News Scrapbook 1964-1967

C t t ic Aztecs

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4

THESAN DIEGO UNION

'ii Thur ., Dec. 23, 1965

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NASH LEADS 69-64 WIN Lumberjacks Topp e Westerners For Title centage. The Arfaonans closed with a 43 per cent average. Bv .JOH."1."IY ~1cDONALD of a consolation ht in its Wii!ie . 'ash. firing mostly on only other tourney appear-

Late Rally Paced by Yavorsky By RICK SMITH EVENING TRIBUNE SPOrls Writer Ba ketball is No. 1 at Uni• versity of San Diego, where coach Phil Woolpert and his Toreros are the biggest thing since co-education. USD s.cored its fourth ~traight win without a defeat last night, topping San Diego State College, 54-47, in a wild, crosstown confrontation. Since Woolpert arrived at Alcala Park in 1964, basket- ball has been the rallying point for the USD students, and their upport of the program was demonstrated in the Torero gym last night, where a turnaway crowd of about 1,400 persons cheered them on. It was nip and tuck all the way, but USD pulled away in the last moments after State s young club squandered a chance for victory. "It verified what I thought," said Wool pert. State is gonna' be good. They're the best team we've· played. The:v.'re going to beat some people." Th Toreros might have been beaten were it not for a strong, off-the-bench per- formance by guard Mark Yavorsky, a .pringy, senior guard who prepped here at St. Augustine High. Yavorsky scored only ll points, but it was his outside niping which kept his club thead most of the way. He 1ad played only five minutes in the first three games; be- cau e of a sprained ankle_ "The turning point was Yavorsky's performance," said Woolpert. "It really was his first game. Bernie

ance here four years ago, had to b~ttle back from a 12-point

the

from

jumps

fade-away

The game was tied twice in the second half before Na~h • really W\:nl to work. He con- ncc:ted with two drivrs, a pair during a 3-minule span send Arizona State on The Wcskrncr s never re- Lanky Bob Pence and Billy Hicks contributed for the vie• to top, 43-39. gained the lead. University of San Di1•go, trailing for some :14 minutes, came on In the late stages to down Eastern Wa hington, 51- 48, for third place. Th i Toreros w<•re deft•nding ch mpions. In early action. Cal State of layward won the consolation crown with a li3-56 triumph over Eastern New Mexico while Ph1bl'ac belled Poi, :¼ugu, 61-49, for ·cventh spot. Lemon,, wl10 collected 48 points in three games and was the sparkplug of his club, wa · named the most valuable player of the touniamcnt. Player~ named to the 1(). man all-tourney team were: Pence and • 'ash of i\r1zona State, Lemons and Rawtis of Cal Western, Bernie Bicker• staff and Cliff A~hford of USD, Hon Oram of Eastern 'lew Mexico, Howard F'oster and .John Langcnhicm of Hay- ward, Ron Drayton or Eastern Washington and F'rcd Mims of PhibPac. USD coach Phil Woolpert, obviou ly displeased with the showing of his first club, be- · gan both halves with his sec- ond strmgcrs and Eastern Washington was able to main- tain the advantage. quintet moved out to a 4-0 lead and held an advantage through the first half as USD failed to find the range rtrst stringers Phil Price, Ber 11c Bickerstaff and Bill Sheridan were fi- nally mserled in the last nine minutes of lhe initial lanza but couldn't change the tide. Utilizing its height, Wash- ington went ahead, 20-12, on a pair of shots by Bill Bayless. and left al int"rmission with a The NorthwPstern sl "ts in the first half but Eas crn Washmgton did liltle bcttn with 30 Woolpcrt. finally sent in the first crew ,1 ilh 13 mumtes remaining and the Toreros down, 31-2G. At the six•mmtue mark. a free throw by Cliff Ashford knot led the score at 42-all. But Bill Britc's Jumper for Eastern Washington sent the invader ahead again. 44- 42. Mark Yavor ky's long jump shot with 4 18 left tied the score again at 46-46 and 1:so teammate Alan Fay followed later with another jumper to f;end the Toreros in front, 48-43, with 3: 12 to go and East- ern Washington ''-il'i finished. Fred Mims, who set an mdi- vidual scoring re<.:ord of 44 points in this tourney two years ago, paced the Invaders with 17 in ~:esterday's sev- enth-place scramble. Howev- er, Point i\lugu's toney Burke had game hono;·s with 18. Havward and Eastern New Mexico battled evenly until he final minute when free throws and a tip ·gave the former a victory. 1 of jumps and :i free throw 22-16 bulge. USD, now record, conrw, cent of 1t d only 20 per

sides, sparked a second half attack la t night to lead Ari- :wna Stale College at Flagstaff the Holiday Basketball championship in Golden Gym. Na h, h.i,t;,ng 20 of his 30 lo

the

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to gain a

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ta e '·t J t m1·ss1·on n er During the first portion of

the We terners

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took full advantage of a bric[

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hrou ht the Lumb qack. a ' cold pell by the Lumberiacks

Cal

victory

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69-o-t

a nd shot out to a 21 ·9 lead.

-pound

Western. The 6-2,

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th

However

e~ior forward from Mc. ·ary, Ariz , netted 13 of 18 !1eld

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~ards m the _second half a~d I tors with 13 and 10 points, improved their shooting P~I · f respectively Cal Wcstcrn's Al Razutis l<'d his team with 13 whi I! Steve Crowell and Lem Lemons hit 11 and 10 poinL~, respectively.

goal alt-empts. The Amona

r of In t night's game against San Diego State College in USD gym. Will Smith of Aztecs stands b htnd Bickerstaff. USD scored 54-47 victory.

Hoop-Happy USD Tips Aztecs margin to II hi def nse ,, th · ztecs zon and LSD a man to m n, S\'ormg w

Son D ego \Jn on S1off Photo t. :\la.ry's College; Mr~. G<:>1-alcl A. La- rue, 1\Iarymount College, and H. John Ca'.,hin, Loyola Univer ity. leg'e; Si~ter Jo·eph Adele, Mount

Bishop Francis J_ Furey, pre~ident of University of San Diego, sea1ed, looks at new brochure with, from left, Manan Scott, Immacul?te Heart Col-

ul a premmm hford of USO w

ClHrord h Jd to

USO Joins 4 L.A. Colleges In Cooper tive ·Program By CHARLES DA vrs v \\arm and rewarding" recep- have conducted four college ad twn when she approached San missions work,hops. , l'quaint students and , lifornia, C th r members of the Religious of the their parents with offerings of . s a O ic Sacred Heart al one of the state the Southern California col- lookmg outward. in titulion's philosophy classes. leges, eligibility for enrollment The an Diego Union's Education Writer Diego State about at!endance by ing prospective lives of of Sister Joseph Adele, CSJ, ad- and financial a ·peels. yesterday at Al- missi?ns _director at Mou~t St. PROGRAMS PLA:-INED t lk d ho t Mary s, is comp1hng a hst of a e _a u co- faculty sp~cialists at the catho- five The outward look rep_orte_d b;y .ind lie colleges available to lectureJre~rese~tatJves or the five mst1- derstandmgs

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EVENING TRIBUNE

high tutJons 1s a corol!ary to a num- ber of programs ,m development stages at USD s College for

and

colleges

other

transcend in

that

schools.

daries.

campus

, there was a bro- TRANSFER STUDE~t'S

Speciflec..

}Jen.

·

.

chure which for the first time

then," -said Ziegenfuss, but, instead USD rolled off six points to take a 50-45 lead. State still had a shot in the last minute when John Wil- u:I "

Among these is a plan for

depicted the' f1 institutions a; Cashin said Los Angel~s Cath- : part of a loose ll<,nfederation. It ol!c colleges are working !)Ut instruction

tu-

in Spanish of

arrangements to make it im- 1 dents from south of the bo der the college, spearheaded by Dr. . pier to accept transfer sludentslduring their fir,t two years at

. contained this stat~ment:

,.

.., college . 15 /from public junior colleges.

ca

Although

owned mdependently, varwus m- arrange- Robert E. Miller, dean of the ~;;~~~leg: ::og:a~5a-!Jave.bfen ments already are complete. division of busmess administra c I P • me u 1 g m er- They include a listing of courses tion and economics. c~~~g:s en;o~ment 111 man~ 1 from 25 junior colleges and how Miller also plans to aid th coop!rative ~1:;e~l ~d.f~c~lt~-: they coinc_ide I_Yith programs at ~usiness _commu_nity in specia ties and !cess to the roll~~;;, the Catholic umversil ·. 1ze~ semmars tailored to close library holding, of one-half mil Father Eagen and Cashin •defined needs. He said Loyola's

lion volumes.'' BROCH iRE PRAISED The Most Rev. Francis J. Furey, apostolic administrator · of the San Diego dioce e and president of the University of San Die praised the cooper- ative brochure and went a step further. ' He propo ed a committee of repre entatives from each ofthe col eges to gain fuller msight of one another and, if po ·sible, to organize program "' th mu- tual benefits. •·There has never been anv concerted effort before," Bishnp Furey said... It would be· a good •I thing.'' . _'\1eeting al the chancery with ' Bishop Furey were officials - from Loyola t:niversity. lmmac- l ulate Hearl College, Mount St. :.\fary's College and Marymount · College. -1SKETCHES 11 'CLUDED Thumbnail sketches of the Jour Los Argeles area instit.u- !Jons, plus USD. are included in the brochure, largely the work o~ the Rev. I. Brent Eagen. director of chool relations at USD's Collegl't" tor 'vl:en, and H. John Cashin. director of school relations at Loyola. As an example of how the colleges are going beyond their 1 borders, ?>!rs. Gerald A. Larue admissions director of Marv~ mount, told of how a University of Southern California authority was called in to establish :'.fary- mount·s new Asian Studies Cen- ter ''There is a new era of under- standing coming about," li-s. Larue said, crediting the late ~ope John with providing the unpetus. 'PLURALISTIC SOCIETY' '·We've come to a realization !n the United States that we Jive m a pluralistic society. The day when '"e kept to ourselves is pretty much in the past." • !other Anne Farraher, pres- ident of USD's College for Women, told of a ''tremendous-

SECTION A 01O-TV

A wee Cave wrote our Statement of Appre~1a- \\ ith Ernest Boruuda, pre ident of he College f r A ated Studen Bod Ca gan circufatmg 1t on campus. Cave said he has been as- si•tcd by Judi Ba11 ·s a junior at the USD Colle !or Worp- en, who lettexert the tatement on a piece of parc)m,cnt, and David Pollick ai,d James R. Wilke, freshmen at the C - I• 0 e for ~1en Text of Statement The stafement follows: •·we the undersigned of the Un vercily of San Diego, do hereby wi h lo thank you, tire young men who have sacri- ficed yourss in order lo preserve that freedom which we so of- ten take for granted. "To you, young men who have been wounded m com at on foreign soil, we thank you sinecr ·. To our young men who ha e been kill in com- bat on foreign r.oil, we hold you 111 high e teem. "To the young men 11ho are ~till jn . mbat on. foreign soil, we back you up 100 per cent. As }Ou ha c <;a bravely shown the way, may we who will follow in your footsteps when our time comes to serve not b found 1>anting in dedica- tion to God and Country. "We salute all of you for being true Amcncans. Thar,kj yo ,, the tion." After con•ult ng

---..«g·e ds H Ip Angel F i"ht, a g up o! coeds 1h11ch t r n auxil- iar to .\rnold Air ociefy, 1 1elping lo cnll('Ct the items. • The drive will continue unhl after Thanltsgi · At the letter \\nling booth, e fraternity furnished pa- per. pencils and envelopes to the ·ludents who wrote not to a cc fie ser\'iceman. but, · Dear G.I. ' The letters will be collected by the fraler111ty and turned D\er to t 11th . ·a,·al District Hcadqu;i crs m San Diego, Kuhns d. lie said the lcl- te will then be shipped to 1e • am and distributed to sailor, and soldlcrs there. 'You Are, ·01 Forgotten' The lctter-,1 riters expressed varying reasons for participa- ting. ''I often think about all or ou fi£hting in the fields far away trom home and I ju t v, ant ou to know that you a e not forgotten by .iny of us here," wrote one coed. Larry Forkmer, a jumor majoring in political sci nee, id. "We realize t -o•hcr people ave r,g to ' demonstra!e their minority views. but we l1aH lo show the servicemen Iha t the only has some viel'.; differ- ent from the protestor.." Tim G as n, a i:shman, aid he send1 a letter ause l felt il was the a t I could do for my coun- ty.''

St Write Notes, Collect Gifts

1,0 0 at USD xpress Thanks To Wounded

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