News Scrapbook 1988

Los Angeles,CA (Lo Angeles Co .) Tunes ! San Diego Ed .) Cir. D. 50,010) Cir. S. 55,573) QC 1 4 1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) OCT 1

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Stolz keeps looking on bright side despite Aztecs' 1-5 record r- By Ed Zieralski /} q '] Asked how he can keep this team ankle and ligament damage. It's not e~ery day that BYU and Tribune Sportswriter tr'-1 ./ from sliding worse than it has, Stolz 49 • s t b k • Stolz said h!S team only had 10 SDSU combme on a venture to hel Because he has survived losing said: "I'll just keep coaching hard. ers sign an OS as ac up men on the field when quarter~ack SDSU sports, but that's what forme seasons before, San Diego State I'm coaching exactly the same way I Brad Platt hit Kerry Reed-Martin on BYU star Bobby Capen r and Azt c coach DeMy Stolz isn't changing his would be if we were undefeated. By United Press International Young were "fine " physically. a 5-yard touchdown pass to get SDSU coach Jim Brandenbur11 re dam style of coaching to pull his team out We11 give them a good game plan SANTA CLARA - The San Santos, who piled up national to within 32-23. for the McDonald's Clas c, the A of its four-game losing streak and 1-5 and give them the best look offen- Francisco 49ers signed former San records at San Diego State, was a There was a mix-up between the tees' holiday basketball tournam start. sively and defensively they can get in Diego State quarterback Todd 10th-round draft rhoice of the New Rowes sophomore wide receiver that will be held Dec. 20-21. Those who watched Stolz last year practices. Santos yesterday as insurance in Orleans Saints this year, but he Patrick and freshman tight end Ray Capener, 25, ar. d an alumnu marveled at how well he handled "You have to lake it one week at a case Joe Montana and Steve was released before the season !no relation). "We, were yelling, . BYU a~d Torrey Pines High ha that team's poor 1-6 start. The Aztecs time whether you're undefeated or Young go down with injuries. started. He also had a previou Rowe, Rowe, Rowe, and here they Jomed his brother Don, 28, a gradu t went to win four of their last five have' no wins." "All it is is a little insurance," tryout with the 49ers and with the both come out," Stolz said. "Ray ~f USD and !orrcy Pines Hi.gh, a games, finishing at 5-7. There were said a team spokesman. "U Joe Chargers. should have stayed in and blocked on now run ttle1r father's public rel no Larry Bowa-like tantrums. No Stolz was more edgy emotionally Montana goes down, Steve Young Santos holds the NCAA Divi ion the play. Only in a crisis do you £ind lions-marketing firm. T e Capen screarrung and yelling at players in in 1986, the year his team won the becomes our quarterback and he I career pas ing record of 11,425 those things out. I guess we have to will handle the McDonald s Cla the locker room or on the practice WAC championship. But this year he likes to scramble, and when that yards. He threw 70 touchdowns come up with a Rowe I and a Rowe account for SDSU. field. No blowups with the media. has settled in with this team and bas happens he becomes more vulner- during his college career and also II." Also, SDSU's game here with V Stolz kept cool because he's had adopted a calm attitude. He has said able to injury." holds 27 national, WAC and chool ___ • • • mont has been scheduled for Dec 3 :-- practice keeping cool during bad often that he feels this team is giving Rahn said both Montana and passing records. ~I :;an Diego, CA years. him the most it has. SDSU athletic (San Diego co.I Stolz's former Bowling Green pro- director Fred Miller extended Stolz's •-------------••-•--••-••• Evening Tribune gram went through a 17-28 start in contract after the Holiday Bowl loss (Cir. D. 123,064) his first four years before it had a to Iowa in 1986, so Stolz has three inbounds with possession of the ball backs Clark Moses and Mario Mitch- .500 season, followed by four straight more years on his current contract. in the Aztecs' two-point conversion ell, both of whom m1Ssed last week's winning seasons, two of which were He knows he's been hired for the long try in the fourth quarter. game with sprained ankles, have Mid-American Conference champi- haul and he's acting that way. "That's not even close," Stolz said, been cleared to play. on hips and bowl years. "You can't go up and down like a looking at the photographs. "His • At CSU, two of the four players No, Stolz won't lose his cool about yo-yo," Stolz said. "You've got to be right foot is in bounds and he has suspended for jumping on the hoods this team, even though it has dropped consistent. We're getting better. We possession. Patrick said to me, and roofs of parked cars, have been his coaching record to 14-16 at SDSU, actually played pretty well in this 'Coach, I was in.' When they say, 'I reinstated and are likely to play this 6-1~ in his last 19 games. The Aztecs last game. We got behind early think I was in,' then you know they week. Backup fullback Brian Cope- have lost four straight. One more and again, but we played pretty darn didn't have it in." land and former starting cornerback last year's longest losing streak will well." Stolz said he's sending a photo- Craig Jersild will return. Two others, be equalled. · graph of the play to the WAC office. flanker Rodney Bowman and corner- They're four-point underdogs this • • • • Three players - linebackers back Dennis Erk, were suspended for Saturday at Colorado State, a team NOTES - Stolz was given a Tracey Mao (two sprained ankles the season. that has won just one of its last 11 sequence of three color photographs now), Kevin Maultsby (pinched neck CSU has lost a number of key play- games in the WAC and has gone 5-15 taken by Umon-Tribune staff photo- nerve} and Lee Brannon (knee) - are ers to injury this season. The biggest in the conference in the last 2½ sea- grapher Russ Gilbert that indicate the most questionable participants loss was starting nosetackle Greg sons. that wide receiver Patrick Rowe was for this week's game at CSU. Corner- Baker, out with a dislocated left OCT 17 1988 '• I'. C. a EJr. 1883 -- Wednesday, October 19 James Y tes, author of ''The O • :P~:k on options as risk manageme~:•:~• Strategy Spectrum" will y San Diego. Information: 699-6100. ls.&_1 4 ~$:at the Universl-

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) OCT 17 1988

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) OCT 1 7 1988 I'. C. B

fsr 1811 How to ;J:'ti te police' ab . cases·~ • use . · e Practices Corn- m1tt~ of e ACLU and the Uni- versity of San Diego Law Sc1i'oo1 ;ill hold a seminar about that Nov ' 9 a.m ' a..t l!§l:L..cost: $60 · Sp_eakers will include Tom Adler. Mike Marri nan G ' . , eorge We ingarten, Michael Crowley and. Bett:.,.Wheeler. Contact Crowley. .- --- *•• ...,,,,,,,.,.,-

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.I Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064)

OCT 1 7 1988

Richard D. Huffman

Gilbert Nares

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~,~•• I'. C. B Esr. 1888 -ffanci • co Herrera, first director of the department o~ _binat1onLll allairs for San Diego, will speak on "The emerging Pac1f1c triangle: The United States, Mexico and Asia" at the University of San Diego from 7:30 to 9 a.m. Fee: $15. Information: 260-4644. ;;t. '1 S-S-

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fonn~r j:g:';~re :om in last week as jus- court bench at 35, Nares was said to be relaxed cllting a r;:obster.SHe tices of the 4th District Court of Appeal, Divi- in court and cautious in Iii~ rulin . . who ater ecame an 1ego 1

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ne?i~:~~at~~n ~~i:a~r~:eJ~t!t~9:~ ~~::~~~i~:~t:r ;:::!1~~~:dt~~d~: - di::n th ~~~:n~ ei~j:tices. Huffman law d_egree' in_ '1965 intending a career In civil his friend Huffman to assume the duties of replaced Edward T. Butler, who retired. 'J:'.he practice, but mstead started lnthe U.S. Attor- director. iivision serves San Diego and Imperial ;aunties.

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) OCT 19 1988

Froehlich was appointed to the superior court by former Gov. Ronald Reagan in 1972 but 10 years later re~ntered private practice. Aspecialist in tax and business law, Froehlich was a teacher as well as practitioner, and a 1 veteran of both military and community service. He was trained at Stanford University and at ' the University of California, Berkeley, where : he later lectured on law. He earned a ~ronz!l · Star in Korea served the state as an mhen- tance tax app~iser and was president of_ the Legal Aid Society of San Diego, the San Diego Bar Association and the Old GJ~ Theatre. -- "" Froehlich, 59, leaves the firm of White, Price, Froehlich and Peterson. Nares Named By Governor Brown , Nares, 45, was named to the municipal court in 1976 by former Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. and elevated two years later. He was born in Oceanside, and has spent his entire career within a few hours' drive of his birthplace. He took his undergraduate and law degrees · at the University ofSan Diego and went direct- ly to work for a general practitioner in his hometown. He handled off-the-street cases in family law and criminal defense, eventually becoming a named partner in Daubney,

San D iego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OCT 1 8 1988 ..Alla,'• P. c a

San D iego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (C ir. S. 341,840) OCT 1 7 1988

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__....,..ennis - USO freshma~ Jose N~ rie a advanc~e mam draw_o theg Volvo Collegiate Champ1ons:p~ . Athens Ga. Noriega defeated er m • B' · gham 6- Ertunga of Alabama rrmm 2, 7_ 5 in the qualifying finals~

TWO-USO-tennis players suffered defeats yesterday in the Volvo Fall Collegiate Championships at Athens, Ga. David Stewart, a senior, lost to David Pollack of North Carolina 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 and freshman Jose "Tato" Noriega, who had advanced through qualifying, lost to Mihnea Nastase of Mississippi Slate 7-5, 2-6, 6-4. Nas- tase, ranked as the 26th best U.S. col- legiate player, is the nephew of for- mer tennis great Ille Nast~

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US,u _,.,•. m,.., all of its pomts In the first half and held Whittier scoreless until the Ima! quarter to post a 21-6 football vrctory aturda~ night at Whittler College. 1e/? USO K n Jones opened the scor- ln with his only reception, a 5-yard PJ from Ooug Prper m the first quarter Piper wa 8-for-10 for 88 yards and one touchdown USD (3-2) running back Virgil En- riquez (12 c m 31 yards) scored on a S-yard run m the ond quarter 1k Hintz capped the Toreros' orm when h took a reception off a fake f1 Id goal 19 y rd for a touch- down Whlttl r' Mrk H rnand z pre v nt d the hutout when he caught a 2 yard touclidown p from Mike Han y In th fourth quarter. Whittier Is 2-3.

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To. dal has been reappointed to the Board of Governors of the Cali- fornia Applicant.s' Attorneys Asso• ciat10n f. 1988-89 . * • • utebook: Oct. 19 (tonight): Jenning,s, Engstrand & Henrikson and USD Law Sch~] ,II pr nt a i:,~ 11! ion titled "Are You 'A Lawyer Too, Honey?' ' from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Fletcher Reception Hall at-.!:JSD. It's free . Call 260-41\29 fo More i formation. • a~ or O'Connor's office will discuss the arts/cultural exchange between San Diego and the Soviet Union at 1 p.m. in the third floor reading room at Cal Western. Oct. 22: The East County chapter of Lawye:rs Club will have attorneys who will answer ques- tions about the law from domes- tic violence to landlord/tenant - during a free program from 9 to 11·45 a.m. at the El CaJon Neigh- borhood Center, 195 East Douglas. --- · - ./2 Oct. 20: Sal G,a

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San D iego Un ion (Cir. D. 217 ,089 ) (Cir . S. 341,840) OQT 19 1988

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Ngyuen, Bianchi spark USD .;,,zq .55"

.Trong Ngyuen sc'orecl twice and Vmce Bianchi had a goal and an as- s~st lo lead theJlSD men to a 5-0 victory ov_er visiting Azusa Pacific yesterday m a non-cor.ference soccer game. Bob Welsh and Leo Ronces also :ored for the T~reros, who outshot 3 _ usa, 33-0. USO IS 7-5-1, Azusa 2-11- F USD plays at the University of San ranc1sco at 3 p.m. Friday.

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