News Scrapbook 1986-1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. 0 . 123,092)
1987
SEP 8
•
Toreros may have tight budget, but they don't appear poor on talen t f/§5 B I I I>, VI· irs That' [)1vuon Ill ." inJured, rushed for 442 yards in 112 carries. da. The secondary report carries a mixed fla- Tr,buni•. J1
he's ticketed for free safety now. Fogarty is hoping junior Jim Mead (six tackles last season) can fill one of the vacat- He noted these keys to enjoying any dra- matic jump over last season's 5-5 record the development of Castillo and the secondary, The September /October part of the sched- ule also seems critical. The first two games are on the road, followed by four straight at A 5-1 or 4-2 result from that stretch would be a nice cushion, especially when one re- start, went 1-5. The last win was a 49-19 loss to Azusa Pacific later reversed because Azusa had an eligibility problem. "I feel we're building a program that rep- re•ents the university well,'' said Fogarty, who's 15-24-1 in his four seasons at USO and operates on a $55,000 budget (excluding coaches' salaries). "The team's grade-point average last spring was 2.88. These kids are true student-athletes. What we need to add to ed cornerback slots. and a mimmum of injuries. home.
course, is the USO kicking game. Jeff Morri- son, all 5-7, 135 pounds of him, is a freshman.
a 6 foot, 205· Colorado State. His 4.7-second 40-yard time
1 transfer Braulio Ca. tillo 1men whose nam may find its w y mto th 36-poml bold type a few time pound
led the tailbacks.
Both fullbacks, Don Macinnes and Scott Mark Finnick is a refugee from the school's
soccer team. He's never kicked a football in
Slykas, are sophomores and neither played
m th comm months
college competition.
' II · trong, h 's a thrower, a I ader and a much m '86 Macinnes gain d 24 yards to his
rival's 23.
cornp tllor, noted Fogarty "And he can run with the ball We're pr tty eJCc1ted about having B auho m our program
DEFENSE
The Toreros rere1vmg corp 1s led by Jeff
The basic approach, says Fogarty, has shifted here, from read-and-react to playing with more abandon and flat-out aggression "You try to do what you hope will work bel;t," said the coach ''Our defensive person- nel are lighter and quicker now, so we're Chuck Royer (118 tackles) and Shawn Rezain (105) have the inside edge, but are bemg pushed by 220-pound Parris Sorrianello and Frank Love, a freshman from Oklahoma On the outside, starters Jeff Merhno and Rob Skinner return, as do primary backups John Gomez and Matt Haniger. Senior Erik Peterson is the only defensive line returnee and Fogarty has penciled in adjUliting."
ecoml-team academic All-
Mansukhani, a
II r , th n, IS a ·loser look at th Toreros' American who had 49 receptions for 8ll
yards and seven TDs a year ago. Lionel De- Morst, a starter the last 2½ seasons at tight end, and Ken Zampese, who played consider- ably but caught only seven passes in '86, also Wide receiver Sam McDermott and light end David Nottoli are primary receiver backups Of Notloli, Fogarty says. "He's the best specimen (6-3, 210) on the team and will play somewhere, maybe on the ouL~ide. The loss of DeBlase and Nasland leaves two-year tarters Pete Browne at tackle and ter Mike Ctiilders. who started as a frosh, as arc back. ran a 4.55 40 (last week).'
1987 pro pectu
Ot ! !thou h a t1llo i xpected to replaC'e th gradual d Pat Dixon (1,727 yard , 15 turn d down a W t Point appointment after pending year at its prep. chool, may merit lou hdown pa ), Brendan Murphy, who nee of lour tailbacks and two fullback , ult with experience, has Fogarty "Y. e le •I comfortable with all of them 11ght now ' h said •·some people ask 1f we r crmtr.d ·ome running backs berau ·e the som playmg time, too. Th pr b l ' The linebacking is deepest in experience. members that the '86 Toreros, after a 3-1 le •hng "up m the air" about his running David was hurt most of last sea ·on, but he City on we had were . o bad It v. a n't that they Mike Cassady at guard, plus sophomore cen- med to alv.ays be w r b-id they JU t the program are the wins the offensive line nucleus. The holes will be Massachusetts transfer Dave Dunn and filled from a pool that includes Ray Smith, David Gilmore (moved from offensive guard) mJured "Unfortunately, that's how you're judged, tarting tailback figures to be 170- Th right~ By the wins." to align with Peterson. Jeff Carpenter. Mark Gama and Rich Hoso- pound J nior V1rg1I Enriquez. who, when not Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) The Citizen (Cir. W. 20,000) SEP 1 8 1981 J'll/r,i 's / p C B ,·. I I / ~ ew dean appointed to llSD ~sing school ALCALA PARK - Dr. Janet A. Rodgers has been appointed dean of the Umvers1ty of San Diego Phi_!j.p Y. Hahn School of!'lursing. q5'.? She will admi ni ster baccalaureate master's and doctoral nursing programs a~ tbe school, which has an enrollment of235 D: ·. Rodgers has held facu lty and ad~m•~t:anv~ positions in nursing at umversmes m Pennsylvania, Virginia and New York City. She replaces Dr. Irene Palmer, founding dean of the nursing school. 7 - Palo Alto. CA (Santa Clara co.) Peninsula Time Tribune (Cir. D. 60,288) (Cir. S 60,011) SEP 10 98 , W,11 •• P C B I A Py Richard Welner Tl Tribune atalf i 1 linger lo, Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Blade Tribune (Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498) • SEP 1 Oi987 National rankings are like a gltt of flowers. They're nattering. They also don't 1 t v ry long. But for t b Menlo College women' vol! yball team - which operu Its season tonight against Oc• cldental at 7;30 In the first of two Important home matches In a s many nights - last season's NCAA Dlvl on Ill rankings have settled like a jar of sweet potpourri. There wa II time when sixth- year Menlo cOIICh Malcolm Taylor had difficulty scheduling home matches because of the Atherton college' ob urlty. ot anymore. L I sea on, the Oaks finished 43•8 after lo Ing to Unlv~it),of SiJ;W.-WJ:.S'O - like Menlo a em er of the newly-formed California Athletic Conference - In the Dlvl- lon III Western Regionals champi- on hip match. More Important, Menlo, which ha compiled a 66-13 record th P I two Y ars as n Ind pendent program, w ranked a the na- tion's top team for nearly a month. The Oaks spent most of the eason amon the nation's top five. "Menlo I definitely known In DI· vi lo~. III voll yb II now," Taylor Id . We ren't goln to sneak up on anybody th year." And team like Occidental, La• Verne (Friday night), Cal State Stan! lau (at Turlock on Saturday) n) San franc! o State (Tuesday) were eager to schedule th Oa~. "I Just had the coach from Colo- rado Colle call me to confirm our b In In their tourn m nt (next month), b cau they are Ing It to ttract oth r pro ms," Taylor Id, Taylor d n't u the rankIn Incentive. But he couldn't hid hi pride when the Oak w r rank d No . 1, or th Impact 11 might have If his young squad again receives a urprlse at the door. Jtfk,.', ,. C. 8 F.,r. 1888 V Aiie,-!N?--1.aw a 'nightmare' for college'"s SAN Dll:GO (Ap) - Some San D' . the_ new immigration law re u· _rego college officials say their workers' residency \ •~mg employers to verify mghtmare. s a us is a bureaucratic "It's a real pain "Hilda Ransom . tant at Grossmont' College in El C •. semor personnel assis- Under the new immi rati aJon, said We~~csday. now verify the residenc; of on l~w, college officials must other student workers and n:o~ er~, work-study students . No mass firings were re w acu ty members. result of the law But Un,·vport~d at area umvers_1ties as a · ers1 Y of San D' d. sports camp counselor this J.Qgo 1sm1s:ed a produce the necessary docu~~::t because she couldn't records supervisor at USD' H on, said Greg Andrews, ment. s urnan Resources Depart- Quelda Wilson, assistant vie h UC San Diego called the r e c ancellor of personnel at nightmare." ' eqmrcment "a bureaucratic But ~tewart Westdal, student . the Umversity of San Dieg errployment coordmator at extra work. She said th o, was ess over~helmcd by any form to be done, but nof ;~~i~:g~~filt?,d m ''just another U!)(.ler the law, employees hired aft g. prafe they are authorized to work. teh~ Nov. 6, 1986, must.....-l m 1s country. • • Deina Lancaster (left) and Monique La V team's lone semor. eau are Menlo College's top two setters. LaVeau Is the blocker-hitter Margaret Leong, a 5. 8 transfer from City College of San Francisco; outside hitter Michelle Sperl, a freshman from La Quinta High (which La Veau and Malke also attended); and junior Talley Stewart, a 5-9 junior from La Jolla who came to Menlo after becoming disenchanted with Miami of Ohio. Taylor has been impressed with ~ th Y O'Malley, a 5-5 junior defen- sive specialist from Mills High, and Cherlyn Neely, a 5-10 freshman hit· ter from Los Altos High. "There's no one outstanding player on this team like we had laSI year," Taylor ;aid. "But we could be a better team because of balance." call It a mixed bouquet. "It wa a great conversation piece," Taylor said. "But II would be lntere ting to see what would happen to the newcomers If we got a ranking like at." For Menlo to reach the top of the rankings again this year, It will have to do be tter again •t San Die o. Menlo took over San Diego's top ranking la t year, but the Oaks lo t three of tour matches to the Torercis. The team meet once In confer- nee play - Oct. 17 at Menlo. The new conference, which Includes Coll ge of Notre Dame, UC Santa Cruz, Dominican and cat State San Bern11rdlno, hould help develop the Menlo-San Diego rivalry even more. "We get them on our court first," said 6-foot-1 junior Daisy Pratt, in reference to the fact the region- als were lo San Diego last year. "Hopefully, we'll be able to host the regionals here this time," the powerful outside hitter said. Like San Diego, Menlo lost stand- out players and will rely on a shuf- fled lineup that will include trans- fers and Impact freshmen. Taylor ls looklng to hitters Pratt and Ann Malke, a 5-11 junior to add height to a strengthened bl~ck- lng game. Directing the now will be setters Deina Lancaster, a 5.5 junior from Hawaii, and 5.3 Moni- que La Veau, the team's lone sen- ior. The three new starters are
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