News Scrapbook 1986

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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Daily Journal (Cir. SxW. 21,287)

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55C San Jos State (8-2) vs. Long Beach State (5-3)

14 Briefcase

Wti.re and When: Dovis, 1 p.m. What to look For: Aggies still ranked No. 2 notionally in Division II ... Socromento was ranked in top 20 in notion until upset loss to Col Poly-SLO lost week . .. Tough test No. 1 in WFC in both offense (424.8 ypg) and defense (304.7) ... RBs Rob Horri~on (1149 yards, 7.9 per carry) and Don Hair (465, 5.1 ofter coming bock from injury) provide strong running game ... Davis counts heavily on passing game with QB Chns Petersen (173 for 250, 2073 yards, 17 TDs, only six inter- cepllons) and variety of receivers - RBs Roger Wilkinson (42 catches, 393 yards) and Jerold Ligons (35, 219), TE Chris Mandeville '(31, 375) and WRs Rob Delgado (32, 428) and Wayne Adkins (18, but for 383 yards and six TDs) ... However, Sacramento leads its league in poss defense (only 47 percent comple- lions, 163 ypg, 19 interceptions). for Davis - Hornets ore ranked

and underrated -

mo 5t versatile - bocks •n oreo.

Hayward State (6-2) vs. Chico State (5-3) Where and When: Chico, 7 p.m. ranked 19th nationally and two losses hove been to Davis and North- ridge, currently No. 2 and 15 re- spectively .. . However, Chico prob- ably strongest opponent yet aside from those two ... Wildcat QB Cro,g Wallis line passer (174 for 299, 2028 yards, 14 TDs, eight inter- ceptions) and hos standout receiver in TE Chris Verhulst (43 catches, 633 yards) . , . Running game well-bol- onced with big FB Theo Longford (330 yards, 4.5 per carry), Ken Low- son (264, 4.6) and John Oglesby (220, 5.6) . •. Hayword counts on strong running game, plus side of that is that Pioneers con control boll keep it owoy from Choco offense; defensively vs. run than against poss ..,.......... ..._._....... ev r. HaY'!'l:ord does hov 25 sacks and 19 intercepti,;;on;;;s~;. :" Also Pioneer QB Bill Neal (94 for

Where and When: Spartan Stodi-

um, 1,30 pm Radio: KCBS (740)

What to look For: If Spartans (6-0 in What to look For: Hayword is

league) win, th yore PCAA chompi- ons and go to California Bowl; if long Beach (3• l) wins, 49ers still must beat las Vegas and UOP to share itl , win bowl bid. Fresno also st ok, its long st since 1949 • . . This tnatches No I and 2 passing teoms m the notion, Spartans overage 325 1 yards per game, long Beach 295 .3 . . • Son Jose QB Tony Locy d in for in1ured Mike Perez lo I w el:, I rew for 278 yards, three TDs .•• He has three of top five receive" 1n PCAA in WRs Guy L,g- gins (67 cut hes, 936 yards, third in notron) and Lalo Molouulu (53, 801) t p has one running. I ogu lou but 1s out of SJS hos seven-game win

University of San Francisco in 1959. He is a senior partner in the 23-lawyer Riverside firm of Thompson & Col~ate. Ward said it's "pretty nifty and very flat- tering" to be picked for the Krieger Award. He was selected, he speculates, "because I have spent more than half my life in the past five years involved in bar and community activities." Among Riverside lawyers, Ward is known for his humor. His vanity license plat.e bears his initials and the acronym "WGA," which Hansen said stands for "World's Greatest Attorney." And when Ward was asked to comment about his being named to the Krieger Award, he said "I think it's for being the world's best-looking attorney." San Diego attorney Warren R. Williamson has been appointed as the new chairman of the State Bar's Committee on Federal Courts. Williamson, who turns 39 on Sunday, is a graduat.e of the Univ ~oLaw School and haspracticed in California for almost 14 years. He succeeds WUUam E. Davia, former court executive for the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals who is now in privat.e prac- tice with Bronson, Bronson & McKinnon in San Francisco. The 15-member committee studies and re- ports on proposed changes in the law and practice before the federal courts. William- son, who served as the committee's vice- chairman last year, has a one-year term of office. Other committee members appointed by the bar's Board of Governors are: James M. Wagstatre of San Francisco, Chris- tine W.S. Byrd of the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles, Ann E. Fletcher of Newport Beach, Robert L. Harris of San Francisco, Albert T. Harutunian III of San Diego, John A. Lapinski of Los Angeles, Albert H. Mal- donado of Salinas, Carol D. Mills of Rose- ville, Michael R. Mitchell of Woodland Hills, Joan S. Ortolano of Los Angeles, Stuart L. Somach of Sacramento, Angela M. Souss of San Francisco, Owen Woodruff of San Fran- cisco, and Davis. Shella Gonzalez, the court administrator for the Glendale Municipal Court for more than six years, will be the new court execu- tive officer of the Ventura County Municipal Court starting Dec. 1. "We are eagerly looking forward to her leadership and contribution to the operation of the court," said the court's presiding judge, Edwin Osbourne. Gonzale-z will replace James G. Fox, who recently retired. "Drug Testing in the Workplace" will be the topic of a forum presented by the ACLU singles chapter on Sunday, Nov. 23, at the Burton Chace Memorial Park conference room in Marina del Rey. The 7 p.m. meeting will feature five speak- ers who are experts in the field of law, medi- cine, pharmacology, and government. For more information, call 392-7149.

The man many of his peers in the legal profession call "Mr. Riverside" has been given the Krieger Meritorious Service award by the Riverside County Bar Association. James D. Ward, a past president of the bar p-oup, is only the fifth recipient of the award m its 11-year history. The award - named for the late James Krieger, a Riverside law- yer who was a water law specialist - is giv- en for distinguished service to the community, and dedication and leadership in the legal l'f"Ofession. Ward received the

award at the River- side bar group's an- nual installation dinner held last month. The 51-year-old Ward is the chair- man of the joint State Bar-Judicial Council commission that drafted the new Civil Discovery Act. Addi- tionally, Ward is vice-cllairman of the State Bar's judicial nominee evaluating

and RB enny Jackson (43, 314)... minus side is that both Hayward and Jockson also No, 2 in league in rush• Wildcats hove been more effective

Menlo (3-4-1) vs.

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lenso .• • Long Beach QB is Jeff Graham (186 for 330, 2287 yards, 17 TDs, No. 2 on notion in total of

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192, 1142 yards) throws more than What to look For: Final game of fen e behind Perez) ond 49ers hove most wishbone quarterbac ks, he also Menlo's first season as four-year, nation's leading recetv r in FB Mork hos run for seven TDs. Division Ill school ... Three of four T mpl ton (71, 533) • .. Son Jose Pacific (4-5) vs. losses hove come by total of six third in not n in rushing defense Fullerton State (2-9) points, oil in final seconds ... Two (74 l ypg) but long Beach doesn't Where and When: Stockton, 2 p.m. teams hove hod six mutual oppo- run anyhow (82.5 ypg) Spartans Radio: KJOY (l 2 8 0) nents; early in yeor Son Diego beat last 1n league 1n poss d f e (250.1 What to Look For: Tigers need this to Whittier (which beat Menlo, 9-7, the ypg), however, th:it's b ouse teams keep hopes of winning season olive following week) and lost to Lo Veme have lo throw ogo1n t them (350 . . • UOP leads league in rushing by four (Lo Verne beat Menlo, 3(). po npt 10 games . (250.4 ypg) and Titans next-lo-lost in 28, with nine poinh in final minute t C ra (3-6) vs. St. aty's {-44) Wh re and Wh n: St. Mary's Stodi· um, 1 pm. Radio; KSCU-FM (103 .3), KSMC•FM (89.5) rush defense ( J 86. 9 ypg) •. . Tiger lost week) . .. However, Toreros now FB Steve Michaels (666 yards, 4.1 hove lost live in row, including lop- per carry) is fourth in league in sided losses to Azuso-Pocific (which rushing and leads balanced running Oaks lied) and Occidental (which game . .. However, QB Hue Jock- lost to Menlo, 27-14, in opener) . . . son, atthough he runs well and engi- Oaks RB Michael Dwane (497 yards,

James D. Ward

committee, and is a past member of the State Bar's Board of Governors. "He's just an all-around wonderful law- yer," said Johnni Hansen, executive director of the bar group ~ving Ward the Krieger Award. Hansen said that every time she at- tends a meeting of one of the Riverside Coun- ty Bar Association's 23 committees, "Ward's name always comes up. He's just Mr. River- side. And he's never too busy to help out." Ward is the Riverside County attorney who twice successfully represented the local newspaper, The Riverside Press-Enterprise, before the U.S. Supreme Court in cases in- volving press access lo jury selections and preliminary hearings. He is a graduate of the University of South Dakota and received his law degree from the

neers wishbone attack splendidly, hos been very spotty passer (68 for TDs vs. strong lo Verne team ... 155, 1128 yards) .. . UOP looked Menlo QB Jerold Montano good bod in lost effort, losing to punchless leader, average passer (94 for 195, Utah State, 14-1 O ••• Fullerton's 1188 yards) . .. Main target is John chief weapon is RB Rick Calhoun, Covarrubias (35 catches, 424 who leads league in rushing (11 70 yards). yards, 4.9 per corry) and all-pur· Fresno State (8-1) vs. pose running (170.7 ypg). Hawaii (5-3) San Francisco State (0-9) vs. Where and When: Aloha Stadium, Humboldt State (2-7) Honolulu, 9:30 p.m. PST Radio: KMJ (580) Where and When: Cox Stadium, What to Look For: Tie with Hawaii What to Look For: These are two __ -40.,., thing that kept Bulldogs from perfect season in 1985 ... worst defensive teams in NCAC; Ga- ll · 431 Fresno QB Kevin Sweeney hos been tors 0 owrng . I Y 0rd s per game, less effective lost few games, at leost Humboldt 337.8 ... Both teams also partly because of breakdowns in 4.1 per carry) hod 148 yords, three

What to look For: This is the 43rd in traditional senes, wrth the prize be- ing The Bell .. . Santo Clora holds 8-3 edge since schools renewed foot- ball, but lo t yP.ar Gaels upset a Bronco teorn I at was more experi- enced ucc ssful than this year's • . • St. Mary's shooting for first .500 season s nee 983 . .. Broncos hove big size ad, ntoge most ploces - u hough OT Jeff lewis, 210-pound -f1.-~....."-~. , u o an t Ga ' OT Lloyd Brown, 6-9 and 305 .•. Santa Claro ran well (203 yards) vs. good Portland State t om last week but hmi worst passing game of yea,; QB Greg Calcagno (162 for 301, 1916 yards, 13 TDs) was only 11 for 26 with lour interceptions ofter throwing only six intercepl ons in previous eight games . . WR Kevin Collins didn't catch a pan for only fourth lime in his SC career; he still needs 75 yards to break school mark .. . Broncos hove good TB tandem in Mott Show (502 yards, 3.7 per car- ry) and Bryon Smith (475, 5.2) and lost week got good running/ receiv- ing production from FB Dominic For- tino •.. Gaels hove dangerous deep threat in freshman QB Tim Rosenk- ranz (61 for 132, 1001 yards, eight TDs) and WRs Warren Porker (32 catches, 747 yards for 23.3 aver- age, seven TDs) and lane Howkins (15, 301, 20.1 including 80-yorder) •.. RB Don Schoenhofer (458, 4.6, 25 catches for 2 I 1 yards) is one of

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struggling offens ively, largely be- cause of large number of socks - lumberjack QB Mott Peterson is mi- nus-238 yards rushing this year, S.F. s 1m u y and Brion Letofsky are minus-192 between them . . . Peter- son capable passer (138 for 261, 1446 yards, but only four TDs) and RB Pat Johnson leads league in catches (53, 533 yards) and No. 5 in rushing (415 yards, 3.8 per carry) tors really hurting after physi- two rushers, Bernord Moore (357, 4.4) and Kelvin Smith (122, 3.9) both extremely doubtful with conC1Jssion, neck respectively ... DB Don Bennett lost for yeor with broken ankle, three other defensive starters all doubtful. QB J' R d Ga . . . l b · b Ch• I co eating Y oco osl week; top

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) La Prensa de San Diego

protection and dropped posses, however, he needs just 304 yards passing in final two games to break Doug Flutie's NCAA career poss yardage mark of 1 0, 579 . . . Bull- dogs hardly a one-dimensional team, however, with TBs Jomes Wil- Iiams (811 yards, 5.6 per carry) and Kelly Skipper (473, 4.8); Skipper coming off career-high 109-yord game lost week . . . Defense hos awesome 6-4 sacks in nine games, 18 J, by DE Jethro Franklin, plus 17 interceptions . . . PK Barry Belli broke two more PCAA marks last 52 career field goals, 245 career points kicking . . . Hawaii very big, held BYU to jvst 206 total yards lost week in l 0.3 BYU win ... Rainbows throw a lot with QB Gregg Tipton (140 for 253, 1832 yards). week -

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P. C. B I 888 VUniversity Of San Diego Offers Law Opportunities ;q~ Reports on career opportu- nities for minorities in the legal profession will be presented by a panel of San Diego minority judges and lawyers from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Nov. 15, at the Uni'@rsity of San Diego. those contemplating the study of law are in•,ited to attend the free eve t, which will be held,,, the Fletcher A Classroom in the USO School of Law. Beverages and hors d'oeuvres will be served at a free (eception immediately follow ing the panel discussion. Panelists include: U.S. Attorney Peter Nunez. Southern District of California. -- San Diego Municipal Court Judges Joseph Little- john and Lillian Lim Quon . --Attorneys Vickie E. Turner {with Luce, Forward, Halmilton & Scripps), Elizabeth Franco Bradley (Gottlieb, Bradley & Viviano). and Russell L . Thrasher. Attorney's Office. USO Law Professor Roy Brooks will moderate the panel. which is being sponsored by the USD and the California Western law schools' career planning and h r Law students and -Maria Arroro-Tabin, U.S.

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union {Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

UC Davis (8-0) vs.

Sacramento State (5-3-1)

NOV1 41986

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Los Angeles, CA (Las Angeles Co ) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50 ,010) (Cir. S 55,573 ) 0 51

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o End Season by Ending Slump -Brian Fogarty,

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

ouchdowns. He scored in each of USD's first seven games but has been shut out the last two weeks. He was held to only one reception by Occidental. Pat Dixon, USD's junior quarter- back, has struggled recently. He completed only 8 of 35 passes for 111 yards against Occidental. Dixon has completed 41 % of his passes this season. A year ago, Menlo wa 9 0-1 and ranked No. 1. This eason, the Oaks are 3- • -l, but that mclude 27-14 victory over Occ1d ntal. -CHRlSELLO

Univer11it~ of S;io 1)1ego football coacfi, ha hoped for a .500 finish for his team this season. Now, he would be sat1sf1ed with .-400 as the Toreros (3-6) conclude their sea- on today at 1:30 at Menlo College. USO started the season by win- nmg three of itll first four games but bu smce lost five straight. The Toreros are coming off their worst loss of the season, 41-7. to Occiden- tal. But tt ha n't been a disappomtmg e n for Torero wide receiver Jeff M ukhani , who has caught a t am-high • 5 passes and scored 8

NOV1 4l9i6

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