News Scrapbook 1986
San Francisco, CA (San Francisco Co.) Chronicle (Cir. D. 630,954) (Cir. Sat. 483,291 )
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)
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NOV 1 - 1986 ,Jllleri ', P. C. B. br 1888
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COLLEGE CAPSULES
Santa Clara (3-4 vs. Northridge State (6-1) Where ond When· Buck Show Sta dium 1 p.m. Radio: KSCU FM ('03 3 Whal lo Look For: A cruc,al game lo Sa~•o Claro against a teom that 1 ranked l 2rh not Pnolly in Division II Both teams 2 1 n WFC, loser lolls out of race . . Matadors' new coocli Sob Burt 1vnked run•and- shoot went to Uro~ running game led by TB M,!.e Kane 914 yards, 5.5 p r carry h al o hos 19 catches for 214 yards and ha< scored 12 TDs • Broncos need brg game from QB
in yeor, come off bench lo rally S.F. ofter it trailed, 24-7, last week; Jim Rudy. 50 for 104 579 yordsJ probe• bly w,11 start, but Letofsky 35 for 76, 513) could get in early ... Azusa· Pacific features strong running game with brilliant de(Qthlcte Christion Okoye, o 250-pound running back, operating behind strong lin11 led by 270 pound center Chuck Redmon and 245-pound tackle Steve Word .•. Azusa No. 3 ,n NAIA rushing at 255.7 )'ords per gome.
Del Mar, CA (San Diego Co.) Del Mar Surfcomber (Cir. 2xW. 1,845)
ov 1 1986
I 1888 ••••• HE Ml ot S · SANTHROPE" Moran ~go, Camrno Thear - Hayward State (5-2) vs. Univers,ty re, 260-468 2 e ormed in Humboldt State (2-5) Greg Calcagno 126 for 236, 1464 Where and When: Arcato, 7 p.m. yards, who ,.. e,, s to be back on What to Look For: Hayward' big• fra . 1ere s corned Y w,11 be p rt or adults l3,i() Frenchb Ya Pans tr . oupe at 8 Pm~, 1 Tickets are $7 I Del Mar, CA (San Diego Co.) Del Mar Surfcomber (Cir. 2xW. 1,845) · · dent sand sen,or citizens.'~: ; :~ NOV 1 1986 .,Allm'• ,su p c B ' " New agents added by Grubb & Ellis ·r bh & ~ 1s Commercial tors. He previously worked for Brokerage Services ha added IB;\1 in San Diego nine new brokers to its invest- • Peter Thomas will also spe- ment d1vis1on. cialize in the sales and leasing Rik Floyd will workoutofthe of indu trial properties in firm's Carl bad office where he orlh County Thomas 1s a will be involved in the ale of graduate of tht: l!'niversity of apartment complexes through- San Di gQ with a degree in busi- out the North Count~ He brings nebs administration four years of experience to his C4RDIFF EXPERTS position, most recently a· a /j c,,,..,,,_ 1 at::D San Jose State 6-2) vs. New Mexico State ( 1-8) Where and When: Las Cruce s, N.M., 5:30 p.m. jPSTI Radio: KCBS 740 What to Look For: Should be n breather for Spartans, but they can't al 1 ord a letdown w th just one-game lead PCAA . S ,1 Jose lead; not on in pas ing 343 ypg ), QB M, ke Perez (213 far 355, 2727 yards) is not,onal total offense lead- er • • Dur"ng five·gome win streak SJS has averaged 546 yards per game . .. RB Kenny Jackson over- shadowed by Perez, but has 7 55 y d •ushing (3.8 per carry) and 35 c •,he 241 yards) . .. Aggies are L t ,n rush defense (204 ypg, 20 Ds) but third m poss defense ( l 86.7J NMSU hos lost seven in row g ng "P at least 38 points in all bui o . . To moke matters worse QB m .Y-. 1 er injured shoulder lost ,;,,ee k and may be replaced by untested Phil Vinson. 229, 1313 yards, but 15 intercep· t10ns) passing lo WR Jeff Man,u• khani 40 catches, 661 yards) .... Monsukhan, also returns punts (15.6 overage) and kickoffs (25.4) effec- t,vcly . Gaels freshman QB Tim Rosenkranz 57 for 117, 951 yard,) coming off two straight 300-yards- plus passing games, including TD po ses of 94, 80 and 72 yards ... WR Warren Porker (30 catches, 705 yards, 7 TDs) and Lone Howkins ( 15, 301) and TE Jon Braff (30, 389) all ore dangerous rece,~rs ... Son Francisco State 0-7) vs. Azusa-Pacific (4-0-2) Where and When: Cox Stadium S.F. Stole, l p.m . ' What lo Look For: Gota-s coming off their best effort of season, a 27-24 loss lo Santa Claro ... However Azusa-Pacific is ranked 13th in no'. tion in NAIA Div,sion I ... Gators QB Brion Letofsky, ineffective earlier UC Davis (6-0, vs. Sonoma State (2-4 1 Where and When: Davis, 7 p.m. What to Loolc For: With toughest c?nlenclers, Chico and Hayword, be- hind tl1em, Aggies need only beat Sonoma (l-1 in league) and Hum• boldt (0-1, 2-5 overalli lo clinch 16th straight NCAC 'formerly For West• ern Conference) title . . . Dav,s is ranked No. 3 notionally and op pears too strong for Cossacks, but Sonomo does hove league's leading defense (267.1 ypg) anchored by big. LB Mike Henry ... Aggie QB Chns Petersen is completing 72.5 percent (129 for 178) with 15 TD posses and just three interceptions ond hod four receivers with more than 20 catches plus speedy Wayne Adkins (15, 345 yards, 5 TDs) .. , Rondy Lingle (27 for 51, 398) may replace 39 percent passer John Mef- ferd at QB for Sonoma. Healto1·with the San l''ranci co- based firm, Specific Prop- ert1e . r'loyd is a graduate of 'alifornia Polytcch Institute at San Lui Obispo with a bachc lor' · degree in economics He reeeived his ma ter's degree in bu mess administration from St. Mary's College 111 Morgana. • The Carlsbad office has also : added two brokers to ,ts indust- • rial division. Kent oore will be involved 111 sales and leasrng of indust- rial properties throughout • orth San Diego County. A graduate of San Diego State U nivers1t:,r. Moore holds a de- gree in busine s finance and is a member ofthe Board of Real- • • • • • • : -----------,, ! r: • • f • • • • • CarlsbJd, CA (San Diego Co.) Carlsbad Journal (Cir. 2xW. 16,049) Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Blade Tribune (Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498) NOV 3 1986 NOV 1 1986 Jl.fltn '• P. c. B ,Jl{l~,i ', P C. B h r 1888 l - ., ·-- --- 'U.§9 reunion homecoming :J. " er •n Escondid "THE MISANT o. 746-6669. ot San Die HAOPE" _ Mo~o, Cam,no Theatre 2~ty French b omedy Will be . VV·4682. Tickets a~: ;aris troupe at B~ertormed in dents and 7 for adut~~-m • Np;,. 1. senior - 1- "ll/,;_Q Cl !Zen . ' SI~ inc ~T----0..Qy,, 8...,......- ~ T"4 rt.,,,,Lo, San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) NOV 1 1986 Jl.fltn'• I P. C. B San Diego, Saturday, November 1, 1986 TIIESTRIBUNE Law f acuities back Bird, deplore governor's role By Ann Levm J_U.,,.c:fo statement. Conceding that the last-minute campaign the theme of Bird's retention campaign - this is the ed: "The governor has said that what he ~ould do is n-ihum' ~,JI! linter blitz to save embattled Chief Justice Rose Bird may be first time the academic establishment has directly at- unpack the court, because the court has been packed for l'rging voters to retain all six of the slate Supreme "too little, too late," he called on the voters of California tacked Deukmejian. years with appointees from Jerry Brown's governor- Court ju tices listed on the ballot on Tuesday, more than "to stop this now" and on Tuesday to "reject this attempt Though other Supreme Court justices have often raised ship." two thirds of the faculty of the Universi~ of San Qiege to politicize the judiciary." "a hue and cry" with their unpopular decisions, Denk- Bird, Reynoso and Grodin, all appointees of former School of Law accu ed Gov Deukmejian yesterday of More than 260 law professors and deans in 13 law mejian is the first elected official to try to unseat sitting Democratic governor Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown Jr., ttackmg the state Judiciary schools across the state signed the statement deploring justices and replace them with individuals in line with face widespread opposition from crime victims' groups 'We mtend to vote for all six justices in the confirma- the politicization of the Supreme Court race and express- his own political philosophy, USO law professor Robert because of their votes to reverse the death penalty and lion election. irrespective of our agreement or disagree- ing support for Bird, associate justices Cruz Reynoso and Simmons said. from conservative groups who say they are anti-business. mcnt with their dec1s10ns on particular issues." the state- Joseph Grodin, and the three other justices who face no "This attempt to pack the Supreme Court is unprece- Out of a total of 35 USO law professors. 21 signed the ment said. organized opposition. dented in the history of California politics," Simmons petition. Faculty from~e 16 American Bar Associ- Glenn Smith, a law professor at California Western While many law professors had earlier expressed sup- said. ation-accredited law schools in the state endorsed the School of Law, said many of his colleagues had signed the port for the concept of keeping an independent judiciary Deukmejian·s press secretary Donna Lipper respond- petition. •
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