALAI , Caliente Greyhound Ctub, Tlluano, first post 7:-'5 p.m. Fronton Palace, Tliuana, ):JO p,m.GREYHOUNO RACING first game

Pumas se enfrenta eo futbol a la Universidad de San Diego 1

U of San Diego Captures Opener SAN DIEGO, Sept. 20 - University of San Diego whipped visiting Univer~ity of Mexico here tonight, 20 to 6, to open the h o am schedule.

Futbo

El partido sera por la noche en el Estadio Balboa- • Justificada a nl maclcin existe en esta poblacion por a~ir la no- che de hoy a l gran c~ue futbo- lf st ico entre los equ ipos de la Un1- vers idad de San Diego Ca lifo rnia, y los Pumas de la Unive rsidad

(AMERICANn, Universidad de Mexico ( PUMAS) - CONTRA - Universidad de S. Diego (LOS PIONEERS) * HOY SABADO 20, a las 8 P. M., en el BALBOA STADIUM DE SAN DIEGO * BOLETOS E INFORMACION EN Direccion General de Tu I

SCORE BY QUART~R 0 0

0 6-6 6-20 (5-yd. 0

6

8

Encinas

Naclonal de Mexico, encuentro a ve rifi ca rse en el Estadlo Bal boa. El t,ncuentro dP fillbol ameri'ca- no debera tniciarse a las ocho de la noche, sabiendo~e que una gran cantidad de aficionados de todo Baja California invadira el puerto I sandieguino, para asistir al icho- FUTBOL (AM 1 ER'ICANO) UNIV ER SI D A D D E t'IEJ

THE SAN DIEGO UNION 14 ® Sat., Srpt. '!O, 19"3 a SAN DIEGO, CALl~ORNIA

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FACE MEXICO PUMAS USD Kicks Off '58 Cord Tonight Ily JOHNlli-Y :llcDONALD The nlversily of San Diego embarks on its most ambitious football campaign tonight with a dash o! international flavor as it 'tackles the scrappy and fast University of Mexico Puma~ in Balboa Stadium. * * * Following colorful pre-game Mexico LI~.~- UPS f t. ·t· k' k ff · h d Endnas 05•/ LE es lVl leS, lC O lS SC e ·1Macorro (214 LT uled at 8 o'clock. . 0121 L~ Actually, the Pioneers will Arnabar Cl72l Re; be bidding for their f i f t h i~~~~ 0 dm 1 :~ straight victory over a two- C:f~ 0 ~m> 1158 > e~ year period undPr the guid- ~gf~g~~'a

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TELEFONOS 22-75 y 22-80

TIJUANA, B. C. -

ORES

LOCAL LA. State, 8; Sacramento St., 6. SOUTHLAND Le Verne, 46: Chino Institute, 20. Santa Barbara, 26; San Olego St., o. San Di~o U, 20; Mexia U, 6. Bakersfield, 42; Mesa (Colo.), o. Riverside, 28; Cerritos, 27. Fresno JC, 22; Fullerton, 6. Oceanside, 18; Eastern Arizona, 7. Cal Poly, 25; Colorado St. 6. PACIFIC COAST L~r:~::iSt.~e;:;• e::,n.W:::'.n~:;leg~S•~: Ariz. St. {Flagstaff), 16; Cal Poly (Pomona), 8. Whittler, 9· Cal Aggies 6 Oakland, 40; Olablo Variey, 16. Chico st.• 34; Pacrffc (Or.), 14 _ W 111 am et t e (Or) Lewis & Clark (Port) 12· Port st 7 Linfieldc(Or.),. J2•oi-.' Col:. of Ed., 41 · Whitworth (Wash.), 6. · ' ' l · Boston College, 48; Scranton, o. Villanova, 28; w. Chester (Pa.), 14. Maine, 19; Massachusetts, 6, Connecticut, 41; SPrlngfield, U Norwich, 24; BridgePOrt 8 ' St. Vincent, 15; Thiel, f. · c w Post 8· Montclear st 6 D'eniSon, 2i; Trinity, 12. ,, • Queens (Canada), 15; st. Lawrence, o, Stroudsburg St., 19; Kutztown, o. Bolling AFB, 26; Lockbourne AFB, 0 Fairmont St., 7; ShePherd, 7. New Haven TC, 30; Quonset, 8. Edinboro, 19; Clarion TC, o. • Ed., 7. (Jaus9etl .,ou nd 6 • (Wash.), 9 , Pac. Luth. h. ' EAST

Ripon, 40; St. Olaf, 7. St. Johns (Minn.), 41; Macalester, 1'. Cornell (la.), 27; Knox, O. ~~~y~;g, 3 Jf Eim;~ 1 , f !~;!· 6~ 3 • E. Illinois, 30; Ind. St., 8. Mo. Valley, 35; MIiiikin, 20. North Park, 26; Olivet (Mich.), 13. Ball St,, 31; Illinois St., 14. Illinois Col., 20; Central {Mo.), O. Concordia (Ill.), 14; Elmhurst, O. Muskingum, 13; Geneva, O. Marquette, 18; S, Dakota St., 7. Winnipeg,. 36; Cofgary, 9. Heidelberg, 20; Bluffton,. 6.. Ffndlay,. O; Otterbefn, o. ~i~i1:r~f:J~~f£~:• g:; Doane, 13. Midland, 45; Concordia (Neb.), O. Wheaton, 40; Norlhern )If., 20. Butler, 3p; Bradley, 19. M_ornlngs1de, 28; Omaha, o. Hillsdale (Mich.}, 21; Lakeland (Wis,), Superior, 30; Northland, 0. g!~~~jh,C~isJ:u 2 ~1al{,t•u~afer, Graceland, 27; Culver-Stockton, 6. Valparaiso, 18; Northern Mich., 13. Glenvllle, 13; W. Liberty, 0. N.D. St., 30; Augusfana (S.D.), 28. Winona St. (Minn.), 22; Loras, 8. St. Cloud St. (Minn.), 24; Stout, 12. lowat Tchrs., 25; Mankato St, {Minn.), 0. Gus . Adolphus, 34; Minn. Duluth, 20. A'!,ont. St., 15; N. Dakota, 8. Sroux Falls.. 6· so Tech 6 S. Dakota, 22;' N.'E.' Mo., 8. · Northern TC (S.D.), 19; Yankton, o. Huron, 46; Oak. Wesleya!'I (S.D.), o. Gen. Beadle, 18; Black Hills TC, 12. Chadon (Neb.} TC, 26; Sthrn. TC (S.D.), 13 _ .

Brooke Army Med. at Tex. Sthrn., ppd, Miss., 17; Memphis St., 0. W. Ky., 12; S.E Mo., 0. Miss. Sthrn,, 14; La. Tech, O. Hardin-Simmons, 14; Tulsa, 0. Presbyterian, 24; E. Carolina, 16. Carson-Newman, 20; W. Carolina, 6. Elon, 14; Guilford, 7. Mid. Tenn., 12; Austin Peay {Tenn.), 0. La. Col., 14; Corpus Christi, o. Marshall, 9; West Virginia St... O. U of Tenn. Martin Br., 33; Georgetown College (KY.}, 7. Southestrn. La., 14; Southwstrn. la., 6. Northeast St. (La.), 14; S, F. Austin,. 12. Lenoir Rhyne,. 14; Wofford, 0. Hampden-Sydney, 14; Bridgewater, O. Emory & Henry, 39; Concord, o. W. Virginia Tech, 13; Salem, 0. Marietta, 25; W. Virginia Wesf., 12, Southwestern (Tenn.), 7; Millsaps, 6. Ozarks, 12; Miss. College, O. Western (Colo.) State, 16; Eastern New M~1~~:r~. State (Colo.), 16; Eastern New N. Texas st., 26; Texas Wsfrn., 8. Sam Houston. 12; McNeese, 6. McMurry,. 21; Howard Payne, 8. E, Texas St., 27; A!Jllene Christian, 6. E. Tex. St., 27; Abilene Chrstn.,. 6. Trinity, 25; Texas A&I, o. Mexico, 6. SOUTHWEST :' 30; Coll~ge of Idaho, 12. Nevada, 12, Pepperdme, 7. Western _Montana, 7; Ricks (Ida.), 6. BYU, 29, Fresno St., 1. ROCKY MOUNTAIN H b If St um o

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THE SAN DIEGO UNION

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un., Sept. '?l. 1953 SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA

(Continued) defensive club napping. As soon as the Pumas are set in position the ball is snapped and away they go. Mexjco will operate from balanced a n ct unbalanced lines, use the w in g e d- T, straight-T, single and dou- ble wing formations to mix up the enemy. The Pioneers weight edge in the line should spell the difference·. USD will open with eight lettermen. They include ends C. G. Walker and Ray Yoast, tackles Rick Novack a n d Charlie Franklin, guard John Mulligan, center Jack Garao. !ono and backs Bob Keyes and Avalon Wright. t h e starting club will be guard Bill Patten, a former S a n Diego High and Marine COJ1)S Recruit Depot perforn,er; quarterback Chapman from Arkansas J . C., and halfback Tom Gates, who played with the Hawaiian Marines l a s t year. The newcomers in

QB CLUB SESSIONS BEGIN; COACHES ENLIVEN PROGRAM Opening luncheon meeting of the Quarterback Club Is scheduled !or tomorrow noon at the Jubilee room of the San Diego Club, with six San Diego coaches making up the panel. The luncheons, highlights of the San Diego football season, are sponsored by the Aztec Club, San Diego State booster group. The public is invited. Jack Murphy, sports editor of The San Diego Union, will be master of ceremonies. Coaches who will discuss their weekend games and report on future contests are Paul Governali, George Schutte, Bob McCutcheon, Duane Maley, Al Lewis and Bull Trometter.

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20.

{ St. ) Benedrd Hastings 19 ~Joomsburg TC, 20; Shippensburg TC, NJ~,.,~rJ~· St., 2S; Warrensburg St., O. Northeastern, 26; Rhode Island, 6. Springfield St., 1; Pittsburgh TC, 6. po~~"g_fleld (Pa.) St. Teachers, 7; Brock- t!,Yf 11 ~~la~Pe°~tSj2; 56~taBV:!h1'r

THE SAN DIEGO UNION a 14 (!!) .'.\Ion., Sept. 22, 19:;3 - ==-S_A_N_DISGO, CALIFO~NIA LESSON IN HUMILITY- P ~pneer WQrk Hard For Victory By JOHNNY • IcDONALD 68 yardi; f9r ii· tQt1chdowJ1 with After stopping two drives, The University of San Diego seven econds left in the USD went 53 yards again, fo?tball players und~ubted!Y game. this time in 13 plays, to score will take more stock m their Four 'USD b k l d 'th l·30 I f • coaches' warnings hereafter. ac s P aye Wl • e t m the half. At any rate, the Pioneers workmanlike roles in picking Keyes went over from the one had to battle every inch of the up important yardage. Tom yard line and when the ' extra- way to gain a 20-6 victory Gates, a former Hawaiian point try failed USD led over a vastly underrated Uni- Marine back, collected 56 14-0. ' ' verslty of Mexico f_ootball yards in 12 carries, veterans Mexico was in USD terrl- team before an estimated Avalon Wright and Bob Keyes tory aaain and with seven 7.000 fans Balboa Stadium I adde~ , 49 and 43 yar?s, Te- seconds° left Enrique Fuen- Saturday mg~t. . sp':cti, ely and Don G,Jmore, tes' pass was intercepted by The defens1\·e J!lay of Vic switched from end to f;ill- Gray on the USD 32 and the Gausepohl, p. sephomore from back, looked good m gettmg fast freshman ran It back for Long Beacb City College, and 40 yards in 10 can-ies. · the final touchdown. freshmap .Joe Gray from St. A seven - yard pass from STATISTIC .Augustine High helped the Chapman to end C. G. Walker Fl I d · uso P US v:;ds ::'s\~ntl ~·:: :: ..: 18 i'oneer eiyi e i'lnme;isurably. gave D its. first touchdown.. Yar oa,si o ..... . 71 2i: Each Intercept d a --pair of Gausepohl added two points Poms . ._ . .. 1-11 i-11 passes deep in USD territory witb a run around end for the ~~~~1.;"l:~epted by ... i with Gray running one back conversion. penou,eci"" ""··"·'·~& MfJ

EVENING TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA b 5 , }" l\lon., Sept. 22, 1958 •

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-=-,--~-~- Lis ing "QB Is Problem,

Lisping QB Is Prob em, (Continued from Page b-3) Mexican team. Mccutcheon had some praise for his backs, ends and cen- ters, but could only shake his h~ad over the manner in which his tackles and guards per- formed. USD picked up its first touchdown of the season in the opening qua1·ter when quarterback Jan Chapman hit end C. G. Walker with a seven- ya_rd pass, climaxing a 53-yard drive. Sophomore Vic Gauseo- pohl, who also played a whale of a defensive game, ran the ba!J over for two extra points. Another drive of 53 yards netted the Pioneers their sec- ond-quarter TD, with Keyes scon:1g from. one yard out. Luis Rodriguez passed five yards to end Ismael Encinas for the Puma tally, which had been set up, ¼-'hen Enrique Fuentes mtercepted a pass bv Pione!'r Billy Bourque on the 17. Freshman Joe Grnv inter- cepted a Puma aerial and d~shed 68 yards to score the Pioneers' final touchdown with ?nly seven seconds left. Scor- ing: M "" ........ •..... I 6 0 6---20 us •• SC0r;ng;···tb;s--2-~ol~ o 6- 6 3rc;,f PAT~Gouseocohl (runr' KeYes, scorrnu: TD- Encinas. / the spunky, but outweighed

But USDWins All coach . Bob Mccutcheon wants for Christmas is four front teeth-not for him but for his quarterback. The biggest problem Uni- versity of San Diego's Pio- neers encountered in beating University of Mexico, 20-6, Sat- urday night- aside from a de- cided case of overconfidence- was understanding quarter- back Duane O'Connor's sig- nals. I O'Connor has an expensive partial plate, which he re- moves at game time. The trouble is he "listhps" without his teeth. It got so bad that l\keutch• eon had to pull him out Sat- 1urday night when one o! the ,players complained he could not understand the signals. However, Mccutcheon has more io worry about than O'Connm•'s teeth. He has some middle inemen who had bet• ter get to work before they host New Mexico Western next Saturday in the Stadium. The 7,000 fans in Balboa Stadium last Saturday night were amazed by the play of (Continued on Page b-5, Col. 4)

Part tr-SAT., SEPT. 20, 1958 TODAY'S GRID MENU LOCAL I Colorado State at Cal Poly Pittsburgh vs. UCLA, Coli- (SLO). seum, 2 D,m. SOUTHWEST Sacramento State vs, L.A. *Baylor at Arkansas. State, Rose Bowl, 2 p.m. *LSU at Rice. S *Texas Tech at Texas * OUTHLAND . A&M. pniversity of M;exico at *Georgia at Texas. Umversltf of San Diego. *Hawaii at Arizona State *San Diego State at Santa (Tempe). · Barbara. *Utah State at Arizona. PACIFIC COAST MIDWEST Stanford at Washington *Dayton at Cincinnati. l State. Drake at Iowa St. ll Idaho at Oregon. Wyoming at Kansas St. f, TCU at Kansas. r

S. Dakota St. at Marquett, Vanderbilt at Missouri. P~nn St. at Nebraska. ROCKY MOUNTAI~ *Fresno St. at BYU. Oklahoma St. at Denver. *Montana at Utah. SOUTH Virginia at Clemson. Tulane at Florida. *Georgia Tech at Ken- tucky. *Mississippi at Memphis St. 'K.C. St. at North Carolina. *Duke at S. Carolina. Maryland a t Wake F oi·est.

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Richmond a t W. *Denotes night

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