Nab News

Official Publication of the National Collegiate Athletic Association October 4, 1993, Volume 30, Number 35 Commission seeks membership structure study

The NCAA Presidents Commis- mary emphasis in the discussion officers and the NCAA Adminis- rameters” for the study-the issues for vote at the 1996 Convention. sion will sponsor a resolution at was on increasing the level of trative Committee-developed a rhar need to be considered. After Members of the Commission the NCAA Convention in January federation in the Association and tentalive process for such a study lhose are rccrived and agreed noted that each division and sub- 10 launch a study of the N(:AA on assuring that the issue is dealt and recotnmended the resolution upon, rhe membership would be division had expressed some con- membership structure. with by the NCAA membership, approach to the Cornmission. invited to submit model structures cerns regarding the rnembership The Commission took that ac- rather than by outside entities. That tentative process would that would address those issues. structure and that the Division I-A tion in irs September 2X-29 meeting In a special meeting held in call for establishment of a small The committee would select ap- Athletic Directors Associarion, in in Kansas City, Missouri, after a con-junction with the Commission leadership committee, which propriate models for discussion at its recent meeting, had urged rhat review of the ctrrerlt concerns meeting, Lhe Joint Policy Roard- would issue an invitation to all the 1995 Convention and then regarding rhe structure. The pri- consisting of the four Commission N<:AA members to suggest “pa- would submit a selection of models See Presidents, page 15 b Council to review proposed legislation

A review of all legislation submitted for gender-equtty source book by a subcom- academic performance of’student-athletes the 1994 NCAAConvcntion is the primary mittee of the NCAA Gender-Equity Task in thal division, approaches to cost con- item on the agenda for the NCAA (:ouncil Force. tainment at the Division II level and the and rhe three division steering commit- n A ,SUIUS report on the search for a possible development of an athletics tees when they hold their fall tnertings new NCAA executive director. certification program for Division II October I l-13 in Kansas City, Missouri. n A report on the actions taken by the institutions. Included in thal review will be a report Presidents Commission, including its dis- Division III will review its survey rem on legislative positions taken by the cussion of concerns regarding the mem- garding regional vs. national champion- NCAA Presidents Comrnission in its Sep- bership structure and the Joint Policy ships, possible revision of the Division tember 28-29 meeting. Board’s action in that regard (see story III statement of philosophy, long-range This meeting represents the CCJlJild’S elsewhere on this page). planning for Division III and gender- last chance to submit amendmenrs-to- equity approaches in that division. Steerhg committees amendments or resolutions by the Octo- Reports ber 15 deadline. The Divisions II and III Steering Com- Other major issues on the Council’s mittees have items on their agendas of The agendas include reports from the agenda: specific interest to those divisions. n An update on the development of a Division II will review the study of See Council, page 14 ) Commission decries recent football fighting The N

. N In the News N On deck

October 7 Committee on Athletics Certification, Briefly Page 3 n In a guest editorial, NCAA Presidents Commis- Dallas sion member and Centre College President Mi- Comment 4 chael F. Adams writes that gender equity has October 10 Nominating Committee, Kansas City, Football statistics 9 educational value at member institutions: Page 4. Missouri Championships October 11-13 Council, Kansos City, Missouri dates and sites 13 n The NCAA Committee on Financial Aid and Amateurism makes plans to study a tuition-and- October 11-15 Men’s and Women’s Swimming NCAA Record 16 fees, need-based financial aid model: Page 5. Committee, Marco Island, Florida NCAA Woman October 13 Infractions Appeals Committee, of the Year finalists 18 n A “screening” system for evaluating inquiries to the NCAA legislative services staff and issuing Phoenix The Market binding interpretations only for significant issues October 19 Presidents Commission Executive Legislative assistance has been implemented: Page 6. Committee, Denver Page 2 The NCAA News October 4, 1993

TheNCAANew s u/Ira- l@Es~u-r L A weekly summary of major activities within the Association

tioll. For more detail, SCCf>itgr’ I ol‘rl~is issue. Search committee Staff contact: .f‘ctl (:. ‘l’ow. reviews information 4Ched”k Ofkey dates for October and November 1993

Subcommittee collecting November ideas for source book

‘l‘hc cxccutivc sr;ircli firm suf~fditd iii- 111cliviclrl;lls Who know of i111lov;t~ivr gcn- fonii;ltioli 011 10 I0 I.5 C~ill(liclillrS WI10 Wcrc dcr-ccluity q>fm1:1chcs :11-c;1skccl 10 contact ider1rifit~tl at tlic comr11i~tcc’s Scptcmbrr IS- .J;IIIVI M..Juslus at the n;1tioll;tl ol’1ic.c to aid I4 mccti1tg. Al that time, N(;AA President it1 the tlevclopmc11t of ;I source’ book dc- Joseph N. (:c-owlcy s;~itl Il1;tt ;1l~hougl1 it is siff11cd to communi( illr ideas ll1;1t will c11- “eminently cfoifi1l~lc” to liavc the 3t.lrclion hancc gcncfu c(luity :ind ‘l’irlc IX con1pli- fmxcs~ tornplctctl by Nov~nf~r, lie clccliiicd ‘IIlCC. I0 est;ihlish ;rily tleatllines. .I‘hc cominittcc t.vt.lltKilly will slll)rllil ii OCTOBER the time of the Convention srt of fi11;1lists to 1111~NCAA Executive (;om- RECRUITING Men’s Division I basketball NOVEMBER mittcc. Tlic k:xrcurive ~im1111ittc.r, f’rrsitle1iLs RECRUITING (~omniission cxrcutivt. c omniittec (or its dt5- 1-l 0 .._.._._.__._._ Contact period Keg;irtling gcldcr-ccluiry legislatioll, Illt 1 l-3 1 __._ ._.. .__._.__&et period. Men’s Division I basketball ig11;itcd rcprt5cnt;1tivrs) ;iiid tl1r 11:1rio11;11of’ NCAA Cou~~cil and N(:AA Prcsidcru~ (hrnm Women’s Division I basketboll’ l-8 (8 a.m.) _._..____._.______Quiet period. nrission IlilVY sponsored a pIof~Os~tl for tllc ficc rna11agcmrnt tc;inl ;irc’ schetlulrti to ill- f-7 __ ..______.__..._...._._..___. Contact period. 8 (8 o m.)-1 2 (8 a.m.) _._..._._._. Dead period. I!)!)4 (bnvcntioi~ that woultf fx~rmit ccrtairl tervicw 111~linalists. 8-3 1 .__.____..____ .._.._..._.. .._ Quiet period. 1 2 (8 a.m.)-30 .._._..__..__..___Quiet period. ‘f‘lie lmsitiol1 I1~cmit ’ ;iv:iilal~lc wht11 I% Men’s, women’s Division II basketball’ Women’s Division I basketball’ tnier~ing WOIIICII’S slmrls 10 IK cout1tccl fi)t ccutivc f)irector Kicli;lrti I). Schultz 1rcsig11ctl l-14 ______.._...._._._. Contact period. l-8 (8 a.m.) ._._.__ Quiet period. sl~ort~-4l~o11s~~rsl1il1arid rcvci1~i~-clislril,Ictloll May I I. October 15 until date of the prospect’s ini- 8 (8 o.m.)-12 (8 a.m.) Dead period. fmrfmses. 12 (8 o m.)-30 .._._.._._. Quiet period. For more detail, see the Septe111bcr 20, tial high-school or two-year college contest: For more detail on gender-equity issues, Men’s, women’s Division II basketball’ Quiet period. SW tllc August IX, August ,l ~IKI~JIIIIC t’ issucs July 7 ‘Ir~tl~Jullr L’ isstlts of ‘1‘11~N<:AA News. November 1 until the date of the prospect’s Division I football of’T11~ NC:AA News. Staff contact: f’;1rrici;1 E. Bark. Fridays during October: Evaluation period. initial high-school or beyear college contest: Rest of October: Quiet period. Quiet period. Division II football Period between the prospect’s initial and final l-3 1 .._... .._... ..__. Evaluation period. high-school or two-year college contests: FAX numbers Evaluation period. MAILING Division I football Peer-reviewer selection IS- Survey on revenues and expenses of l-30 . .._...... _.__._ Evaluation period Numbers for facsimile machines ot next primary topic intercollegiate athletics to be mailed. Division II f&ball the NCAA national office (all are area DEADLINES l-30 _.,_.._..__.__.___._.__.._.._. Evaluation period. code 9 13): ‘l’he tlWt+3lmlcnt of‘ a f’““I of peer 1(‘- 15 - Amendments~to-omendments of NCAA legislation due. Such omendments may not in- *See page 1 11 of the 1993-94 NCAA Man- \icwcrs is tl1c IKXI m.tjor t:1sk f;1cil1g the (:orn~ Administration/finance . ..339-0035 nlittct. 011 A~lilctics <~crlilic.ition, wl1ic t1 will crease modification of the original proposal uol for exceptions. Also, see pages 1 14-l I5 15 - Resolutions for the ConventIon must be for dead periods in other Dlvlsions I ond II Championships ..___.____.339-0026 meet Octobc~r. 7 i111);ill;is. submitted by this time or, by Council only, at sports f’ec.r rcvicwctb .m’ rhosc i11clivitlu:lls WI10 Marketing and will (3;tlu:1lc tl1c scIKsl11dy thnt is Iccl1Grc.d 0T broadcast services ______. .339-0027 cvcry lhvicioll 1 inslitulioll. ht237vicw tc;lrIl Compliance services ...... 339-0033 111trnl~crsWill it1c Iutlc intlividri;ils who ;1rc irIm ;tlso ;ipf1c;irc~1 ill rhc, Scp(cml)rr I3 issue of 111;11would rccl1iiic llic, Associ;i(ic)l1 I0 iiiiri;1tc Drug testing _..______.....339-0029 volvccl, or li;ivc 11~~11involved, i11 iiitrrc 011~~ .l’hc N(:AA NYWS), 111cc.rrtilic.;trion 11;111(1- ;I study 01 its 1nr111l1c1~rl1il~structulmc. Enforcement ...... __..____._339-0034 g.1.11~:1ll1lctic s it1 SOIIIC way. Also, in tl1c filsc book mtl the c t-rl1licatio11 sell-s~utly irlstrrlm .4 rcvicw of(llr (?mniissio11’s m.t.ti11~ ;ip NCAA Foundation 339-0036 five-yc;ir c,yclr of (11~l~ro~r;iiii, tlic c omrnitb Int’lll. pc;irs OII l1;t~c’ I of rliis isslir. Legislative services ...... 339-0032 ic’~’ liof~~ to l1;ivc r;icli prcr-review ~C;IIII Staff contact:.Johu f 1. L.c;rvrt~\. .f‘hc pri111;11~ycn1pliasis i11 tl1c (~oniniis~ The NCAA News _____ ._ . ..339-003 1 ~11;iirctl by ;111il1stilutioi1;1l cllicf’rxecutivc Next meeting: Ocrobcr 7 in Dallas. siot1’s clisc ussio11 was 011 iiir.rcasil1g Illt. offic t-r. amount of‘ fcclcmtion i11the Associ:1tio11 ;III~ Off ice services . . ..____.____.339-l 950 ‘l‘ltc first part of tllc ii< ILlal process brg;i11 on ;bsuring tt1;lt lhr issue is dc;ilt with by rhc Publishing _.______...... 339-0030 in I;itc Scpmnber wlicn tlit lirst oricnt;1tiori N(:M c-arher th;11l i111cmside entity. Executive director __...I.... 339-0038 visits wcrc r11;1cl~.A tot;11of ’;1\1out 25 Division ‘l‘hc.Joint Policy Ho;lrd me1 during tht Statistics ...... ______....339-l 800 I iristiturions will rc( rive oricnt;1tio1t visits by Resolution to call (~0111missi01i’sSrf~tcnil~er 2%29 mrcling ;ind Visitors Center . ..______339-0007 the cm1 of Novcrnht-r. for detailed study dcv~I0f~~ a tcntzrtivr process for thr study. All Division I nmnbcrs have recrivrd i1 .l’hr profmscd timetahlc c;ills for models to lmckagc ot‘cmGficatio11 m1tcrials. including Thr NCAA Prcsiticnts Commission will IX- developed fi,r cliscussion at the l!Kl5 (:om NCAA switchboard ...... 339-1906 the Gvemyc;ir cerrific;itio11 schrdulr (which sponsor a resolution at the 1994 (bnvention vcrltion and for 21vote al Ihe 19% (;onvrn- n Division III CEO survey

C&f exmctivf vJfirfl.5 at Divirion III institulivnc recently were .sur- a. In all sports? uyed to determine their uttitude toward regional chamfiivnship cvm- YES ____.__38 NO ___.___40 Do you favor replacing any portion petitiv?L, us v&hosed to nutional rhum~ionship.~ in thut division. b. In team sports only? If you favor establishing regional of the current national-champi- A total vf 223 UXIs re.cponded to the .survqr, und of that number, YES ___.___27 NO ______30 football championships, which of onships format in Division Ill (a na- I37 (61.4 Percent) did not &or re@cing any portion of the current the following regional formats do tional bracket of 16 teams that play c. In football only? nativnul cham~;onships,fonnat in Division III. you favor? for four consecutive weekends) with YES ______25 NO ______17 Among th rommmti,from thx res$&unL~ were tht following: a regional-championships format d. In other sports (please specify)? a. Establishing eight regional cham- n “We need to lower the pmsure to mmpete on u national lael. *’ [a championship that terminates at . Team sports first to test effec- pionships, with four teams par- n “It b important fbr a Division III student-athlete to compete on ihe regional, not national, level)? tiveness. a national luoel. ” ticipating in each region during YES ...... 86 NO _...... 137 n Sports for which the NCAA two consecutive weekends: 42 n “‘Re@vnul chum~ionshi~s ure a gvvd step toward rvst redur- does not sponsor champi- tion, greater visibility, maximum purtt@ation, and thy un- onships. b. Establishing four regional cham- dertmre the l~i~rrivn III philv~vphy. ” w Sports that are affected by pionships, with four teams par- n “Keep the national chumplonshi~~ US u goal to kqb a student- (For those who answered “yes” to weather (golf, tennis, softball, ticipating in each region during athlete jrvm nttmding u Divisivn I or II school instend. ” Question No. 1) baseball) should be regional. two consecutive weekends: 31 n Ytofi treutivg us like second-class ritizens!” In which of the following sports do . Team sports that compete for C. Other format (please specify): n ‘lf‘n tpam wins n regional, it will want to play cquinst anoth- you favor the establishment of a re- more than two additional YTregbnal winner. ” gional championships format? weeks. 26 listed --

October 4, 1993 The NCAA News Page 3 - n Briefly in the News n Lookina back

5 years ago: The off icci-s of Ihc Scholarships NC:A,4 I’rcsidciits (:orI~IIlission tlcciclcd Oc3ol)c1 24, I!jXX, IO proceed witli ;I fi- n.~nc.ial ;Iitl 1)101)os;1Ideveloped I>y honor racers I’I.~SI~ICIII I’ctc1 I.ikirls 01 I.ehigh Uni- vcrsiry. ‘l%r (;olii1llission had ;igi~crd iii ils Scpciiilacr rllrt-1111g to spnl1sor Ihc ~~IY~~~nS;ll, wliic h Ililtl IX’eIl SLlppOltCd by Ihc I)ivisioti I-A AlhleIic l)ircctoi s A\soc i;lIion. ‘l‘hc N<:AA (:OIIII~ il. how C’VCI‘, h.1tl r-cconiniriidrcf lb lhe iii;~I~ ~cl I crcivc fill1 her srudy. (The NC iA. News, Oc.tol,~r 31, 1!)HX)

10 years ago: The final l~cl,ort 0f‘Ihc SpCC’iill (;olilmirIee 10 Kcvicw AIhlcIic. I’l~ol)l~r~~s;~ntl <:oncc1~11s irl HighcI F.dIlc aIiol1 wits nlailcd IO tllr mcml~clslli~, it1 OCIr,l>er 19x3 ;llltl Wilb reprintctl iit its cnIireIy iii Ihc Oc.lolX.1 31 is\uc of‘.l‘he NCAA News. It ~>rc- sctl~c.tl Illr I.rc~ommeIld;IIions illld c OIW Calling the shots 111u11;Iryof Ih;Il I,lur~lil,l)orl panel 1cg;lrtliilg acatlcmic, gobunanc-e and f‘itlanci;d issues, 2s wrll 3s enfbrcement Matt Hemphill, a junior on the Kansas State Uniwrsity ji~otball team, ;IIKI recruiting. (The N(;AA Nrws, Or- receive.sa tetanus .shot.fi-om a Red Cross volunteer while hdping with.flood- lobe1 31, 19X3) relief effbrts this summer in Manhattan, Kansas. Hemphill was one of more than 30 members of‘ the Wildcat football program, including head 20 years ago: The U.S. Sct1i1Ir coach Bill Snyder, who helped sandbagjlooded areas. vott~l Ocroher 3, 1973, to IpIurn Senate Hill 2365 to the Senate (:ommerce (:oIIiinilter. Ihiis reflecting Ihc SrIl;l~e’s relurtancr IO c rcale Federal control Purdue lintmaIl Jeff Zgonina. IIS goal is IO o\‘er ;1nlatrur ;1111lr1ic s. (“N(AA: The provide tutors ;incl memots IO local elemen- Voice of <:ollcgc Sporls”) Attendance record .l‘l1e U.S. team woii Ilir c Ii;llI~pionship m-y school children who have special with ;I 17-1) victor y over Ihe all-Japan II;I- needs. 30 years ago: The N(:fi i.011g “I c.;tn’t say ci1ough AmuI ir:’ said Laurie IioIlal tram Ilcfore X.000 frets in Tokyo. lbnge t’l;InIiiiig (;orlIrniIIee recoiii~ ‘1‘1~ collcgr c O;IC IWS 011 Ilie tcmi wcrc Petersen-OtRico, a11 clcmcnt;u-y sp~~i;ll rnr~~dctl ;III~ the NC:&4 (buncil sup- Joe Albetic i, SIaIe Liniversity Collrgr ;II C~IIC ;uioil le.;1cl1cr who lielptd ~oordin;1Ie poilr~l ;I r-e.Il’l’irIii~ition of‘lhe 011co111;1; Bill Bergan, (:l;II-kson LJniversity; IIIt. 1~1ogr;111,. “l’m really looki1lg ti1rw;ud IO Assoc i:~Iion’s enfol~ccn~ctlt policy Ihat Bill Carter ad Joe Matassa, Michigan Inakit1g iI biggcl.” “prn;dIirs sl~oultl be broad if thcl~e is a ‘llic pi eviorls best was I.205, set Oclobrr SI;Ite Univrrsity; Kevin Colbeck, Wesley %goiiin;1. wl30 graduated lioin P111~dut. IlilSiC ir1sIituIioni1l pattcr’ll Of nondesel- 95. IO!)?. whell the Univetsiry of low;\ (:ollege: Rodd Kaufmann. Alfred Univer- last L~ereiiibcr, said he was exciletl to see his v;111cc, narrow if’violations arc isolaIed 11o~lc~1 SI. I.or& llnivcrsiry. sily; Bill Hall, (bt~ncll IJnivcrGIy: Rob itIm being iniplemenIecl. and insliIilIiol1al dereliction is iiol in- “It ~21s ;I gi~r:rI expcricilcc, somrthiiig I Oltl I~oiI~iiIioi~ :111tl N01Ili (:;1ioliiia O’Meara antI Dan Whelan, MOLIIII St. volvcd.” (“N(AA: The Voicr of (;ollcge phytd IO ;I O-0 draw. ~;IS glad I did last yc;Ir,” hc said. “II f&Is M~y’s <:ollcgc (M;~yl;~lld); John Roth and spoils”) Roty Whipple, Hartwick (bllege; Matt goocl IO givt. somcIhiIlg Ijack to Illc c OI~I~~II~ Lacrosse in Japan Thompson. 1~;1l~so11 (:ollt~pr, and John tiiry:’ Tillman, 1I1l;l<.i\ (;olltp-. Mayoral coach n Fact file Gentle giants

W Committee notices Minority opportunities committee discusses role with Commission

‘1‘11~ N(:AA Mitlority O~)~IOII~IE “AII 11;111ic ilm1lls W~‘IC t~1r~111c*ly (:01111( il 11lilt ;I11iIddili0tl;ll ClClll~llI iiiIics ;111(1 Itl(t.rc\ls (:o~llrllillre ilivol\ ~(1 iii Itit, tlisc ilsGoii5:’ Wtiil- I1r atltlrtf IO ItIt. t.xislillg tccpir~cm f’l1llllcl cxl)lolctl ils 1 t~lil~i0llslli~~ C Olllll SiliCl. “Wt. feel W’C Il;lVC CSt;lIl- IIlClllS Of Illr ~llO~:“;llll 11lilt WOtlld <:ommittee on Financial Aid and Amateurism: Kcpl;~c~cn~c~~~ for \\,iIll 111~ Y( :A.4 l’~c.si(lc.llIs (;OIIIF lislicd cii;1logr1c I1y wliicli fiituic fIlIlhC?l’ CllSlllt’ Cllhilll(.CIllCIlI OI>m M;trilyn McNeil, (~;llifi~I~lliil I’olyIu hnic SI;IIc L’iii\,ci sily, SalI I.& iilis5iol1 tlrlt iiiga rcc‘c’t~l coll~l1liII~~~ i55r1cs C’;II~ I,c add1 cs\ctl I)y Imtli ~101111iii(ic3 foi ctliiiic nliliolitirs. Ol)ispo, \IIICC hcl illsIiI11(ioll \vill 1)~ c lahsif’icrl ;Is Ihvisitrtl I-A.4 c.ffi.c Iivc llicc.lilig. coiiirrii((cc5:’ Yrprtnl)et I. 1!l!bl. AppoillIrt, IIIUSI Ix cI \j~oii~;in fio1ii I)ivisioii II. Al\o, WhiIc-oml, said (tic co11l- Men’s and Womtn’s Track and Field (teptescnting men’s Irack): Other topics 111illm. is cotlccr-nrtl .1lm111 ll1c lack KC~~~;IC~III~~III fi)r Ilwit1 hf. (:ohcll, Noithr;islci II I Ini\~ersily, r~csignctl 01 o~1~1011~11~ilirs ;iff~~t~dcd through f’rc)m 111t. c rml1lillt~c. AppinIrc IIIIISI Ix. ;I I)ivision I mc11’c t1ac.k Ilic progr;~n~ lo t.thiiic ~ninoriIIes I rl1it3t’i1l;tli\~~, ~~r~l~~r;ll~lv Ir-olll I)isti~ic t I 01 2. wirh reg.lrtl lo offic i;i(iiifi.

Whircoinl) s;litl Ihr c 011lillillrt~ is Ex-Colorado player named noI intcrestctl iii stilling the c ix-d- li\ily (llill c~ollfClmcllCcs Ilavc beCl1 academic member of year gl~;lllltYl Ihlou~:h rhc, I”“gl~alll ;111d the ~c~oinliicIicl;~Iioii, he said, is .JIII~ I IAIISCII. Ii), 111~‘1 ol’f’c~l1sivc~ .,s .I Khotlcs Srllol;~~ ;II Osfortl WlliIc or1ll1 saitl ItIt, c 01l1111illt.t iiol I,cilig fi~iw;~r~dcti with Ilic go,11 I,lc.klc IOI rllc I’lli\(.lGl) of (:olom 1’111\crsiIy iii EtigI;111(l, was sclec~Ictl txpi~~~sstd iIs c OIIC tm1 ;~lmrl lht of‘ c ic;iIiiig ;I sc1 of iicw rrgulab l~.KlO, hrlltlcl, fi1oll,;Lll lt“1111, has I,v ;, \()I(’ of’ Itl<. I ,fioo~llKml,cl~ .1~~~ounI;1l)iliIy 11ic;1s11rcs thar ;I~C Iiolls. Hc ;~dtlcd Illi11 rhc conlmittcr I,CCll l1‘lmcd 1llC 1!l!F-!l:1 (;~I‘E AC~I- (:ollqc Spoils Inlc~rni;~Iion I)ii~cc.- cmrrcntly in pl;~cc willi reIgl-cl In is inIrrrsIrt1 ii1 showc-;isingc onfi~r- tlcnlic, All-AIIICI ic;I .li,.111) MC.II~~)CI IOI s of‘ AIIICI ic iL (( :oSII)A). IllC. C Ollfi’l’t-II< C’-hT;llll I)lCjRiIlll. S[JC’- CI1C c?, Ihl ha\r tlclnollslr.;1lrd cf- 01 IhC YC;ll fi>l iI11 SflOllS. cific ally, lie saitl, lhc colrinii((cc tL111sc11. ~110 i5 I1t.girlllillg work See Hansen, page 18 b \\YnlItl Ic(.oIllIIlclld to rhc N(AA See Minority, page 15 b Page 4 The NCAA News October 4, 1993

n Comment ,,f.‘.,,;’ 0$5) The_._~ NCAA News Proposal out in favor of another Editor-in-chief The Comment sec- P. David Pickle tion of The NCAA On brhalfofthr Amrlican 15asehall 0 Letter 1x111coaches (srvcral of whom have Managing editor News is offered as (:oachcs Association. I would like to contacted the AR<;A rl;JIion;ll ollice), Jack L. Copelond 0 page of opinion. to infer 111;1t;I proposal on rheir hehalf Assistant editor The views do not appmrcd in thr September ‘LOissue of would shift m Yropos;~l No. ‘L-15, which W;IS rlirnin;1~cd wirhout reason. Vikki K. Watson necessarily repre- .l’hr N(:AA News (“Serond publication seeks traveling and coaching privileges Tllc Anlrric ;1n B;1sehall (:oaches Editorial and sent a consensus of of pi-opt~ils 77l;iilrtl"). to away sitrs for volunteer coat hrs in Association thas endorsed Yroposal advertising assistant No. ‘L-15 and is urging voters at the Ronuld D. Mott the NCAA member- The ;1llic Ir s1:1lrs 1ha1 the volu11tecr- all sports orher than foolhall and ship. co;~rli lm~ps;il tar- hasehall W;IS with- haskcthall. Implement;1tiorl of 111at 1994 N(:AA (;onvrntion in San Anto- drawn hrforr the srrond publication, proposal worild satisfy the s;mic iiilcnt nio IO rlo rhe S;IITIC. which is indeed true. ;m Ihe one for haschall coaches alone Karen L. Duncan However, this was do11r with the that was withdrawn. Assistant to the executive director express undrrstandin~ of the propos- This w;~s nol mentioned in the mim American Baseball al’s 15 sponsor5 that rheir support cle, ;11Iowinp 1c;cdcrs. paiticularly hasc- Coaches Association 0 Guest editorial 0 Opinions Gender equity fits in education context Cutting coaches could boost equity

By Michael F. Adams Thomas O’Brien, director for research ;1c;1tl~mic;1lly. ‘fhat’s what so many teachers arc yrlling CENTRE COLLEGE Horizon Institute for Policy Solutions ;Jhot1t. Teachers know it’s tough to teach an unrnorivated The Chronicle of Higher Education kid. II got-s hack to thr family. Ifthey sr~pport ;I stuclrnt with Mt1c.11attetttiott r~cen~ly has IXCII given to “lh~~~~r slalistics show that 93 pcrccnt of N(:AA s( hools i111individual spo1t, thry arc likely to supput their kids 111~N(AA t-c-fortn ~nove~ne~lt at~d issues re- had drfic its in their lootball programs. III Division I-A, the with I)ook.r, maga7inrs, nrwspapers and otht-r aids to I;tlcd to gcndcr equity. While cpitonlt. of big ‘succ~essful’ ;1lhletics prqrains, 45 pcr~ce11t Irat-tritlg:’ few, if any, coed SC-l~ools, ill- of schools r;in dcficils. “Why all the recent talk ahout cutting spots 1cams in Graduation rates clttditlg (Ietttre (Iollegc, 01 dcr to rsti1ljlish gender equity? Wl1y reduce schol;1rship c~ot~ld t,c said to he currently Alexander W. Astin, director oppnrtunitirs fur studt-Ills ill ill1 when huge coaching staffs Higher Education Research Institute itI total cotnpliancc, eat so much university money? For ex;1mple, in 1990~91, University of California, Los Angeles the ot+ctive is still dcsira- 1l1r IInivrrsity of Virginia paid IO ;1ssist;Int foo~hall The Chronicle of Higher Education ble. co;icl1cs, rrlo~l of’whom each received s;il;irirs of $50,000 “It is Illlforlun;ue lh:1l tl1c Studer1l Kighr to IGlow Act wi1s to $70,000. Evet1jtrs1 one ofrhesc ‘ialarics cor1ltl p1oviclt~ ;1 l);~ssccI irl ils ciirrr11I tbrni, hut wt- nerd 10 rc;dirr that Ttle tltost dtff tcult pm of wc;iltli of11c~wwo111c11 ’salhlt.lic~ scholarchips. (Zrltti1lg ficc c(l1~c;1lio11;1l resc;11cllr1~s ;111tl me;1suretnc11t sI>ccialists the ptut~tetn, like many ;issisl;irll coat hes could raise over $250,000 in rlrw studrrlt h;1ve heen cncour;lging policy makers to use just such schol;1rships. lmd~letns, is ddinirion. By ‘outcomes only’ assessments for many years. “(:olleges need to assert co11lrol over this huge ‘win at “l’ractic;1lly every scl1ool di.*lricl in the country uses gctitler equity, do we mean ;1r1y cosI enterprisr and use the- savings to provide equal st;11~cli1rdi~rtl tests to provide output measurczs, :tnd the CX;~CI 50/50 ratios ;tct-oss the t,0;lt-d? rh WC oppni~iini1ies Iin young women: pul)lic is cnc-our-aged to hrlievr rhar schools grnt-ralingrhe tllc;ttl eclttal opportunity? 01. propottiotlal- highest (ou~con~c) scores on statewide or district-wide tests ity? Robert Lipsyte, columnist ;~rr 1he ‘best wllilc those with the lowest stores arc thr The New York Times ‘w01& ‘I‘hc NCAA (;etlder-Equity ‘l’,tsk Force says “Twrnty years Iatt-r, the gong IGllie Jean King hit is hIill “Such clu;1lity judgments 211-cinc;111inglrs~ without ‘input’ tlt;tt at1 :ttlilctics pt-0gr;ttn cmt t)e c~onsidcrccl ringing, ;1lthough the sountl tcnrls 10 he muffled hy tht (I;I~;I on the stuclcnts when they first enroll. In fkt, “getIcier--~qitit~tt~lc” when the mile and fc- ~upercolliders of sport, young men in leather and plastic ‘o11~cr~me’scores arc l)rohahly trlli11g 11smuch more ahoul armor running into c;1ch other. King Foothall is the h;lsi< tuale lmtlic-ipttils would gladly accept the the popuI;1tiotl rrcnlifd hy the school th;ln they al-e about harrit-r, so&lly, fiii;inci;illy ;171tl psy~~~~r~logically.to womcii’s ttlt. rftrc-rivcncss of the school’s ;1c;1demic program. The progt-ant of the ottict-. On the affirmative gc,11i11g;1n eclu:ll share in A111rric i111sprnfs. s;1111rmi11tllrcs for711of~one~shot tcsti11g also characteri7t-s side, SOII~V take the position that until a “Neverthclcsr, thcl c has hrrn enormous prog1 CSS, the N;ltio11;1l Ashrssmcnt of Educ arion Progress and 1he spott ttsittg as many women as fimttmll uses although 1101nc~1rly cnotr~h. Just look at all the 11~~s ahout tccti11g 11ow I)cing p1npost~l I1y rhe National Ecluc a~ional t1ie11 is c~te.alc.tl antI sponsored by every col- ~~II~~II in 1he spans pages. (;o;lls I?llld. “Worncn’s boccer, bench vollcyhall ancl mountain hiking lege and tttiiversity nationwide, gender “It ir ;1 sh.imc lh;il cc111c;tIional researchers c onrinue to wt’rt’ aimrninwrl ~1srvrnts iii tht- I!)!)fi Allanra Olympic equity cannot be said to exist. srilq)oiI (;111tl profit fio1n) such simplistic :Intl naive ( ~;UIICS..Soccrr w;is ;rpp1~ov~d as ;1 pcrm;1nenl event, it1 ;~ss~~sstnen~pi;iclic~c~s ;111clIha1 wc colitinur 10 rncouragr On ttie otticr- h;intl, there art‘ coaches, rt-sponse not only to ils worltlwirle popul;1rity bul lo a l)olic.y makers i111tl ‘conbumers’ to 1,s~ the questionablr mostly malt, who argue that get&r equity ~miiccilrd cffbri I)y the Women’s Soccer Foundation arltl results gcnc1;1lrd by them. The ;1sscssment community c~rhcr glass-1ools or~ini/;1lions. likely will kill the current national sports 11111s1 ,>I oclllt t' ;111(1rlisscnli1latc to policy makers anrl “Mc.anwhilr, Ihe I,oom in WOIIICII'S twllcgt soccer ib al IJill c11ls r1111c.hI,ettcr tools for t~v;1luatin~ the quality of our stt-ltctttr’c. They basic-ally are making “scpa- lhr hc;111 0I v;1rioris Title 1X Iawsl1ils ;md thcjo3lling Ibr colleges and univc1 si1ic.s:’ I-;lle-t,rrl-~c~ll;lt” at-gutrletlts like WC used to numerical gciidc~~ equity:’ hcill- Ott Ittc civil rights I110Velllt’tlt. ‘I’tlOSe Coaching opitiiotts arc~just as wt-otlg today in regard Grades George F. Killian, executive director IO gCtl have to stay up on thr latrst strategies and still hr an X, !I, IO. 1aki1ig Ic~sso11\,pl;1ying ;I( clrihs, goiiig lo tour11;1- academic adviser because they are bring judged on the itut \o tn;tt~y of the coaches, especially LXvi- 111(‘111\. academic successes of their studmt-alhlrres. siotl I (-OilCtlVS, Arc cfitcstiotiing? “If l1;11t711\support you iii ;I sport like tennis or golf, “Thry ;1lso have to 1nake their pl;1yrrs realize their roles 011~ rc;is011 is that if‘wc in colleges antI wt1c.te you h;1ve lo 1x1~1 ’01~it, so111clinlcs through s;1crilicc, off the field and co1~rt . . ..111tI rhey have to fund-misc. 111~.p;1rents 11sr1;1llysl1l)port rt1rir children in othrr ;iI~ci1s. (:oaching usrd to hc ;1 nirlr-lnonth~a~year.jot~. Now, it’s 12 See Gender equity, page S F F.umily suppo7l ;111tl inrerest make studs-nts do hrtrer months:’ October 4, 1993 Page 5 The NCAA News -. Need-based financial aid explored

Committee to look at Americans alarmed model’s potential cost and competitive impact by education costs Most Americans fc;tr that ris- pacing inflation, income gains 7‘1,~ N(AA (:c~rttmitree on Pi- itig costs arc pitring a collrgr and growh in finant-ial aid. nancial Aid ;III~ Att~~~teuri~ttt made n Discussed (OII( cm amotlg Division 111institutions ;tlx~ut thr rclucatioti orIt ofreach fbt~many Inflatiott was 2.8 pcrccnl pl;nis fi,i- study of‘ ;I luitiott-aiicl~ ;~lJ\etic c’ol’;~ Lttiifortn, c o~nmotily ;tc.c.rp~rtf tnethodolo~~ for LtSe in 5~itdetits, ;trcordit~g to srirv~y from last fall to this fall. Rut f+rb, t~cetlLlx,scd fiti;tnci;il aid clctc.rtninin~ need ill granting fiti;tttci;tl aid 10 StlldCTTll-i1~hl~~~S, te\ults releasrd Sep~ctiil~er ‘LX. avrrage tiiitiori, room aricl tt~otlrl d~triri~ irs Septetnbcr 22-23 and t-cc.orttrrtt~tldetI to tttc NCAA (:otrncil tlt;tt ;,,I institutiorl I>r Thrrr~fifths of lhosr polled board rlimbcd six percent, to tncctittg it, K;msas (Zity, Missouri. pt~rtnittctl I0 nlilize its own tri~lltodc~lo~ fot dctrrtninitig tired, as for tllc (~;~lilornia Highrt Edu- )fi,‘LO7, ;I, four~ycar put~lic- unii IcJtig ;tS it ~~otifoirt~~ lo written iiislitt~liot~al ~itidclin0 ~tttd it is The c~otiitnittrc, r~~spottding to a catiott Policy (:entcr said qu;tlt- versitics, illId rose f-ivr prrcent, c otlGslt.tll with 1lic rrtc~~ltotl used li,t- ;,I1 st~~dents at that iitstitution. rcc otnt~~rt~datior~ IO the N(:AA f&,tl students arc kcpr out of lo $15,8 18, at fbitr-year private 7‘11~.Ft&xtl go\‘cr ttrti~~tt~tic) hi~cr protluc~3 mcttiodolo~ies lot (:OLIIII il I,y the Spcci;tl <;orittiiitree U>llcgc IXY ause of thr (OSI. collegrs, (hr <~ollcgc Hoard tlc~t~~t~tttit~iti~ ttccd, rc.sulting in ;t I;,( k of cottsctis,tb ;ttnong to Rcvicw Financial (:ot~dition~ in Ninety pctccnt said cost sl~o~~lcl said. itr~lil~~liottlr .,s to liow tirt-tl rtiall I>c dctct~t~tittetl tot- prlrpost5 of Itttctcollrgiate Athletics, rstab ttot Ix ;t Iti~itlratnce. ‘l’hc increases were ;tt)out ilW;ttXliltg t‘in;tnci;tl aitl. listtccl it ~r~l~c~otntiiittcr to work “Atttc~ic ittt.* perccivc highrt the s;tmc, or slightly Irss, than W Kc~~~icwctl rc.\rlllS 01 the scc.ortd yc;Lr of ;t Itial fJcriorl lot with the NCAA national oR‘ic.r’s tduc:ttioli iIt much the same last year’s iis collcgcs fare ljrl lttillittg the ;tw;inlillg 01 tnottcyc ftortt the Special Absistaticc rc~5r.trclt ‘it;itf‘ it1 ~v,~lu~rting 01c. wdy they pcrc rivr hcaltli c arr:’ sharp-r c.otnpetitioti for 3 12tJtltl 10 I’t~ll~gt;~i~l ~1LL~Ic.ttt~;ttI~Ic.tcs wlto are not cligilJlr for I’cll pott3ttial (‘act ;11,(1c oti~lx~titivc int- Rtttick (Xlahan, the c rmrr’s shrinking [Jo01 of studcttts. (;IXIIIS, .~ntl tcc~o~JttJ~c~tttletI to the NCAA Special Advisory <:ommit~ l);~ct of’., ttcccl~l~;tsrtl ftti;itici;tl aicl esrcutivt. dirt-c-tor, told Tllr As- Bctwrrn 19X0 and I900, Fed- I~YA to Kcricw KAYottttttet~rl;ttior~c Krg;:trding J)i~tt~il~cttiott of ~~~tc~ttiott itttc~c~ollc~gi:tte ;ttlilctic~\ sociatrd Press. “Wh;tI al;ums eraI fitl;trt< ial aid rose 47 per- K~vrrlttrs that it Illillit’ Ills provisioti p~rtnancnt. Thr c~otnttiittrc ill Divisions I ;111dII. Amcticatt\ is ltot :t lackofqu;tlity. cent and individual disposat>le ;tlso It3 otltll~cttclc~l tllilt loreign studrtll-~Llllletcs conlintrr IO bc ‘l‘tiey f-at 1tla1 rscalatitig (obls income tosc 63 percctit, while ‘l‘ttc f‘iti;,,~~ ial .ticl c.ottt~t~iltt-c cligilJlt fiJr tiicJ~tc~y~ fiotii the lLititl Liiitlrr Ihal provisiotl. lJtL1 that will prevent tlio\r in need ftorti thr cost of higher education Iiopcs IO rrvicw ;I l)l;tn lor cot,- ;,,I ittctitiilic~rt;~l oft trial ;ttlvi\ittg l’orcigtt strltlcttts bc pct~rttitlc.tl to p;~Jlic~ipXitlg ill thr system: wtmt LIP I26 pc’rc em cluc~tittg rr~c~:trctt ot, lltt. ntoctcl at c.t.t-lil’y ;t tiJtt.ign SIrltlent~;1thlrt~‘S riced Ibt- ;IsSislatlce, I-athcl I~lat1 ~l‘hr (:ollrgr Ibard, thr Ptince- ‘The (3ifortli;L Higher Edu- ils itt’xt tncx*titlg in Fel,rtr;try I!)!)4 ;I I inancial ;ticl otf’ic c’r. ‘l‘he c.o1ltrtJilit-t, bclicvcs it iS itnlJr;tctic;tl for ton, Nrw Jcrsry-based group cation lhlicy Gtttcr said its poll ;~ttd Ix-&ii, tlcvclopittg ;I ticctl- ;I filL;ittc~t,tl aid offic t’r 10 provide Such crrtific;t~iott, I~ecausc that adltJitlirlct3 the SclJol;t.rtic was cortttt~issioncd to tnr:tsut-c Ixtsctl~;titl l~rolx3saI fi)t cbcnlual txistittg tl~~tl tnethodologicS prodLtcc tiiriittinglcss tc3tllfS lot Aptitude Test antI orhcr CXXII~, pttl,lic sctitimrn1 aboLtt the (051, cot~~i~lt.r;t~ioti I)y the tnetiil~ctsl~il~. foteigtt 5ILtdcttts. I-t-potted I cc~trly that the cm qu;Llity ;utd availability of higher n Kccont~ttc~~~tlt~tl lo the (bnncil rlt;tt N(:AA bylaw I.‘,.‘L.4.‘,. II, It.tllilli\‘rly srtting;, timetable of ;I collrgf, cdrcc;rlion is out- cdric alion. wliic It c~srtitprs spcc it‘itd ~r~vrt~ntiictil tdiicxioti;il gtalllr li-om tin its wo1 k, (1,~ c otntnittee noted th;tt the NC :AA (:outtc-il and srvel-al L~otisiclc~t;LIio~t in clctcttttitiillg the pcrtniSsilJle :tmoLt~lt of a firll gt;ttil~iii~,~itI lor .t stiidrt~t~;tthlt~tr, IK ;~tticndrtl to inclritlc IJcrtrfits tncttil~ct~ it~stilr~tion~ are spotisor~ .~tltltccuc~l irJ Federal Icgislaliott Ijut not itt (hr N(:M bylaw, as wrll it,!: .I rcrolrttiolt at (ll(, I!)!)4 N(:M (:otivct~tioti (No. t’-15.3 it, Iltt, See,- .tS (.Ctlililt IX~tlelits (SLlch it\ spcc‘ilic vctcl;tlLS bencfil pl(Jgl’XttS) Softball coaches list top teams rli.,, ;Ltr c otisirtent witli tfiosr c.Ltrretitly cxc~tt~lJtetl by tlic IJylaw l)Lil otttl I’ul~lic;i~ioti of I’roposed l.eg- not cittrrrLtly .Ltltlrcsscd in N(AA Irgislatiot~. academically in three divisions islatioti) that WOIIICI tlirecr the l Ilrc o1tlmt~tltlctl to tilt. (:ouncil th;tt Ryl;lw 1524.1 I>c iltttettdeCl cotntniltcc (0 l)tt’patc Irgi~l:ttioti hrs to tttakr Ihr m;tximttnt I’~11 (irant award of $!N)O fog I)iviGons II l‘hr National Softball (kc Division l pctl;titiiltg (0 Ilrt,tl-l,.t.scd aid it, As~ociarion rrcrrt~ly r~ccogni;lrrl antI Ill ill\titutions ;tppli( ;tt,le only in Division If. The ,U otntne~i~ tittic. ti,r c.otisi(l~r;tl ion .I, the I995 LJtah State, Ncbr;tsk;t-Kcarney and (:otivc.ttlic~~t. (l;ttioll is I~~srtl ott thr c otnmittcc’u l)cliel’ that, bet ause the dcfitiilions of ;t fiill grant-itlbaid atid c rJst ol‘ attrndattc c arc the Bethany (West Virginia) as the top ;tr;idcmic t13ttis in Divisions I, II The financi;tl aid c.onitrtittee same, the legislation is iinnccrssary in Division III. ;IIKI 111. respecrively. t~sl”‘e~““‘l cotl(~cl rl that I!)!)5 111;1c n I)isctcssrd whrrhrr the SlxGal Assisjt;tnc c FLIIKI folm s(tJtIrt~t~ Iw 100 so011 I0 pct~ltil atlrclti;tte ;ttlileres sli011lt1 IJr used fat hr;Llth~insrit;~~i~~r premirmts fhr 2 study oftlic i5srtc atld tlt~vrlol~tnent sttltlrnt-athlete and rrcommendcd to the Special Advisory Com- ITraIl State lrtl Division 1 with a 01.a propos;~l. Theteforr, it recon- mittee to Rcvirw Recommrndations Kegarding Distribution 3.500 team grade-point il\‘CIXgr ttietitletl to tlic (:otlrtc+l that, :tf rhe 01 Krvmuc that it complctc its Study of whether the fund should (4.000 scale). Nelx-ask;t~K~~~rney ICilSt, iL b1XllS report 011 ttlC C 01X1- 1,~ tlrt,tl in this tn;t~tncr. In ;t I-clatrd action, the f‘inancial aid ant1 took lop honors in Division II with tttittcc’\ work I)e sc-hctit~lctl fol the atii~ttcuti~ttt c~otiitiiiltct ;tlsc> ;tskcd thy N<:M Sttttlrtlt-Athlctc ;I Z5.360(;I ’A. Bcthiltly’s 3.510 W;IS 1995 (:ottvt.ril ion and that any Advisor y (:c)tntnittcr fol input on whrlltrr Irtgislatiotl should hc good enough to It311 Division III. pr”pos;lls IJC prcscnretl 110 I;ltct proposed to [Jr,-ttiit itistitrLlirJns to pay l~rrn~iLmts for sIudetit~ Ihan the I!)!)6 (;oltvcntion, with ;t~hlctcs wlto ;Lrc not covcJul IJy a tiLmily ittSur-ancc l>litll or othet- Following is tllc c ontplete list of the tititlct~sl;tticli~i~ Ill;,, Iegisl;ttiott private coverage. IIre Narional Softb;rll (:o;tc-hrs As- coultlI,c propos~~~l iti l!l!G if ready. soci;Ll iolt all~ac~,ttlctnic~ 1ofJ teams: ‘MO men’s lacrosse teams reprimanded by committee

Ttlr N<:M Men’s I.;icr~s>r ri (;(,I- State Litiivcrsily stuclci~t~;tthIctr, ble to p;irtic ipate. Sr;itc-W;tsltitt~:rr~t~ game tinder- IIrtivrrsity 01’ North <:;trolina, lcgc (hbryland) tncn’s Iit< rossr Todd (Iiggrtt, for his verbal mis- tJtilic(l the priticiplcs of fair play, (;ltaprl Hill. “Thr cotrtntittrr tc;irns tiJr an altercation IJrtiJre condr1c.c. (Iliggett will br banned In addition, the committee has allcl cli\c rrrlired thr cltitrtll~iot~shil~ strongly belicvcs thitt c~or~duct of (IttGr I!)!13 N<:M clt~;t~~rrf’in;tlco~~~ front partic ipatins in the first cr)Il- withhelrl $500 of per clictn from antI itrtercollc~;itc ntrn’5 lacrossr:’ this natiirc should tiol 0~ cur:’ Gender equity TheNCAA News Commentary: Society has stake in majority gender getting equity Published weekly, except bi- weekly in the summer, by the No- b Continued from page 4 pl.rcc. (:tmdrr t’cfLllty llas Wltilr I don’t thirlk wt’ have to ‘;tlldc~lll.\ 1h;111 I ;,,1, I,): the lKlll tlonal Collegiate Athletic Associa- t~clL1c;ttiott:Ll valri~ I‘hat is ;I tttrs- (10 ;Itl cX:lCt tltill~~/letll:llC I)Otly c olltitc’rs on c,ttlict sitlc. tion, 6201 College Boulevard, s;tgc 111;ltWC ’have Iat in big-time couttt it, intcl~cc~llr~i:ttc sports, .I Our society Itas ;L ttt,Ljot ctakt. in Overland Park, Kansas 66211- ttttivcrsitics tloit’l t~elortii OIIT sclv~ collcgt. ;tthlctics. which is inc rt’:ts- college 01 rittivt,rsiry that ofrt-t s I 1 sccilig tllil1 5? pclcctlI 01 its ci- 2422. Phone 913/339-1906. Sub- III this iLl’Ci*, Ihe ~:O\cl~lllllt’lll ib iliKly sect, ah part of the total m.~lc spoits aittl fnttr fctti;tlc~ spoi‘ls ~i/(.ti\Plll;tl is, wc~tnctt-arc tl-c;t(- scrlptmn role: $24 annually pre- goitlg to do it lbr US. Mv cxperiencc paid; $15 annually prepold for entct~t;iit~t~~et~t~ttol edur;ttion~ is clcally ottt of C0ttlldiilttc r attd ccl t’cli~ilal)ly. l’c~oplc Itavc ;t Ita\ IJf~.il, I)otti irt cd;Jc alion anti junior college and high-school fac- a-pie-titrc. If gender rcfLiity orlgllt to IJc jLtdgcd 50. Ncx~ year at M’ily of risittg to lllc. statJtl;trtls that govt.1 ntncnt, tli;~l WC’arc Ijettcr off‘ ulty members and students; $12 help5 ~LII Ihe whoIt- process Itark (;t,titrr, lor ittstanc c, while wc still wt. SC,, a,,(1 I ;ittt c-onviticccl Ihat WII~I, WC t;tkc the ittiriativr r~;ttllc~t onnuolly prepaid for students and itlto pcrspcctivr lot- SOIIIC 01 the II.I~~ mot-c riL;Llr attilrtcs pal1ici- once 111~ N(:M tahrs tllc poSitic,tt faculty at NCAA member Institu- than sit 1xlc.k and rcspotxl to Fe& c oarhcs ;IIIII m;~jot~~ o&-se ;ttlilct- p;tlilig than Ititit;tlcs, with the atl- tli.t1 ;~pplicatioti of gt.rttIrr cclttity tions; $SOannuoIIyforforeignsub- ctal ,31;111l1;11r’5. ic.3 pto~~ants, so ttiuc h the 1)ctlt.r. ib a wise tliilig to do, the,, tht scriptions. For first-class upgrade, tlilioti of wotttcti’~ golf we will forword on additional $26 (except Attothcr rc;tsott is Ilt;tr tltctc I’iti;tlly, .ttld ntoSl ittlpOltiLIl~ly, liavc nine wottirtt’s sports and c ollegcs, L1ttivc.i sit its, high schools foreign orders). No refunds on aI\0 i5 a crc’.,, deal of’ good to Ix 1)):;,t,y sl andat~tl of‘rthical rt’asotb tlitir men’s spolts. (:lr:trly, there .ttttl society ilt ~:rtt~I-al will (IiltlSm subscrlptlons. Second-class post- ;tcxx~nil~li~l~rd 1li1011glt frtii:tle ;ttli- ins, tllis simply is thr rislit ttlitlg to att titore tn;~lc ;tlhlrtes at (:ctllre lorttt it\ ;I f;litly rqiiir;tl~lr antI age pald ot Shawnee Mwion, Kan- sas.Address correctlons requested. 1c.tic.s ~otttl~r~itiott. M;II~~ 01 rhc tlo. Wr lon~sittcx~ have crosbetl the l>lilyittg lootlxill ;lll(l IJ:lSelI:lll tll:ltI lx)Gtivc w;ty. Postmaster send address changes ICSSOllS IllLIt arc ICilTIl~d 011 Itlc I,ridgt- it, this society wht.rr spc- \vottlt’tt playing firltl hockey ot to NCAA Publishing, 6201 College pl;tyiiig firIds are as valual~lr to cific gr(Jttps c ;~tt IJY cxcl~~dcd Irom vollrylxlll, ;lnd tllill may rcqiiirt- Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas, WCJlItCll its tCJ lttIZt1, AS WOlllVlt itb pttlicilmling fillly itt society IX- sowc i rdress down Ihe road. I ;ittt 66211-2422 creasittgly ntovr tnm tltc ntarkrt- (xttsc 01’ r;tc‘c, gclldt,r or I cligiott. tlii\cii t~torc I)y wli;lt i\ good fbt Page 6 The NC&l News October 4, 1993 Screening system in place for binding interpretations

A cystcm that will allow the legislative cervices staff has Iwo schools to monitor c~onipliance and recommended the process IO chair of the Interpretarions Con- NCAA Irgisl;1tivr services staff to opt1ons. with irgislation and interprrt;Ib the Council. mittee. The chair then will decide ev;il~~;itc i1icluirirs and issue hind- First, if the issue is determined Iions. if the issue is important rrlough to Reintroduced ing interpret~itions only for signif- hy I he slafflo he of nation:11 rignif- n (:011cc1n that stall inIrrpre- be included on the committee’s ic2nt issues has hee11implemented iCilIlcC, the staft‘will issue ii hiriding t :1tions wc1mebinding only on t host Proposal No. I.50 was reintro- agenda for full committee review. ;~tier-approval hy the N(:M (:ounm ir1IcrpreIation. SChools that rcqursted the inter- drircd hy I2 mrmher schools as an If the full committee agrees with cil at irs August mccIir1g. prcI;1Iion. ;1n~endn1cnt for thr I!)!)4 <:onven- If Ihr st;11?‘ helicvrs Ih:1I the the staffs interprrtation. the inter- .l‘he system includes a rtGrw by tion and can he found in the I!394 pretation will be published in The issric is 1101ofn:ition:il signific ancc n It-t;ItioIIs c rraIrt1 a depend- N(L4A News as part ofthc commit- Iion ~:onln1iIIct~ ofall hinciing staff I.t#laIion as Proposal No. Z-8. I easonahle to willow SChools and/ t’nce by the membership on the tee’s minute5 and will he binding i11tc~~l~eI;1lio11s. on all menibcr schools. If the full or c onferrncrs IO m;1kr Iheir owl1 lcgisii1IiVr se1vices staff, 21s wrll as David Price, chair of the I .cgis- The “screening” sysIeni was I-CC- 11~ Lions, it will provide advice iI IIOIJC th:lt SC-~OOISand confcr- IaIive Keview <:ommittee and asso- committee disag-ees with the staffs ommc~~detf 10 the (council by the interpretation, it will issue an i1i- tli;iI is not binding 011 the school cllt t’\ wot~lti takr greater responsii ci;I(r roniniissiont~r of the l:Icific- NCAA Iqislativr Kc-view (:om :1ski1lg Ihr clucstio11. 111doing so, i,iliIy for the proper :ipplication of 10 (:onferencc, hclirvrs the screcn- terpretation that also would be niittec after it spc111Ihe past year the sI;tff’ will work through the NC :AA I ulrs. ing process will take care of many published in the News. rrviewing 1903 NCAA (:onvention of the concerns that Icd to the Irgisl;1tio11 with ;I school or (‘011~ n The scnsc 11121rlin~i1i;11ing ‘Checks and balances’ I’rol)~)si1l NO. 150, wllich WOUI~ Ircncc to rcvirw the intent ofIl1r binding stafYiIItrrpretatioIis would sponsorship of Propos;1l No. ‘L-8. I1;lvc 1rl;ldr iIll ~l;1f’i‘i1~re1yret;1ti~~11s “There is ;1chccks~;11ld~~,;1l;lrlccs rule and to see 110~ it might apply ;~llow some schools and confer- “We helicvc Ihrrr. is a lot of nonbinding and advisory in nil- system built in so that the mem- to thr situation. Such responses ences to feel more conlfortable mrrit IO the deccntrali/ation roll- Iwc. The proposal was rcfenctl 10 her-ship, through the Interpreta- will he sharrtl with other staff crpt contained in Proposal No. 2- 1hc c~on1mitIre by the (:onvcntion. making good-faith drcisions I-e- tions (committee, will revirw Ihe niemhcrs to ass11recontinurd 1on- gardi11g rules application without 8,” Fricc said, “hut we also fcrl that 1%&m- Ihr iml~lrmrr~t:1tion of inIerpretaIions we are giving,” said sistcncy in inIormation provided the fear of being considered to i1 is imperative that tlIt. staff rerain rhr *c.r-eening system, the staff Nancy L.. Mitchell, NCAA assistant to the mrrnl~ership. h;1vr ;tcIed contrary to NCAA leg- the authority to provide binding issued bintlinp; interpretations executive director for legislative Review of proposal islation. inIerpretatiorIs in isolated cases. services. “We don’t brlicvc this whrnt-vrr :1 clurstion was asked We think the new srrcrning proc- fl The stmsc Ihilt hindinginter~ changes our day-to-day operations that wab no1 answrrrti hy existing The ~~ommittee began its review css incorporates the best of both Iq+Ji1lioI~ or intrrprcI:uions. of l’rop(~>;1I No. I50 hy listing the pretations made it appear that the or service to the membership. We staff directed the mrmhership as worlds.” still will answer all questions posed reasons it was introduced to the The staff will roriIir~ut~ to rem opposed to working with and hclp- In addition to the staff scrct-ning to us. It just gives LISthe latitude to spnnd Io all requests for assistance n1t~n~hershil~. The committee co11- ing schools arrive at correct and process, lhr committee’s plan con- illlOW an institution or conference in applying N(X4 rules. cl11drd Iherc wcrc five basic rca- rei1son;ible interpretations. tains i1Il oppo1Tunity for review of to IIIakr its own decision in an sons for the devclol~n~rnt of The I.rgisl;1t ivr Keview Corn- binding sti1ff interpretations. iIlSt;IrlCtT in which rhe issue is not llnticr Ihe screening system, I’ropo\;1I No. 150: whrn il school or ronference has 21 mittec agrrrd thi1t Proposal NO. When the staff considers an of Ililti~Ilill significancr ilIld Ihere clurstion Il1i1t is 1101answered hy n The vol11n~r of interpreta- 150 did not adequately address issue significant enough to warrant is not ;I significan’ rccriiiling or Icgislatior1 in the N(:M Manual OI tioiis (i)oIh off’ic i;1l anti staff inter. those five issues. It developed the a bindinginterpreIation, the inter- compctitivc advantagr IO he I‘ y an cxisti11g i11trrpretation, the prct;iIiolib) Illil~k ir diff irult for screening system as an alternative pretation will be reviewed by the giGned:’ Second Publication of Proposed Legislation corrected

Tl1e Second Public;1tion of Pro- 1n1rltidivision cl;lssificiIliOn legis- [>I CSCiISOII pr;icticr opportunities law 13.4.1 should he in ilalics An institution. may firf~durr additional posed l.cgislilIion, which Was IaIioII; August I, 1!)!)4, for all f&)t- IJI iota to the firat conIc’sI in the (intlic;11i1ig I;~ngu;~gr tohc tlclctcd). uthktirs puhlirutifm~ (olhvr lhan an ni;1ilrtl to the memhcrship Scp- 1x111p1~og~11n.r first established and Ir-aditional sc~1iic’111,or 10 hegin Also. the section would not he addilifmzl mrdia guidr or rrrnriling trtnbrr 15, contains errors in Fro- cL1ssifirtl i11 Division ILAA i1h of pr;icticc 011 Sclqcml)er I, which gilt.11 nt’w Iettrrin~ as SC’os;ll NO. 7 should Iemhcr I, IY!):l. ;,!, ;1 1 esult bf soccc1 illlti VolleylX1ll. to permit Ifi ul;~Iion pack;1gr. st~rion (i) of 13~~ “(I) Notrrrfntrfttt~ t’~tblrr.nlrot~.~. 110~ 1;;. letter&l ((1). (r) and (1).

Community service !I, 11 if’ 711 1)t io Y.\ !Y .s I 7 St .s October 4, 1993 The NCAA News Goalie’s sorrow finds release on athletics field Field hockey team provides emotional salve after death of player’s mother

By Martin T. Benson Perkins joined the team but still THE NCAA NEWS STAFF didn’t play much; however, she had found her sport, as a reserve Mary Kay Fcrkins didn’t plan to t‘olward. be a studcntmathlc-tc whrn she en- “The players made mc feel at rollrd at the IJnivrrsity of the home t-veil whrn I was on the South. bench,” she said. “I had done all sorts of thrrapy. Everything else She had tried the sports sccnc when shr was in high school in felt wrong at rhat time. Field hoc- key was something that felt right. Sneads, l~lol~ida, but never found 3 “It’s a way of being aggrrssivc fit. but being protected because you’re “‘l‘here was a core group that part of a team. Thrrr aren’t many played sports wrll and I wasn’t in outlets like that for women.” it,” she said. “The sports I trird, 1 clidn’t do very well, so thry weren’t Bock in school Mary Kay Perkins (left) has wentbed some tough times with the help of Anne Steilb~g (right) and vrry lun for me.” She took the next semcstrr off the rest of her Smanee (University qf the South) field hockey team. Snearls High School didn’t have to blow off some steam and figure field hoc key. Sewanec (University out if shr really bt=longed in goal, tht- Tigers went 152 last year, admits she is no goalie coach. She she started playing. She was elected of the South) did, but by the end of school. Shr said it was field hockey including six shutouts, and won has no assistant coach, so Perkins one ofthe team’s rhree captains by her freshman year, Perkins still that convinced her to return. rheir second consrcutive KIT C:on- has had to learn from books and her teammates. Last year’s captain hadn’t seen a gamr. She had other That next year, Sewanee had a frrcnrr championship. The only from watching others. and one of her role mod&, Anne things on her mind. college with a field hockey team in Steilberg, ceremoniously passed void a~ goalkeeper. Not having Her style is emotion-charged. Tcnnrssrr, Sewanee also was Perkins the Tigers’traditional cap- Needed to belong been able to recruit someone for rhe position, coach (Chapman Kern ranked third in the Great I.akcs “There is never any hesitation tain’s bandanna. Her mothrr died in a car acci- had tried to grr another field Region-not bad for a team that for her to say what she ferls:’ Kern “When it happened, it put me in dent in Florida over Parents Weck- player to guard the cage, but Fer- had playrd at the club level until said. “Sometimes she stops practice a good mood for about four end that filll. Perkins’ fathrr had kins said that she wanted thr job. II Kern took over as coach in 19!)0. to say it. There will be times when months:’ she said. died of c;lnc.er when she was 4 has hccn another place that firs she worries that she is being too Thr rmotional scars from heI yCilr3 Old. fix hrr, this time as a startrr. Driven by desire aggressive and she apologizes. mother’s acrident remain, but field She ncrdrd lo belong somc- She’s got a lot built up inside her, hockey gets Perkins through that “There’s morr I can give the “By thr end of last year Mary where. She needed an outlet for and that’s how she lets it out.” tough anniversary every year, and team there:’ she said. “It’s more Kay was one of the best goalies irn tension. She found it her sopho- fills the need for sports she has fulfilling and 1 can releasr more the conference,” Kern said. “She’s Elected captain more yrar wht71 hrr dormitory’s felt since high school. tension. 1 felt 1 could go furlher as still raw, but mosl of her success ;ls\istant proctor, who played field At the end of last year, Perkins “I love thr sport and the people ;J goalie than as a forward:’ comes from desire.” hockey, asked her to come to prac- got the rerognition of acceptance I play with,” she said. “More than tice. She was right. With Perkins in It has had to be that way. Kern she has been dreaming of since anything, 1 have fun.” Award winners: Gvmnastics coaches select all-academic teams

.fhe National Association of Cal- Sr.*rr. 3 IIXI; 17. (Cc) Bowling Crern, Wr%rrn J.XXO: Iirr~a Burlar. Ohio Sratr, 3.X70; Amy Corvrr, &cgOrl Starr, 3.690, M&nic San- legiate Gymnastics Coaches/ Mrc-higan and Pvnn Srate, Y.ft70. 20 Massa- Myerson. Florida. 3.X60; Christirw Murllcl, ford. Yale. :I 690: Jrrsira Krull. Missouri, chusrrt,. :I 060 C:entr;d Mirhigan. 3 Xfift; Melissa Olson. 3.6X0; Kimberly Holmes, Central MirhiXan. Women and National Association Wectrrn Mlrhigan. 3.X60; Kristi Leanrrc 3.680; Courtnry Snydrr,

By Richard M. Campbell Marshall, 33-31, October 2. Interesting facts NCAA ASSISTANT Other I-AA first-year coarhrs Several of the coactics in new STATISTICS COORDINATOR off IO good starts include C:otgatc’s positions have intcrrsting back- Ed Sweeney, Cal State Sacramento’s Auhtm’s Terry Bowden, Wash- grounds. AI kansas’ Ford resur- Mike Clemens, Davidson’s Tim ington’s Jim Lamhright. Arkansas’ faced in Fayctteviltc Ihi sedson Landis and Maine’sJack Cosgrovt-, Danny Ford, Ilaylor‘s Chuck Keedy with ;1 sparkling I ‘L-year- caree1m all at ‘L-2, and Georgetown’s Rot> md Nevatl;~‘s Jeff tiorton are the rrcord of !16-2!t-4 (.7CO winning Benson at l-1. mosl successfbl so far this season pen rnlage). He played for and of the 15 Division LA coaches who First-time head coaches c o;ic t1rtl with I%1111“Rear ” Bryant iire new to their current jobs. In 1992, four first-timr coaches ;11Alabama, and his coaching dc- 0ttlc1~ filmst-time head coaches with no previous he;~d-coaching but 31 (:tenison was against Ohio with good starts (in addition to experience posted ;1 1%20-l rerord S~atr’s Woody Ilayrs in that tcg- rntlary coach’s final game, thr Laml~right. Reedy and Horton) for a .43l winning prrcenrage. rhis st=asm include Eastern Mich t!t78 (;;imr Bowl. This season, nine new I-A igan’s Ron (bopcr and North (Lr- roaches are in their first head- t’ittst,urgh’s~Jc,hllrly Majors, rmi- olii1;1 State’s Mike O’(;ain. roaching positions at the four- ncr-up fo: tt1c t!t5ti Heisman Bowdcn’s team j111q~ed to 5-O year level. This group has started .liophy at Tenncssec as i1 player, is after :I 14~10victory over Vanderl~ilt t 7-22 (three have winning rrcords making his second run for the Octol,er 2. He leads the I5 first- Divisions I-A and I-AA. and two arc al .500). Panthers. From 1973 to t 976, Ma- year c oat hcs, nine of whom nrve1 Seven I-AA roartics are in thei jors ted Pinsburgh to a 33~13-1 have twen head coaches before. North (Lu-olina St&c’s O’Cain, a 47-28-1 record (.625 winning f’irsl he&coaching season, and record, including ;I I!)76 wire-sew- Bowdcn, of COIJT’SC, tlccarrlr ttic also 2-2, took over tasl .June when percentage). Oklahoma State’s havr posted ;1 15-t 3 mark so far. ice national championship. answer to a trivia question when Dick Sheridan was forced to resign Jones (10-2) was the leader that ‘the roartics, listrd by cottrge in This yrar’s group inrtudes scv- hr look the Auburn joh: What for hratth reasons. year, followed by Florida’s Galen alphabetical order: crat coaches who are r~rturning to tathcr-son combinarion is the first Hall (X-O), who took over from I-A first-year history to be brad fi~olt~alt coax hcs at rhe Charlcy Pcll after three games; collcgc after hcacILcoactiing stints same tirnr at Division I-A instilu- Since ICM8, only 13 coaches have Louisiana State’s Bitt Arnsparger in professional football. Southern lions? Rowdcn joins his father, won 10 or more games in their (X-Cl), Air Force’s Fisher DeBerry (:;llifornia’s John Robinson left Florida State coaching tcgcnd first year as a Division I-A head (X-4), Kutgers’ Dick Anderson (7- thr Trojan program in 1982 to spend nine years at the helm of Bobby Rowdrri, in that historic coach. TCII of those c.nar.hes also 3); Long Beach Statr’s Mike Shep- pairing. won bowl gamrs in their initial pard (4-7) and Wichita State’s Kon the Los Angeles Rams. He rc- turned to Southern (California with Lamhright took over Washing- >t’aso11s mtl scvcr;1t Ird trams to Ctiismar (‘L-9). ton’s thrlunes unrxpec~edly from 1~11defeateclyears. ;I tit- 14-2 (3 I!)) record, tops among Don ~J;nnc\ when the long-time Ibwling (ireen’s Chary Blackncy I-AA leaders XI ive t-A mentors. llusky mentor resigned in tate in 1991. Sotirhern C:alifornia’s In Division I-AA, Southern-Ba- S;~n.Josc Statr’s.John Kiitsron, a August. Lambright was ;I long~tinic Jotin Robi11son in t !t7ti and ‘l&n- ton Kougc’s Petr Richardson has long+nic collcgc and lJr(Jf&SiOnat assistant l’or Washingmn (24 years, nessee’s Hill Battle in I!)70 each the most victor& for a first-year head roactl, took over thr Spar- including 15 as defensive coordi- Irtl their squ;~ds to the most virto- coach wirh a 5-O record, inc tuding tans’ program at the age of 66. Hc nator). I.;irrit~r-ight i.* 3-t after a 52- rirr t,y a firstbycar coach, with a 14- I3 win over Mississippi Valley hat1 previously coached at Utah I7 win over San~Josc Srate <)ctot,er itlcnrical 1 1-I recol~ds. October 2. He formerly coached at Stiltc iirld StanfCJrd, ;lS WClt il!, 2. Miami’s (Ohio) Dick <:rurn in Winston-Salem, which reached thr Drnvcr in the National Footbatt Ford took over thr Razorback I!)74 and Oklah(>rni1’s brr-y Divisioii II playoffs three timrs A11t)urn’s Howtl~n :1nd Soultl- I r;l~l~. program after stepping down as Switzer 111 I973 c2rh hiid 10-0-l and posted a 41-14-l (.741) record em-&ton Rouge’s Kichardsorl are head coach at Clemson in 19X9, rrcords in their first outings as I-A in five years under Richardson. the only coaches with undefeated Among new I-AAcoachcs, Boise and has ted the Rarorbat ks to a 3 head coaches. Thr only first-year Samford’s Ghan Gailcy has gone rerords 1~eni;iining among either St are’s Pokey Allen forged a 62-2ti- 2 mark, inc~tuding a ‘LO-10 victory coach to win a national rham- from positions in professional foot- the I6 I-A/l-AA first-time head 2 (.703) record in SCVCTIyrars al ove1 (;coIgiil t;lSl S;l~lIId:ly. pionship was Michigan’s Rennie ball-where he was a Denver co;~ctlrr or the 13 l-A/l-AA 11~~ Division II power Fbrttilnd Stale, Kcc~ly rrl~tac~ctl long-:-lime Bay101 Ooslrr-bann in 1948, with a pcrti-rt Broncos assistant in the NFL. and coart1cs with head-coaching expc- white Colgate’s Swccncy was highly successful (56-22-S in right years) htwl mm (;r;nil Tt3fl‘ afier run- !LO record. ;1World League of American Foot- rieiicc. ning It1c Hear-.*’ ofl’ensr for three .l‘he other first-yrar head ball head coach with rhe Rir- Thch first-year LA c 0;1ches with al Division III Dickinson. seasons. His ret-or-d is :I-:! afier ;I coaches with at Icast t 0 virtories mingham I;irc-to collegiate head cxpcrirnce st;ilid 2!t-3!)LO and Itlt Nicholls State’s Rick Rhodes rem 24-J loss to tlouston oc.totlc.I- 2. wcrc Houston’s John .Jenkins coach. The former Florida quar- t-AA co;~chc-s are 3 t -2!tLO: turns to service as a head coa( h Ncv;Ih’s Horton is 11-2after ;I 4!L ( I !t!tO), Ball State’s Dwight Watlac e tcrback also has coached at Ti-oy ;1ftcl posting a 32~14~1 mark in t 4 vie IOI y OVCI’ N~\wla-1~1s Vqxs. ( 1978). Oklahoma’s (hut k Fair- Statt-. He has the nt’xt t>rsl sla1t stints at Troy Slate and SouttieI’Il HC tooh o\cr fro111 (&I-i.* Auh, lht t>ilrlk> (l!t67), 10uisi;1n;1 State’s irmt~rlg I-AA coachrs with a 4-t Illinois. Sourhern-baton Rouge’s r~io~l~vic~tor-iotishead coach in Wolf Mike Archer (I 9X7). So11lhrrn Mis- 1.~1ord after a 2 I-6 victory ovc1~ Kict1artlson got his chilr1c.e in I-AA t?1t k historv. sissippi’s C:rirlcy Hallman Ct!)XX), Nicholls Statr <)cmber- 2. ;1tier leading Winston-Salem to ;I bbtcrn Michigan’s C:oopc~ is ()klah<>n~;l Sti1te’s P.11JOISTS (I!tS4), lhq11csn~‘s (Lr-eg (;attriso hiis a 41-14-l 1.741) recor-tl in five years. 011~ of thlmcc 1lcw black hcatl Tamp;1’s Early l%ruce (1972) and 3-l mark after an Octobcr.2 toss IO C’O;lC’tlCC ttiis yC;ll ;lllCl tl;lS il ‘L-L’ Mississippi’s Billy Kinard ( I97 I ). (;amlon, 7-O. Khode lsla11d’s Floyd Houston’s Kim Hellon took ovcr~ n1;1rk aficr ;1 15-7 victory over Mi- Only Swil/cr-, Jenkins and Wallact Keith and ~I‘ennesscc~(:h;ilI;lrloo~ his first cottcgi;1lr head joi, aftr1 ;imi (Ohio) Octot,c.i 2. I‘tic oltlcr (lid riot pit k up a bowl victory. ga’s Tommy West each have %2 stints as an assistant in the NFI. black head coaches ;1rr Trnrplt~‘~ Ttlr 1!bX4 5e:,s011 was tt1c mo\t records. Keith’s squad drittecl wirh the TiIIlltJiI by burcanccrs. Ko11 1)ickcrs;on ant1 W;rkr Forrst’s succrs\fiit lbr first~yca1~ roactirs, RI-0~11,30-7, and West’s team upbet Houston Oilers, 1.0s Angeles bid- Jim (:;ildwcll, both t -3. as that year’s group of scvcn posted defcntling Division I-AA champion ers and Miami Dolphins. Postgraduate scholarship nominations due October 25

NC:AA postg1~;1&1;1lcYC hoIar*tiil~ 111 ?LOOO (4.000 stxle) or iIs rcpki- 5. ‘I‘llC str,dcnt-;1tl1lctc lllllSl hwt Following is ;I lisr of tlihtric.1 Ritlgc Ko;1d, Suite No. IO, Wcstbkr, i1c~inin;1tioiis for foott~;itt ;1rc tluc 1c111. IlCtlilVCd, tlOtt1 Oil alIt Offltlt’ l‘i~ltl, 1t1ai1.s that iiicl11tlcs inIorniation Ohio 44145 (2lti/X7l~XlOO). 10 ttistrict sc.trc.lioli c onin~itrcc 2. ‘I‘IlC ~tll~l~~llt~;lttll~t(. 111,,!4 t,c iii ;l l,lallilt’i~ Iti;11 h,is t~rouglir th;1t 1~1s t,ccn 11pdar~~l since the District 5-Marjorie I-%.(;ites, c.11ait.st)y (1~ tot,t.r 25, I!)!):<. Nomi- ~11rolletl ii1 Itlc a( aclrniic YrilI ill crt-tlil 10 Ihe st11rten~athlete. the non,iil;,lic~ll~ folders wclc m;iiltd. I)~;III ofStudents, (;cntl-;it College, 11alio11 lbltle~~s ti;ivc t)c,rn n1;1itctl wtlic ti tlis or tier fin;11 st’ason 01 institution and intcrcollcgiatc atti- District 1 -Irwin M. C:ohen, Xt 2 Ullivrrsity, Fclta, lowi1 502 19 to rhr Ilicrilty attitrlic \ rrpresem;i~ c~ligit,ility under NCAA legislation Ittics. As~ist.inl 10 the tYcsidciit, Norlti- (5 t 5/62X-52!,2). rive ;I( Cil(‘tl rnerrit~rr institution, occurs. rastern Llnwrrsity, 360 ~l,,ntirl#u~ It is suggeslttl Iti; inslilulions District 6-Rot)e1t M. Swra/y, al011g wilt1 ,111instruction nic1110- Avc,,,,c, I\o\(oll. Massac 111r.rc.lts 3. TllC~ ~~uclt-lll~~ltt~lctc m1tst IlWC llOlllillillC. cllle tlut 110 more Ill;111 Vicc~l’1~ovos~ tbr- Kesc;uc h, I@xas r;11&1n1 ancl a list 01 district ~rlec- o:! t 1I, ((;17/137:3-445!t). l~crfor111cct with distinction as i1 Iwo s~1t~lt.r1t~;1tl~lt~tesIbr- foott~all. Tecll Ilniversity, 203 Hotden ttlll, lion c~oniniittc~c chairs. 1rit3nt~er ofttic varsity tt‘aiii in 1t1t .Ii) nomin;ue :I s~udent~;1thlcte, the Discric t Z-Doris K. Sol;~tlay. I’.<). Box 4 103.5, I .ut)t )ork, Tcx;1s The NCAA will award postR’1du- q)otl in which tic 01 stic hiis t)erii sc11001’s filculty attitctics I Cl”‘- Associarc A~l1letic.s Direc Ior, Syra- 794O!t- t 035 (X06/742-38X4). ;itc sc 110l;11-shipsof $5,000 ractl 10 11ornin:i~cd. Tlic drgrcr 01 Ihr senlarive must coordinate the con- c11st’ Ilnil,ersiry, Manley Field L’!t lOoit,all players. Ofttir winners, District 7-Jim C;. Matik, Pro- sl11tlriil-;ittilete’s atlilctics artiitvr- pletion of l‘ivc forms inclutlctl iii Honst,, Syrac USC,Nrw York I X44- IO will I)e srlcctcd from Division 1, fcssol of (:heniist,-y. San Diego i~it’nt will I)c wrigt1c.d at Irasl Itic nomination l’ottler. 5020 (3 I .5/44:~-:w!~). t 0 from I)ivisions II ant1 111, antl Statr Universify. 5800 (h,tJ~l~lite t~l~;~liy with the CIC~IRT of ;ICiItIC- the rcni;iiiiiii~ iiiiie will br selected ‘l‘hc eighr tlisl ric I st.lcc.tion conb Distrirt 3-C:linl l~Iyilllt, lhrrc - Drive, San Diego, C:alifoi-nia 92 t X2- niic perti~rnianrc. tor of Athletics, Augusta (bllege, iit Iargc. riiirtccs will screen noniiti;itio~is 032x (6 t !)/5!%557 I). 2500 W;II~OII Way. Augusr,~, (;eorg1;1 Following are thr criteria for 1. I‘l1r stcltlrrlt-altllrtc \t10111~1 firm1 ttirir Icsprctivr clistricts ;1ntl District 8- Danirl I.. Bridges, 309 t 0 (706/7:{7- t 626). iioniinating ;I St1ldt~llt-ilttll~tC~ 111tentl to continue arademic work t~~rw;1rtl the n;1mcs of the finalists Director of Athletics,

n Division I-A leaders Through October 2

RUSHING LeShon Johnson, Northern III 2 Brent Moss, W~sconsm T rone Wheatley, Mrchrgan j: Ryon Rtvers. Fresno St Craig Thomas. Mrchlgan St :: Rodne Thomas, Texas A&M ..... Jr PLAYER Paaairtgyards5RR. Nevada vs. Nevada-LasVegas. Ott Errlct I; hett,, Flonda ...... Sr 2 B ron Morris. Texas Tech...... Rusitingand patsingy~rdt: 537. ChrrsVargas. Nevada A I III Kmg. Army $ vs Nevada-LasVegas, Ott 2 Feweaimshi andpasalrrg yards allowed: 51, Mississippi Napoleon Kaufman. Washmgion ...... vs. Vanderbrit.4 ept. 18. Junror Smdh, East Caro ...... Rurhingand paeainp piayc: 74. Tim Schade.Minnesota Kr-Jana Carter, Penn St ..... 2 Fewednrabiag yarda aiiuwad: -32. Arizona vs. Pacific Sherman Wrlliams. Alabama ...... vs Penn St, Sept 4 (Cal.).Sept. 11. Ton Nrbbs. Ball St ;: Cu x IS Martm. Ptttsburgh Rushing rdf 322. LeShonJohnson, Northern iii vs Terre11 Willis, Rut ers : :: Southern Ir I.. Oct.2. Curtrs Johnson, d orth Caro SO Terre11 Davis, Georgta Rushingpiaya: 40, SharmonShah, UCLAvs. Stanford, Winslow Oliver. New Mexico & Sept. 25. Calvin Melvm. Hawari Jr Paum emrpiatad36,Chris Vargas. Nevada vs. Northern Rurhinp atd @ng yardaz537. Chris Vargas. Nevada PASSING EFF&$ENCY Ill., Sept. 25. IN1 YDS/ TD RATING vs. Nevada-Las Vegas. Oct. 2. A; “ML %T6; INT PCT YDS ATT TD PC1 POINTS Paaaasattempted: 66, Tim Schade,Minnesota vs. Penn 322. LeShonJohnson. Northern ill. vs. 3.33 782 13.oJ 6 1000 2D25 St., Sept. 4. Rushit@ 112 i 266 1107 969 13 1161 1638 SouthernI r I. ”Ott 2 ii t% 357 1lM 10.39 10 a.93 181.1 Passing Yards: 526.Chris Vargas.Nevada vs. Nevada- Heath Shuler. Tennessee.. Jr 112 : 2.34 1129 a82 17 1326 1761 Las Vegas,Oct. 2 Passingyards 538.Chris Vargas.Nevada vs. Nevada- Maunce DeShazo. Virginia Tech Jr 128 E E! 349 am 10.23 Las Vegas,Oct. 2. Dave Barr, Calrfornla Jr 1: 88 6667 ; 227 1310 992 1012 11.63909 1% Passes au@ 15. Johnnie Morton, Southern Cal vs. Chris Vargas, Nevada Sr P13 155 7777 6 262 1997 9.38 Rer olplt 12.Chris Doering.Florida vs. Mississippi Jeff Brohm. Loursv~lle _. _. Sr 141 a9 65.12 1.42 1378 977 16 7.51 12: Houston, Sept. 4. St.. Oct.2. Danny D’Ned. Oregon Jr 123 75 6098 : 244 1212 9.85 % E Charlre Ward, Florrda St Sr 159 111 69.81 1 .w ma a23 12 755 15: Remiuin~ yrdr: 250, Jermaine Lewis, Maryland vs. North Caro.. Sept. 11. RemMngyard% 241. Ryan Yarborough.Wyoming vs. Darrell Bevell, Wisconsin So 449 760 876 Air Force. Ott 2~ Marvm Graves, Syracuse.. Sr 1: 5792 64046667 : 217 1295 939 ! :,k?Y 1z% John Walsh, Bngham Young So 126 1346 6.M 10 641 1553 Puntreturn yanir 136.Ray Peterson,San DiegoSt vs Rob Johnson, Southern Cal Jr 155157 ‘108O” M1o68.79 : 64 t236 787 10 637 1547 Cal St. NorthrIdge.Sept. 4. TEAM Steve Stenstrom. Stanford Sr 311 1537 7% 14 725 153.5 Rushing yards 526. PennSt. vs. Maryland. Ott 2 J J. Joe. Baylor.. _. Sr ‘: 13356 wgl5957 7 1% 933 9.93 3 3.19 151.4 Kickeifretorn yardr 164, Enc Scott, Northwesternvs Joe Hughes,~Wyommg _. _. Sr 261 1372 a97 ‘: :.1 151151.1 3 OhroSt., Oct.2. Paeaiagyar& 588.Nevada vs. Nevada-LasVegas, Oct. Joe Younablood. Central Mlch Sr 1: E z: ! 244 1140 9.27 TEAM 2. 2.22 752 a.36 Gale Gundy.Oklahoma S-1 Pdnts tared 76. Nebraskavs North Texas,Sept. 4. Scott Crabtree. Northern Ill Sr 1z 6456 60.9562.77 : 381 943 6% E i% 1:: Resitiq ard paaaingprdr: 794,Nevada vs. Nevada-Las Yarborough Rurhinp and passlnpyards: 794. Nevada vs. Nevada-Las Vegas,Oct. 2. TOTAL OFFENSE Vegas.Ott 2 Peiotam 70, PennSt. vs. Maryland. Oct.2. YDS YDPL TDR’ YDSPG C Rurhlnp yards: 526. Penn St. vs. Maryland, Oct.2. Chris Vargas, Nevada 2010 6a9 Scott Mdanovrch. Maryland. Anthon Calvillo. Utah St. 1:; ~~ John WYalsh, Brigham Young 1240 660 3lOM Stoney Case New Mexrco 1514 7.61 1; Charhe ward, FlorIda St. %:Z Jell Garcia. San Jose St. 1% t: 1: Dann O’Nerl. Oregon 1161 738 1: ZE Trent I’ dfer. Fresno St Kordell Stewart. Colorado 1155 947 EE Steve Stenstrom Stanford. 1::: E 1: Marvin Graves, Syracuse 1409 7.53 11 ml Max Knake. Texas Christran. Joe Youngblood. Central Mic’ h 1EEi : $E Jeff Brohm. Louisville _. Joe Hughes, W oming E E 14 % Todd Jordan, tl ISSISSI~~I St Dave Barr, Califorma 10731306 7.78601 I! %E Trm Schade. Mmnesota 13D5 56o Glenn Folev Boston Colleoe 1016 777 ! El.Ei

n Division I-A team Through October 2

PASSING OFFENSE RUB ;HlNG OFFENSE RUSHING DEFENSE NE T PUNTING ““Cl G CAR YDS AVG TO G CAR YDS AVG TO hln..- PCT YOS fa;;i; 4 246 1246 5.0 13 Arizona .._._ 5 164 3O 2 1 PUN;; g,; RET 71.2 2061 5 247 1494 60 16 Washmgton St _. 5 134 318 1.6 4 Florrda 594 1797 &reT; 5 271 1466 55 14 lllmois 4 151) 293 20 2 West Va. 16 464 ; 4 176 1159 6.6 11 Washm ton.. 4 149 TX) 2.0 3 Loursrana St %! 1% Nor 9 h Caro : 6 314 1737 55 23 Florrda I t 5 174 361 22 1 Au Force E :.: ” 58.3 1324 Nebraska 4 215 1139 5.3 16 PennSt.. 5 155 384 2.5 4 New Memo 23 440 1: 57.1 1645 Vrrgmra Tech : 5 261 13% 50 13 Indiana 685 1613 Arr Force 5 282 1376 49 12 NotreDame...:...Missrssrppi 5198407215 156 415 2.6 25 Colorado.. 3416 43.g401 ‘i Wisconsin 4 204lD22 50 a Ohro St _. __. _. _. 4 137 m 24 0 Nevada-Las Vegas.. % 1% Oregon St 5 2% 1213 4.1 IO Southwestern La 4 131 334 25 5 w;“ba”m”,” St. ii %I 1: 516 1542 Florrda St 5 200 1209 60 11 Mlsslsslppl St 4 132 335 2.5 4 21 42.5 7 557 1537 Texas ABM 4 la7 %I 5.1 12 OklahomaSt 4 147 353 24 0 Northern III. 28 400 lo Michrgan St 3 127 6% 5.5 6 West Va. _. 4 141 377 2.7 0 Stanford 28 41.3 11 9: ~~ Colorado 4 192 913 4.8 II Nebraska 14 413 West Va 4 212 911 43 9 Oregon.Vtr mra _.. I.. .: : Z Z! !.f ! Southern Methodrst 31 42.1 l! 2% 1EY Fresno St 4 182 903 5.0 a Michigan _. _. 4 131 403 31 3 Nevada...... 582 1123 Wisconsin 1: 22 : 597 1111 TOTALDEFENSE PIAYS YOS AVG TO' TEAM PUNT RETURNS Antona.. YOS/ TD RATING Alabama...... "5 zl E ;: : Texas A&M “4 Y 5:: YDS ATT ‘??E : 317 lcii? 34 5 Louisiana St 5 10 1% 0 193 p$!'. 5 g y?g i,: ; Kansas St ‘i 2 pcT1 ?I PDINTS65.7851 g1 4 10 171 1 17.1 i-i iii 0 170 6% 507 Vanderbilt Texas A&M.... : a5 973 34 5 Caldornra : 1: 2! Washington 4 2sa 1012 3.8 7 4 12 169 : 1:: ii:; ~~ Mississrppr St. Dhro St. : 261 1047 40 6 Mrssissrppi 5 20 281 1 14.1 a34 4.77 3 171 Virgmra a3 1331 4.0 7 3 252 i-E ~~kwo0, 4 13 179 0 136 655 550 Washin ton St 712 596 1 13.1 Mtamt (e la.) : 289342 13711113 4.14o " 4 Duke _...... : 1: 1: 1 lla 6% 5.91 4 336 z-i.2 Western Mich ,052 5Y :, 31690 9272 ,M,a,‘$yh& st. Oklahoma St : 306317 11491407 4.436 a4 f 1; g x 11.: Illinois : 263 11% 4.4 6 : Es Ei my; 0 113 'E z Boston College. 270 1141 44 10 5 19 212 762 577 Nebraska 4 262 1211 4.6 8 : 1.8 944094.57 Tennessee x 11.: : ': ':: 2i 2:: 4 274 9612 Purdue .._._._.. 0 110 763 486 l&39 6.15 i :.zi ZEi SCORING OFFENSE SCORING DEFENSE TEAM KICKOF :F RETURNS G G NO YDS TD AVG TURNOVERS Nebraska 4 Florrda St.. G5 ‘I Notre Dame 1 379 ;UM INT ;$ngst Alabama. _.._.._. _____._._ 5 35 Penn St : 1x g 2 : Anzona Ohto St 4 10 301 Y 21 : 1 Call3 orma Vrrgmra : 2 Cincmnati 5 12 360 1 Jo0 $hn;es;; : Penn St Texas ChrIstIan : 4 11 327 0 297 ! : 4 Oklahoma : Texas.. 4 13 374 Nebada.:::..:...... Miami (Fla) ii New Mextco i %! : Fresno St 4” Ohio St : Oklahoma St 4” i Ei I 28.5 7 gq;y Texas ALM 4 : Kansas St. : Auburn 63 Arrzona 45 1: z x z Loulsvllle p,“d;zama St 4” Northwestern.. Hawall : ii Michrgan.. : Kit! x 3 North Caro Washmgton : 4” UTEP 5 ta 463 1 257 Colorado. : Mrss~ssrppr 2 Mlaml(Dhlo) Flonda 4 Kentucky Geor ia Tech : 1! iii 8 2.E Kansas St 4 7 11 Oklahoma 4 Wlsconsm i E Florr ! a 4 12 335 1 254 --

Page 10 The NCAA News October 4,1993

n Division I-AA leaders Through October 2

RUSlilNG CL Kerlh Ehas. Prmceton Richard Johnson, Butler Tony Vinson. Towson St Sherrrden May. Idaho Flew In oglra. Massachusetts James 44hate. North Caro A&T PLAYER Passin yards: 450. Bethune-Cookmanvs. Delaware Terrance Slakes. Pennsylvama Jr SC,Oct. 1 DarylBrown, Delaware. Rushingand purlng ati570. SteveMcNair. Alcorn St. Chrrs Parker, Marshall $ vs. TexasSouthern. 4 ept 11 Fewest rurhlng and pucinp yards allowed: 32, Rhode lrvmg Spikes, Northeast La Island vs. Brown, Dct 2 Krppy Bayless. Mtddle Pnn. Sl Jr Rushing and passing plays:66, Dan Barnett. llhnois St Robert Trrce. Cal St Northrrdge Sr vs WesternIll., Oct.2. Dante1 Harrrs. Southern Utah.. Sr Fswusl ruchinp yards allowed: -30, James Madison VS. Fred Moore. Montana St Jr Rurhin yards: 259. RobertTrite, Cal St. Northridgevs. Lock Haven,Sept. 4. Ertc Gant. Gramblma ...... Sonoma4 t Sept. 25. David Wright Indiaca St...... Judd Mmtz. dayton ...... Rurhlng plays: 42, RichardJohnson, Butler vs. Drake, Eddle Thompson Western K ... Sept 25 Anthon Russo. St John’s (d Y) Carter A ull. Drake.. Parser completed: 36. Dan Barnett, lllmors St. vs PLAYER WesternIll, DC12 Barn&t Rushingand asslnp yarda:442, Mike Jackson,Bethune- Pass, altempted:60. Tom Proudian,lona vs. Wagner, Cookmanvs. g elaware St., Oct.2. PASStNG EFFICIENCY l-l,, 1 CMP INT YDSl TD An CMP PC1 IN1 PC1 YDS ATT TD PCT Passing yards: 450. Mike Jackson, Bethune-Cookman Rushing yard;: 218.Cortez Hull, Drakevs. Aurora, Oct. 167 6oolOW 9 15w vs DelawareSt., Oct.2. 2. 60 ’ 306 1042 10.63 1: GE71 6220 i .m 1009 885 1: ‘% Passes caught 17, Elliott Mrller. St. Francrs (Pa) vs Passing yards: 450. MakeJackson. Bethune-Cookman alker. Howard :. 101 59 5842 297 me 919 7 6.93 vs. DelawareSt Ott 2 205 131 6390 i 2.93 ‘674 8.17 16 780 Central Conn.St., Oct.2. 111 270 1012 912 6 541 Recslving yards: 220, Ttm Silo. lona vs. Wagner,Ott 2. Ilp,“,“,adsl;~~,a:i Lkti : : ii % : 4.: ;7; y; 7 814 Passed caught-17, Ellrott Miller. St Francis (Pa.) vs. Todd Berneli. Eastern Wash l!! 7 619 Punt return yards: 125. FreddieSolomon, South Car0 Central Conn.St., Oct.2 Robert Cobb. Northeast La E Ei : 256 1245 798 12 769 Scott Sem timphelter. Lehrgh ii7 107 59 12 3.07 1465 009 St. vs Newberry.Sept 4 Rawlvlng yards220. Tim Silo, lona vs. Wagner,Oct. 2 E 43 54.00 : ‘2 !E Kendrick b!ord, Grambhng Kiclmflreturn ards:197. James Cunningham, Howard :!A gg i.E 6 811 TEAM 105 i?i E.E : 285 039 799 7 667 vs Alcorn St, Bept. 25. 4 w 972 7 78 Rushing yards: 529,Citadel vs. Lees-McRae.Ott 2 1:: iE:t : 3.45 1027 8.85 i 2 TEAM Chns Hrxson. Rhode Island 3w 1164 882 6 455 Cree Morns St Mary’s (Cal.). 1:: 76 57.50 : 9 58’ PassIn yards: 450, Bethune-Cookmanvs. Delaware Joel Foote. Princeton :z ‘ii: E? 2 392 Points scored: 70. Middle Term.St. vs. Campbellsvrlle 3, act t Eric Randall. Southern-B.R 1;: :74 ZE61 16 i 744 691 7.36 11 909 Sept 16. Robert Dougherty, Boston U 140 03 59.29 6 429 1158 827 7 5w Rushlnpand passing yards: 671,Drake vs. Aurora, Dct 2. Rushlng and pa&g yards: 716. Idaho vs Weber St., Sept. 18. Point;scored: 62. Citadelvs. Lees-McRae.Ott 2 TOTAL OFFENSE Rushing yards: 529. Crtadelvs Lees-McRae,Oct. 2. RUSHING PASSING TDTAL OFFENSE CAR GA; LOSS28 NET437 ATT189 1491YDS YDS YDPL TDR’ Steve McNarr. Alcorn St 63 Dave Dickenson, Montana 58 % E? :i Robert Dou herly, Boston U g $22 11176 245118 205140 16741158 Scott Ssmp ! Imphelter. Lehrgh 04 69 11 181 ‘465 14a31476 6.80719 1: Dou Nussmeter, Idaho.. 32 RECEPTIONS PEFILGAME RECEIVING YARDS PER GAME Rob a I, Valpararso.. ; 1: 2357 170139 114111 10091012 11:: !? ” G CT YDS TD CTPG George%3 ersel, Hofstra 209 193 ‘6 ‘97 1404 1420 559 1; Mtles Mactk. Pennsylvania 4 0x3 Trm Srlo, lona.. Clarrell Pearl, Northeastern 2 Todd Eckenroad. St Francrs (Pa ) ...... E 3 iz iii 0 760 Bdl Laror, Cornell ;; 1017’ 11238 132127 1011767 1123805 63516’ : Elhott Miller. St Francis (Pa.) ...... F : 30 316 1 760 Cree hlorrrs, St Mary’s (tBl j ” 28 30 102 64 155 ‘3Q5 1331 727 12 Scott Gurnsey. Montana ... 5 36 529 5 720 Tom Proudran. lona 44 86 166 -80 171 1131 Dave Cecchim Lehrgh ... Sr 10 700 Match Maher. North Texas 2% 62 60 2 116 1027 1xg % ! Ned Burke. Cornell ...... : E ?i ;: : 1EZ Darm Hmshaw, Central Fla Trm Srlo. lona ...... :: 26 577 Y ;i Trm Mosley, Northern Iowa : Sr 24 517 Errc Fish, EvanswIle 14’ s 6110 4680 137134 1074911 1028 6.59 : Tony Brooks, Eastern Wash ...... : 2 650 Oavrd Rhodes, Central Fla Jr i 26 397 : ‘K! Ja Walker, Howard 17 101 53 40 10’ 928 Ei ES David Rhodes, Central Fla ...... 2 4 %zY 2 6M Wayne Chrebet. Hofstra 24 303 Ro‘ bert Cobb, Northeast La 13 1214 7 18 1; Kevm Dlxson. lll~no~s St Jr 5 32 270 0 640 Lawrence Segree. Tennessee St B : ‘6 284 : iii: Chrrs Hrxson, Rhode Island 53 1:; 10850 -3134 156132 12451164 tNTERCEPTII$NS Lonme Gallowa Western Caro :z 6057 23135 16994 1144721 1194952 648732 : G Fy; FG PCT FGPG G NO YOS TD IPG Make Jackson, Lielhune-Cookman FlELD ““*c:’ Dale Fr Delaware Todd Kurz. lllmols St ...... 11 846 2.20 Zack Bronson. McNeese St 5 167 E 301 18 2.33 5’ 660 1179943 907581 1: A 1;: ‘Touch d owns responsrble lor Ra Whitehead. Southwest Tesas St : 0 Curtls Burgms. North Care. A&T Je II ery Wtlkms. Youngstown St...... 7 .B757w 1:: Sha ne Smder Valpararso : ii 0 ‘25 Jose Larros. McNeese St ...... “,; ! 1: 7 700 1.75 Jrmrorhan. Iona Jrm Richter, Furman ...... 5 11 0 727 160 Kurt Dnzler, St John’s (N Y I :: : : :i SCORINQ Skip Thomas. Rhode Island Fr Chris Helon. Boston U. CL Mike Estrella. St Mary’s (Cal )...... Sr : 1: ! 2 1E MaIlk Wood& Marlst :: : : 1: Davtd Merrrck. Marshall Mark Mrller. Bucknell so 0 Errc Oke. Massachusetts ...... : : : :: : .! : .% lM1.50 Brent Alexander Tennessee St ” :; !i : Roger Miller, Northeast La ...... Jr 5 7 7 1Mo 1.40 James Daniels. PennsylvanIa.. 3 3 : 0 lea ALL-PURPOSE RUNNERS PUNT RETURNS Tim 5110. lona ...... 5: 4 RUE REC PR KOR YDS YOSPG Mm 12 per ame) CL NO YOS ‘ID AVG Chad Albano. EvanswIle...... ;: Sherrrden May, Idaho ...... 0% 27403 Aod Boolhes. ‘k rchmond.. Sr 6 123 0 2050 Lanue Johnson Delaware Sr Terrance Stokes, PennsylvanIa ...... Jr 3 z !I E g; y505~ Shalon Baker, Montana.. Jr 0 137 1 ‘7.13 Phil Anderson belaware St ...... : : : : : ...... : : : ,J; Keith Ehas. Prmceton ...... ii Gary Harrell. Howard.. Sr 12 196 0 1633 Ton Vmson, towson St ...... Dzzre Young, Val ararso 208 2:: w” 733 18325 Mike Cavanau h Columbia So Jef r Stovall. Northern Iowa ...... JuddMmtr.Dayon...... ::P .: :‘:“““““’ 724 18l.W Mark Drlando.%wson St Jr i lg ! 1::: Dzrre Young, Val araiso ...... 2 Tim Silo, lona Jr 4 45z 4: 3i 1’4 721 18025 KICKOFF RETURNS Rrchard Howell 1 avldson Sr Dame1 Harrrs. Southern Utah : : : : : : 477 58 165 7w 17500 Mln 12 per ame) CL NO YOS TD AVG David Gamble, kew Hampshtre...... Sr Richard Johnson. Butler ...... :: : 6% 16400 I( erry Hayes. L estern Caro Jr 7 733 24229 Jesse Humphre Morgan St ...... Sr James While, North Caro ALT ...... 5.i 10: I i 649 16225 J Cunnln ham, Howard Jr 7 248 13543 Robert Doughe x,y. Boston U ...... Rene lngo ha. Massachusetts 2: : 647 161.75 0 Smith. 4 am Houston St. So 10 316 1 31 60 Chrrs Parker, Marshall ...... ii Davy Smut5, Sam Houston St ...... : ...... $$ : E !A 540 A. Pegues. S’west MO St Sr 7 221 0 31 57 Tom Macpherson. St John’s (N Y) Jr Tony Vmson. Towson St ...... K x:: Rene Ingogha. Massachusetts ...... SO Pete Frlzpatrrck, Cornell ...... Sr 3 % 6 I 469 15633 PUNTtNG ryronne Jones Gramblmg ...... D’angelo Dereef. Charleston So ... Jr 5 3% iz E p4; fW 3.6w,yW CL NO AVG Pat Wrllrams. delaware ...... Mark Whillemore, Central Fla ...... Oli ; erry Belden orthern Artz. F 8 z3 Steve McNarr. Alcorn St ...... :: : EG Crarg Melo rano. Lehigh Kelvm Damels. Bethune-Cookman ...... :.I. : Sr ...... Jr 4 % :: 500 Ronnie MCe utchan. Furman S: 25 4436 Dave Dickenson. Montana ...... estern Caro ...... Jr 4 E “4 1% Pat Neck. McNeese St Sr 17 4376 Mike Estrella. St Mary’s (Cal ) ...... “s ...... so 4 510l7 ‘6745 ‘7 3’ 5% 1465u Josh Farrell, Sam Houston St Jr 17 43 29

n Div ision I-AA team Through October 2

PASSING OFFENSE RUS MNG OFFENSE RUSHING DEFENSE NET PUNTING VDS/ G CAR YOS AVG TD lona 4 C;; Y,Dl ““9 ‘; YOSPG YDS NET G ATl CMP INT PCT YOS ATT TD Delaware 4 242 1421 59 19 PUNTS AVG R”:: RET AVG Montana 5 224 138 16 Delaware St. 4 212 1257 5.9 16 Wagner ._. 4 117 135 12 1 82 Northern Arrr 29 400 14 151 42.8 BostonU .: 4158 92 07 6158.2 6 17551287 2 7 Middle Term St 3 143 882 62 13 Prmceton. 3 101 181 18 1 Furman.. 25 444 10 57 42 1 oh&,, ,Cal )::,: :: ::. a 594 1576 00 Stephen F Austm 4 222 1171 53 12 Butler. 4 134 249 1.9 0 ;.i Northeast La 17 426 13 41.8 : 1z ‘Ai 1; North Caro A&l.. 4 202 1149 57 13 Pennsylvama 3 ‘(13 193 19 2 Lehtgh.. 23 46.4 1: 122 411 lona 1 i z!z 1% K Crladel 5 301 1418 4.7 14 South Caro St 5 179 302 1.9 2 Lrberty 29411 8 Alcorn St “5 %I !Y ! Towson SI 4 205 ii33 55 ii McNeeseSt 4136290 21 5 !!.“5 Weber St 2 !P4 Morgan St : 4 149 74 97 49751 ’ 15011143 :.; 12 Massachusetts 4 215 1106 51 9 Marist 4 121 296 24 3 740 Western Care. ” 26 382 Central Fla zerr Ky ._ 5 287 1280 4 5 0 St Mary’s (Cal ) 5 155 380 2.3 1 760 Southern-B R 02 300 Howard.. .I. : x3”: E : 81 12 2 i 4 172 1018 59 14 Georgetown.. 2 81 155 19 3 775 Western Ill. Central Fla 4 147 312 Holy Cross i!i #i ValparaisoHofstra : : 1, : : : 11 533 1404 71 10 South Caro St 5 254 1270 5.0 14 2.1 5 78.0 : 1% lo5 Southwest Tex St. 4 230 1011 44 tl Mtsstsstppi Val. 4 146 331 23 3 Idaho...... 14 39.6 23 379 Eastern Wash. 4 13.2 E : E 11: a08.3 I Texas Southern 5 239 1253 54 12 Southern-B R 5 175 445 25 0 % Idaho St 24 388 1: Cornell 3 129 6 605 815 63 3 Eastern Ky 4 175 973 5.6 9 North Caro A&T 4 148 350 24 2 69.5 Montana 23 411 i: ::.: Northeast La. .._.... “’ 5 164 ii 4 59.0 1345 02 13 Drake 4 203 960 48 11 IdahoSt. ._. 5 178 474 27 4 Ga Southern 33 38.6 1: 43 373 Northern Iowa 5154 83 7 5.39 1320 86 6 Idaho St 5 222 1181 53 12 Massachusetts. 4 148 404 27 4 1:: Stephen F Austm. 23 383 Tennessee Tech 29 38.5 1: i! ::i TOTAI _ OFFENSE TOTALDEFENSE PASS EFFICIE iNCV DEFENS iE G PI.AYS YDS AVG TD’ YDSPG G PLAYS YDS AVG TD’ YDSPG TEAM PUNT RETURNS CMP INT YOS/ TD RATING 323 2WI7 65 19 Southern-B R : 265 924 3.5 5 1848 TD AVG PC1 IN1 TD PCT POINTS Boston U. 4 PC1 VDS ATT 294 2081 7.1 25 %: South Caro. S1 291 1127 39 9 2254 Brown “3 ND4 yDs00 1 220 Georgetown 595 297 3% 1 ‘19 57.44 Delaware 3571 295 2065 70 24 516.25 Georgetown 2 165 452 2.7 4 Rrchmond 7 142 0 203 4167 5 2 238 69 14 Idaho. i St Peter’s 5 350 2381 6.8 Iona 4 283 936 32 0 g.; Calumbra : 0 148 1 185 Morgan St .k! El! :.E Alcorn St m Drake 4 29: $.g ;; ;i 3.: St. Mary’s (Cal 1 5 3g 1;; ;:: i St Peter’s 7 123 1 176 Duquesne 10.47 498 579 : :,:i ::.!!i Northeast La 5 Prmcaton 3 Montana : 9 153 1 170 Northern Iowa : 971 566 5.51 306 le.10 59 18 Tro St % Howard 4 13 m5 0 15.8 31 2.9149’ ::.E! Stephen F. Auslrn. 4 :%! MtddleTenn St 0% 387 570 301 1784 59 16 MCil eeseSt. _. : %Yzl ii ii 2410 Marshall 1 154 McNeese St lOa, 674 5.18 Valparaiso North Care. A&T’ : : 300 1775 59 16 ;.g St Peter’s i 225 741 33 5 247 0 Cal St Sacramento : 1: :ii 1 153 Rrchmond 618 870 489 : 28177 !E Towson St 4 273 1769 6.5 2’ Dartmouth ..I 204 787 3.9 3 Colgate 4 5 74 0 148 Southern-B.R 0.09 479 5.32 5 5.56 8415 370 2206 60 23 Howard : $5&u& j; 7# % Texas Southern 0 115 0 144 WIllram L Mary 612 475 485 4 408 67 86 Montana 5 441.20 4 271 1717 63 15 Marshall 273 5 Term -Marim 4” 10 140 0 140 East Term St 739 5.73 Howard 620 Massachusktls: : : 4 319 1695 53 10 :% WIIDu 9 uesneram 8 Mary : 45 g gl ,I; ,; Eastern Wash 8 111 1 139 l3a~lI~q. g ;7$ :,4$ : E i% St. Mary’s (Cal ) 5 365 2103 58 20 % Oelaware St.. : 9 123 0 137 Wtlllam L Mary 5 317 20% 66 21 :% Northern Aria 2 392 13X3 46 10 270 6 South Caro St 5 14 189 0 135 Cal St. Northridge 4 2.Q2 %I 77 585448 372 2087 5.6 2’ 417 40 Sam Houston St 251 1128 45 8 2020 Towson St 4 11 148 St Mary’s (Cal ) : 468 791 463 : 2; 0944 Lehigh.. 5 ‘ Scored by rushmg-passmg only ‘Touchdowns scored by rushing-passmg only Northeast La 5 18 240 1 1”3:

TURNOVER MARQIN SCORING OFFENSE TEAM KICKOFF RETURNS TURNOVERS GAINED TURNOVERS LOST G PTS SCORING DEFENSE TO AVG FUM INT TOTAL FUM Delaware 4 192 G PTS AVG Western Care. : No YDS North Caro A&T : I”: lDTAL4 Idaho. 4 188 Prmcelon 63 Howard 4 1; zi : 2: MISSIssIppI Val i 10 1; Middle Term St ouquesne : li Troy St 5 10 328 1 320 Idaho. !I 4” Towson St. : 3 :,i Montana St 13 393 2 302 Ga Southern 1: z0 :i i Valpararso 4 151 E$L$iCal). $ $ Sam Houston St : 14 385 1 275 Brown : i 0 2 1, ‘S Northeast La : 5 188 !i Towson St 9 245 1 27.2 Furman Boston U 4 147 Ga Southern 104 Marshall : 0 214 0 268 St Mary’s (Cal 1 i ! 1: Montana 5 183 Boston U : 2s 10.5 MISSISSI pr Val 4 11 292 0 265 TowsonS : :1 i Oelaware St 4 144 Southern-B.R 112 llllnolr .P t 5 14 36-l 0 260 : : 1: Stephen F Au& 4 Dartmouth ” z E 120 Soulhern Utah 4 12 30.3 k$%re North Care A&T 4 1: M~ss~ssrppr Val 4 49 123 Festern Ky i 2: Valpararso 2 : ;9 Tro St 130 New Hampshire : 1: E 0 254 Term Marhn Dra1 e 45 1:: :%?dlrd’ : ii 136 South Cam St 11 267 0 243 Montand St. 5 i9 1:1114 : z4 : MoroanSt 4 136 Georgetown 14 0 Dayton .I 2 9 218 0 242 Pennsylvanrd d 7 11 Ho&d. St Petefs _. : 3 Northern lewd 0 240 Wagner 61 ; : Grambllng : 1:; Evansvrlle 4 50 1:: Furman s5 :; % 0 239 October 4, 1993 The NCAA News

n Division II leaders Through October 2

RUSlilNG PUNT RETURNS CL YDSPG (Mm 12 per game) CLNO YDS AVG er Graham, New Haven ...... Jr 1702 Jerry Garrett, WayneSt (Neb) Jr 14 314 224 ...... Sr 1638 Nate Bush, Wayne St (Mrch) So 10 197 197 ...... Jr 1566 Kasem McCullou h, South Oak Sr 16 290 181 .... Sr lE6B , DeonHardmo. In %ranapohs.. Jr 9 154 17 1 ...... Jr 1460 Tyrone Poole Fort Valley St Jr 13 214 165 Joe Simmons, NC Central ...... 1456 Pete Roback. Augustana (S D ) Jr 7 113 16 1 Mrke Vrvens. Southwest St ...... 2: 144.7 Wrllram Graham, LIUC W Post Jr 7 106 15.4 Tyrone Rush. North Ala...... Sr 1363 A Frankhn_. Tex_ A&M-Kmosvrlle Jr 12 174 145 Bobb Phrllrps. Vrrgmra Union ...... Jr 136.2 Stanley Flanders, Valdosta’St jr 10 145 145 Greg Iv alker. Delta St 1330 Lavon Rers. Western St Jr 13 180 13 8 Charles Dean. St Cloud St ...... g Benn Sanford, Mrssrssrppr Col so 12 165 138 lyrone Jones, Central Okla E Marcus Gates. East Tex St Jr 12 162 13 5 Leonard Craws. Lenorr-Rhyne ...... 131 5 Darnell Cox. Fayetteville St So 18 241 134 Norman Whrte, West Tex ALM. :: 130.6 Jerem Monroe, Mrchr an Tech ...... Sr 1262 PUNTING Keith &eaver Ashlan 2 ...... Jr 1256 ItAn 3 6 per game) CL NO AVG Tonv Grant. Mars Hrll 124.8 John Caccratore. St Francrs 1111.) Brandon Hight. Bentley ...... g 1230 Chrrs Carter, Henderson St “s”, E 2: Hosea Knowlton, Central Ark 122s Rodney Cleaver, Em orra St ...... Fr Preston Jackson, U 8 Davrs ...... 1;:: Elliott Armstron Elan 5: 120.8 Bryce Carlson. d, oorhead St ...... Jr Darell Whrtaker, Eastern N Mex...... 11:: Dave Ludy, Wrnona St ...... i: 1168 PASSING EFFICIENCY ...... Casey Anderson, Neb -Kearnry So 27 41 2 Mm 15att per ame) PC1 IN1 YDS TD POINTS B rett Salrsbury. it ayne St (Neb) ...... ik “5 r4 “1”1i 71 9 1987 KICKOFF RETURNS Kermrt Eu gs, Norfolk St ...... 1706 (Mm 12 oer same) CL NO AVG Chns HateP, er, Valdosta St ...... :: 45 2z 1:: E 1640 42 0 Jamre Pass. Mankato St ...... Sr 5 162 1527 35 6 Khan Jones, UC Davrs .... Sr 4 121 ;: %!z 354 James Werr, New Haven ...... 1; 5 137 E Scott Woods lndrana (Pa.) ...... 5 103 G :: 148.8 Dean Herrboldt. South Oak St E Gregory Clark. Virgrnra St ...... 1467 Bucky Logan, Adams St Jr 5 322 Trm Thenell. Western St. .... : ..... :: : 166 lo156 K 1459 Dana Maxwell Mass -Lowell Jr 5 Perry Klem LIUC W Post ...... Sr 4 1: 99 E69 1443 All-time record Kendall James. Carson-Newman Jr 8 :i Jod Drckerson. Edmboro ...... Jr 4 44 52 3 737 1440 Dave Lud Wrnona St Jr 9 Brll ic1atos. Portland St ..... Sr 4 1: i 1111 1: 141 3 Maurad cyave. Nebraska-Omaha So 6 ii! Ken Avent. Calawba ...... Sr 4 75 % Kerth Green. Mornmgsrde Jr 10 Oave MacDonald. West Chester ...... Jr 5 l!Z i 525 : l?i! 1: 1% Br ce Carlson. Mooihead St $ ,: E Vernon Buck, Wrngate ...... Jr 5 173 91 526 6 1442 11 1367 L MI r, e Ragrn. Wrngate 295 Make Fisher, Cal Poly SLO ...... so 4 104 719 9 1366 Todd McDonald. South Dak St .... E ::,i : 1164 f 1% Trevor Long, Chadron St ...... ? : 1:: 65 546 4 RECEPTIONS PER GAME RECEIVING YARDS PER GAME Shawn Duprrs. Southwest St ...... Fr 3 131 Et 1339 CL G YDS CL G CT YDS YDSPG Rex Lamberlr, Abrlene Chrrstran ...... z E ; 1061 1: 1337 961 192.6 952 9 1331 Chrrs Gear Jrm Kurlrnskr. Northwood ...... 8 : 1% ...... 1592 is E i 793 5 131 9 Noble Goo Joe Mauldrn, MO Western St ...... Jr 5 104 Rus Barley. N M Hrg :i 1288 Damon Thomas, Wayne St (Neb ) ...... 1275 TOTAL OFFENSE Mrchael Drdlein. Washburn ...... ;: 1270 YDS YDSPG Preston Cunnm ham. Southwest St 1228 1993 pL42 Duane Joubert. I4 est Tex ABM ...... 1551 Calvin Walker, Valdosta St ...... El Johnny Cox, Fort Lewrs.. 11:; E SE Malt Carman. Lrvmgston .... 416 Rod Smith. MO Southern St 1170 1% 372 0 ...... Alvm Ashley, Southwest St Tyrone Johnson, Western St Sr lW4 ...... F!3 1559 Tony Wrllrs. New Haven ...... iz Rus Barley. N M Hrghlands.. Sr i s it2 ilE Shawn Duprrs Southwest St...... 135 Byron Chamberlarn, Wayne St tNeb ) 515 Mrke Ra rn, Wmgate =* 5 25 517 22 142 l%! Kharr Jones, UC Davrs ...... Johnny Cox. Fort Lewrs ...... Charles 8 avrs. Sagrnaw Valley i 27 500 loo.0 John Craven. Gardner-Webb ...... 1229 5% Rod Smrth. Ma Southern St ...... ii2 Preston Cunnmgham. Srauthwest St I 33 395 Chrrs Hatcher, Valdosta St ...... 2 Ken Cahoon, Calrf IPa ) ...... 614 Vernon Buck. Wmgate ...... 1% % Tim Brown, Clarron ...... !% Trm Thenell. Western St...... 113 Marcus T rone. Sonoma St ..... 973 11:: E2 Greg Hop 1 ms. Shppery Rock ...... ii! Calvrn Walker: Valdosta St Sr 5 40 455 91 0 267 0 E Erik Sternbacher. Lock Haven ..... 316 185 1% 271.4 Bryan McGmty. Lock Haven FIELD GOALS Derrrck Sharpe, Mars Hdl ...... : iit FGPG E? EE Todd McDonald, South Dak St ...... T rone Johnson. Western St 547 Raul De la Flor. Humboldt St 5: “5FGA 15 12 1254 FG Ra Marrow, Cal St Hayward ...... h! arter Wrllrams, Southwest St ...... E de Yf Palladmo. West Va. Wesleyan ...... 995 % Lonnie Custer, ...... Ai :: : ‘! ‘Y 1.75 2442 Gardner~Webb Clrnt Dolezel, East Tex St ...... 1221 Jon Spmosa. Lock Haven 311 Sr 5 9 a Jermame Whrtaker. NM Hrghlands ...... Jason Lazarskr. Ky Wesleyan...... 315 Fr 1!i %i? Brll Matos. Portland St ...... zfi Glen Frelds. LIU-C. W Post 391 Ervrnd Lrsterud. Mrssourr.Rolla. Jr 4 ; i 1% Brent Holsclaw. Ky Wesle an...... : 1178 2356 Darrck Holmes, Portland St. Gus Aldana. West Tex ABM Sr 150 Matt Cook MO Southern $t ...... 924 2310 Charles Davis. Sa maw Valle % An el Ronqurllo, Eastern N Mex $ : 110 67 1.40 Jay Mason. Shepherd ...... 227.0 Kevm Whitfield. v?ayne St t hyrch.) ...... 261 Ra 9ael Fernandez. UC Davis 1.25 Chrrs Teal, West Ga ...... 12 217 2 Mrke Driscoll. Amerrcan Int’l : : : 1 25 SCORING ALL-PURPOSE t7yNNERS ;\ i :“4 Xi ‘5 PTi PTPG : ; i 1% GRUSH REC PR KR YDSPG Jeremy Monroe, Mrchrgan Tech 168 Roger Graham. New Haven...... Jr 5651 64 0 326 246 20 Kerth Hrgdon.Chey;ei 15 i % E ii,! 4 ; “5 23 Dave Lud Wrnona St ...... 0 273 Preston Jackson. C avrs Alex Campbell, Morns Brown.. .: .’ So : Kedh Hrg I, on. Cheyney ...... 1: t 2; :z :E Brran Satterlreld. North Ala Brad Helm. Mrllersvrlle Sr 4 : : 1: ...... 5 14- 517 hi? Damon Thomas. Wayne St (Neb) 12.0 Make Ragrn, Win ate Duane Joubert. a es1 Tex. ABM...... 2 4 9304 1E Kevrn Whrte. Hampton 1: x i : 120 Jeremy Monroe, Michrgan Tech ...... 5631 303 “Z T Ro er Graham. New Haven 10 0 ... s: 4 545 1&% MI &e Vivens. Southwest St So 3 i ii 1:3 Make Jaunrch, South Dak St...... LLJr lJ5 “‘; T rone Rush, North Ala ” “J”, z d rchael Mann. lndrana (Pa ) ...... Sr 5764 12 ! ‘3 16440 Chfton Davrs, Fayetteville St Jr 5 z : 112 E ...... Sr 0 122 16360 Tyrone Rush. North Ala Sr 4 ! 2 110 ...... Damon Thomas, Wayne St Neb ) ...... Darell Whrtaker, Eastern N r, ex ...... : 59! ‘E 0 227 182.w Joey Huffsteller Wrngate :; ; i toa urnett. Elan 2: 5 262 319 17746 Darrck Holmes, Portland St : i zz 10.5 Elton Rhoades. Central Okla ...... ;: : : Wrnston Horshaw Shrppensburg ...... 71 235 Jr 5 4 2- 460 49 165 Leonard Davrs. Lenorr-Rhyne Jr 4 : Fl 105 Corey Bell. Morns Brown ...... Johnny Cox, Fort Lews ...... Sr 4” Jr 5 0 614 ;:%I ShannonBurnell, NorthDak Sr 4 i t io :; 10.5 Chet Henrcle. Bloomsburg ...... Ken Cahoon, Cam (Pa.). .I. ” !: : ...... Jr 5 681 72 ‘8 ‘8 100 Jason Schlem. Angelo St ...... : 5794 44 0 0 1;s.: 5 0 ii 10.0 Cod Gamble. Chadron St ...... ;: 4337 322 i 48 Bill t eech. West Va. Tech ...... Darrell Johnson, Vrr mra Unwon : Joe Srmmons. NC Central ...... Sr 5 728 91 1!% ! ! 0 i”6 Bryce Carlson. Moorhead St .... Jr 4 479 11 H 14! 15975 Glenn Starks. Central Dkla Sr 5 i! 96 ~~~$;~~hA&gyj~ IGa ) ...... : j Greg Walker, Delta St ...... 4532 95 15675 Chrrs George. Glenvrlle St Jr 5 ! i 1 4 3 343 16675 Joe Srmmons. N C Central _. Sr 5 ii Loren Weeks. lndranapolrs ...... Alvrn Ashle Southwest St Ulysses Smrth, Savannah St ...... Jr 5 : Carter Eve, Ilr orrrs Brown ...... 5 311 61 15600 Erran Dugan. West Va. Wesleyan so 4 ! i ; 38

n Division II team Through October 2

PASSING OFFEFSE IFFENSE PCT YDS SCoR’NGGCTD XP YDS 1765 ...... 705 Wayne St (Neb) ...... 37 31 Wayne St (Neb ). s 1572 LIUC w post ...... : :Ez New Haven ...... Lrvmgston ...... 5 3: North Ala ...... ;: ;: 1E Valdosta St ...... 531 28 1% Glenvrlle Sl ...... 1146 Gardner-Webb ...... : 2 1378 UC Craws ...... 661 1717 lndrana (Pa ...... 4525 21 i-i! 1146 Valdosta St ...... : 1145 Mankato St ...... : Cal Poly SL d ...... Lock Haven...... z: 1% !c$an Tech ...... 45 2722 1: i 1167 Itost 5 25 1% Washburn ...... r ?“- 1120 Wm ate...... :;z 1442 South Uak 4” 1150 ChadronSt...... _...... _.. UC I! avrs ...... 1!! Southwest St ...... z.5 1130 LIUC w post.. Portland St...... : 51 7 1111 a.*South . . . .Dak . St RUSHING DEFENSE West Chester ...... 50.5 wmgare ...... L) L.J G CAR Fort ...... : 474 1% Abilene Chrrstran ...... 522 Lewrs 416 9 pb; o; (Ga) 5 157 western St ...... 1345 Ourncy 5 173 Alban St (Ga.) 5 24 ?I Vir mia St : E Soul RrOak 5 1BD ;ii tii$lands : : 1: I 1: ] 1:: 1:: 1: 1: 1: i f : : ...... i 1?2 Hamo r on 5 22 1: i 4 16 1cI ” t Central Okla ZYi 1329 WesiT& ABM , II Angelo St .:.I i $ North Oak 4 II ii D 00 West ex ABM ...... Northern Co10 New Haven ...... 1% SCORINGGDE;DENSE Mrssourr-Rolla : : 4 140 ...... 8.5 XP 2XP DXP N.C Central 5 154 1E !J estwesle3Gan Va esleyan ...... : 458 Gannon ...... 0 Central MO St. 4 146 MO. Southern St ...... 49.6 981 Northern Cola ...... : : : Stonehrll 3 131 South Dak St ...... : ...... 2 1 8 SacredHeart ‘.’ 3 116 1% Ferns St ...... East Tex St ::.i ...... ; ; Mansfield 4 158 1162 Hampton WestGa ...... : 533 North Dak ...... : i Ii Alban St (Ga) ...... 5 TOTAL OFFENSE PASS EFFICIENCY DEFE iNSE YDSPG stone x III ...... z : 1 1 G PLS YDS ; WaneSttNeb) 4” g 6108 ATT Bentley...... Mrssourr-Rolla ...... ““” : : i i UC “Llavrs z Amerrcan Int’l : “,;te&lleaSt ?3E :: Mrllersvdle...... Mrllersvrlle...... Emporra St ...... :z 5 : : i % 5R Stonehrll z?; ...... Asiumptron 46 4 U LIU-c w Post.. 4 309 Northern Co10 1: 526.6 Vrrgmia St 1 New Haven : g ‘E Ferrrs St lndrana (Pa J : i : 0 1 Mrchrgan Tech.. 2502 Emoorra St : ‘?! Edi East Stroudsburg .47 4 10 Gardner-Webb 4 423 Elan iii Valdosta St : : i3 23 Abrlene Chrrstran Lrvmgston 2397 E! TURNOVER MARGIN Grand Valle St g Mankato St .I. 5 366 2385 477.0 WayneSt (r4 eb). I; FUM INT GAINI UM INT LOS; MARGIN Indiana (Pa) 5 355 2297 459 4 Southern Conn St 150 Cal Polv SLO i -91 : : 325 Tuskegee 115 Angelo’SI 1; :: TOTALDEFENSE South Oak St 14 21 ii $1 G PLS YDS YOSPG Bentle 3 109 North II ak _.. .: r9 New Haven ii: 6 Sronehrll 459 1530 Lenorr-Rhvne 77 Hrllrdale. !I 1: Bentley 4 234 724 181.0 lndran a(Pa) / 111 18 4” : : :z2 20 Wayne St If&b ). 5 3!3 1926 1% ..- r. ~~rlo”” 3, ! 31 6 18 62 0 2w Hampton 5 217 -2 1934 i 11 20 Amerrran lnt” 4 246 775 193b N C. Centra! 5 19 : : itl 2w1 80 Northern Co10 5 331 337 1994 107 Wrrigate 36 9 1 60 South Oak 1039 207 0 Albany St iGa )’ 1: ii $a; ;; (Ga) : :z: 1057 2114 ; 1i.i North Oak 5 11 ; ; 11 1 8050 \ 4 230 17 Grand Valley St 5 297 1:: % 5 159 M&nunRolla 4, 10r 149 i 6 5 1: E Glenvrlle St 5 209 1119 2238 225 0 : 152 %%roudsbuq i ; 7 1: :: 40 1.25 Assumptron 4 240 900 Page 12 The NCAA News October 4, 1993 n Division 111 leaders Throuah September 25

RUSHING PUNT RETURNS CL YOS TD YDSPG (Mm 1 2 per game) CL NO YOS AVG Brll Sedgwrck. Ursmus 648 6 216.0 K P~ecew~cr.Mass Marrhmc SR 4 121 30 3 Weymen Jones, OlrveI ?I 615 6 205.0 Em Green. III Bened~crrne 5 149 298 Jlmm Henderson, WIS Z.tevens Porni SR 608 5 Owe Peabody, Mrllrkrn zi 4 115 288 Mati Fnedman. Plymouth St. 370 1 2:; 1 Lesch. St John’s (Mrnn ) SR 5 137 27 4 John Lutz. Colorado Col :; 354 1770 Stove Andsrson. Rowan SO a 151 la9 Trenr Nauholz Srmoson SR 520 1733 /f your o@onant i.s Dickinson Collrg~, don ‘t $lnn on scw-ing too Man Cannmg, John Carroll Dan Pasqurl. La V&e 506 1687 Hunter Shoop, Denrson ii 1; 1;; 1;; Rodney Bond, Jersey Crty St ” ZEl 499 1663 many point.\. At least that j- what rpcpnt r1’sult.s .should tell you. Sam Wrlhams. Oehance JR 12 211 176 6111Johnson Mass .Dartmouth SR 330 1650 R Patten, Framrngham St 16 251 157 Lajhauna Scan. Mllllkrn 329 164 5 Dickinson is allowing ju>t 2.0 p(JirltS (I gume -~ which rankr hrhind K Matthreu. Mame Marrtrme :i 3 47 15.7 Kevm Mararelll, Monmouth (Ill ) ” “’ :El 491 1637 Roshan Myers. Ferrum. Carey BerIdEr. to8 487 1623 Middlcbuly CXI?~P and Trinity Coll,11yg~(Conn~ticut), which both C Notatirancesco, G’ltysburg zi ; 1:: 1:: Marlon Perryman, Wdlenberg :; 486 162.0 C J Brantner. Wis -Eau Clarre JR 12 172 143 Kelvrn Gladney, Mrllsaps 480 1600 havr pluytld just cJ7l.P gam.f this .seasnn. R~low ILW the top scoring Dave c0nrdl. Wesleyan ;; 159 1590 KICKOFF RETURNS Krrk Matthreu. Maine Martlrme 307 153s defmstx in wd division through S+tembpr 25. (Mm 1 2 per game) CL NO YOS AVG Frank Baker, Chrcago E 605 151 3 Josh Psrkrns, Ohro Northern FR 6 289 48 2 Oreu Beers, Merchant Marme SR 452 1507 Brll Johnson, Mass.-Dartmouth SR 3 122 407 Heath Butler, N’western (WIS ) 430 1433 Wrll Prmce, Errdgewater (Va ) JR 7 263 376 Jose DsLeon. MIT. Sri 269 134.5 Matt Enmhall. Bethel (Mmn ) ;; 4 150 375 Don hlolllck, Otterbern SR 402 1340 Travrs Yost Winenbar Wrllram Davrs. Carthage FR 265 1325 Tim OK, Wlb.-Slevenskt JR z 1:: ii’: Joseph McCoy. Chrcago 521 130.3 Bruce Rvans Kean .ii 388 1293 517 129.3 12 396 330 4 131 328 PASSING EFFICIENCY Greg Lehrer, Heidelberg :; 5 160 320 RATING_ C J Brantner. Wrs -Eau Clarre 6 186 31.0 (Mm 15 an per game) CMP PC1 INT YDS TD POINTS Bill Brshop, Cancordia (Ill.) 4 122 305 Wrllre Seller, St. John’s (Mann ) 32 56.1 1 714 a 204.2 Chrrs Wtley. Alma :i 4 117 293 Jrm Ballard Mount Unwon 73 715 3 1030 12 la93 C Thompson. Muskmgum 9 263 292 Mike Monhco, Albion 43 704 3 597 7 180.8 Scoh Tumrlty Augustana (Ill ) ,-zi 6 175 292 John Smdh. Oehance :II 82 683 3 1210 11 1783 Frank Plefka, FDU-Madrson 46 61 3 2 682 1720 Mike danBraber,Hope Ei 27 58.7 1 435 z 169.7 NO AVG Paul Bell, Allegheny 37 61 6 2 5 1634 20 431 Ja Schnsrdsr. Hamlme :Ef 46 554 2 ::: 7 1549 0 17 419 Edy Hesson. Rowan 48 545 2 a23 7 1548 17 41 a Jelt Lrndqurst. Neb Wssleyan zi 4 129 72 558 4 1041 14 1532 iS 4i’j Mark Lea, Waynesburg ,,, ,,, ” FR 2 37 26 702 0 285 is28 17 410 Justin Frlske, Loras SO 4 a2 51 62.2 3 720 i 152.8 17 40.9 Guy Smons. Coe SR 3 78 42 53.8 3 708 7 1520 19 409 Chns Dee. Carneore Mellon JR 4 80 42 525 1 703 1486 19 40 6 RussYoung.Se~ansa 3 55 31 563 2 480 1464 21 40.5 Mrke Ehjah. Watiburg :i 3 66 36 54.5 2 532 1462 22 405 Sean Kewlle, Moravran JR 3 105 66 628 3 a3a 1462 16 403 Adam Wasserman, Coast Guard 366 1459 Jason Clark. Dhro Northern. :: 2; ; 528 1449 Jason Baer Wash 8 Jelf 28 53.8 1 412 141 9 RECEPTIONS PERI$ME Boo Perry, Wrlkes 47 552 740 1408 G CTPG G TO XP PTPG Enck Hackenbsrg. Susquehanna 40 588 : 538 1407 Matt Newton, Princrpra ;; 123 Kelvrn Gladney, Millsaps fk 11 22 7 Sam WIlllams. Oehance : ._. 105 Wendall Watson. III Benedrctme. JR i : 155 TOTAL OFFENSE Tom Buslee, St. Olaf 454 9.7 Scott Tumrlty Augustana (Ill ) so z 0 150 G PLAYS YOS YDSPG Ted Erockman. Kenyon i: i John Lutz Colorado Col JR : 15.0 Jrm Ballard, Mount Unwon 8 3 a5 1069 356 3 Dawn Willis, Upper Iowa 3 E ii Kevm Bellamy, Frostburg St z 12.7 John Smdh, Dehance JR 1399 349.8 Harold McKinle Bethany (W. Va ) :: 4 308 Brll Sedgwrck. Ursmus zi : 6 127 Jordan Pornrk, Princrpra : 154183 910 303 3 Ed Bubonrcs. hzarm1 union 476 ii Adam Kowles. WIS -Rwer Falls ..I’ SO 7 125 Chns Ings. Wabash :i 079 293 0 Chns Mrlkulskr. Tufts :El Y ‘ii Wrllram Oaws, Carthage :; : 120 Tad Kluendar, Carleton : 153117 807 269 0 Crarg Antonro, Waynesburg SR 209 8 Matl Fnedman, Plymouth St 12.0 Ed Hesson, Rowan :El 3 93 796 265 3 Vmcent Hoopsr. Bethel (Mmn ) SR i 246 Rodd Patten. Framingham St SR ; 120 BrIanVan Duesen. Western Md ” ” SO ; 144 775 258.3 Steve Endres, Wrlkes 355 :i Max Freeman, Alfred FR 3 120 Brandon Grabowskr, Rensselaer SR a5 508 254 0 Todd Brerowskr. St Narberi .:FI ; 276 73 Krrk Matthreu. Mame Ma&e 2 120 Jay Schneider, Hamlrne JR 760 253 3 Kendall Grithn. Loras 488 Joseph McCoy, Chrcago :i 4 120 Guy Srmons. Cos : i: 758 252 7 Colby Penzone, Kenyon YR 4 249 :.i Sreve Harrrs, Carroll (Wrs ) JR 120 Matt Walshrre, Upper Iowa :i 3 160 756 252 0 RUSSJacques, WIS -Plattevrlls ..JR ; 258 70 Weymen Jones, Dlrvet i 120 Brad Hensle g Kenyon6 .,, ;; 750 250.0 Mark Collela, Wllkams. 70 Scott Maurer, Trinlv (Corm.) :: 1 120 Dan Takah. ethany W. Va ). 4” 1551% 983 245 8 Charhe Whalen, Salrsbuw St 4 ; 2;: 70 Steve Anderson, Rowan 120 Jell Lmdqurst, Neb esleyan 4 145 982 245 5 Greg Lshrsr, Hsrdelberg 3 274 Dreu Beers, Merchant Marine ;i i 120 Sean Kewlle. Moravran 735 Jason Nrssen, Hamrlton Ei :i Troy RobInson, Wesle an 120 Willrs Seder. St John’s (Mann J .ii i 12677 722 EY Bnan Vandegrdt Rhodes SR : 2i 2:; 70 Jrm McCarthy. North d ark ii : 120 Boo Perry Wdke$ 717 239.0 John Guglrelmo. Johns Hopkrns z:: i 100112 713 237 7 RECEIVING YARDS PER GAME FIELD DOALS Chrrs Eerkrmer. Kalamazoo SR 3 94 684 228.0 CT YDS YDSPG G FGA FG PCT FGPG Sam WrItrams, Oehance :A t 42 761 1903 Scan Rubmet’r, Montclarr St Scd d 4 1000 2 00 All-PURPOSE RUNNERS Ed Bubonrcs. Mount Unron SR 3 474 1580 Greg Brame. Wdtenberg ;; : 5 625 1 67 CL REC PR KR YOS YOSPG Tom Buslee. Sl. Olaf 3 :“9 45*._. 151.3 Mike Melrn, Au sburg 5 556 1 67 Sam Wdliams, Oefrance :“R : RUSH308 761 211 272 1244 31100 Kendall Grrnm. Loras zF1 4 79 488 1220 Dan McGahn, lSllT s 3 750 1 50 Rodd Patten, Frammgham St 2 161 251 105 555 277 50 Jerem Markham, Manchester JR 359 1197 Frsd Harding, Cdrneyre Mellon ii 8 6 750 1 50 Brll Sedgwrck. Ursrnus 648 a 0 119 775 258 33 Steve Endres. Wrlkes : :: 355 ii83 Make O’Connell, Merchant Marrne l 4 4 1000 1 33 Eric Green, Ill. Benedrcrrne ” :FI i 5 447 149 351 952 238.00 Matt Newton. Prmcrpra -,“i 347 115.7 Jstl McDaniel, La Verne. 4: 4 1000 1 33 Brll Johnson, Mass -Dartmouth SR 0 122 472 236 00 Eric Green, Ill Benedrcbne 4” :: 447 iii8 Jason Hochms. Ohvet ; 4 100.0 1 33 Carey Bender, Coe z 4”;: 1:: 679 924 00 Jame Goss, Sswanee ii 334 111 3 Steve Mrlns. Brockpori SI. :i 3 4 571 1 33 Dan Pasqud. La Verne .G 3 506 156 i : 662 220 67 Tad J alge, Hamlme : 1: ii3 1110 Sieve Legyen, Susquehanna JR 3 4 1000 1 33 Scottlumrlty, Au ustana (Ill) 2 221 11 34 175 441 220 50 Rob Lokerson. Muhlenberg’ 4 3 20 331 1103 Weymen Jones, 8 hvet z: 3615 0 43 658 21933 Crarg Antonio. Waynesburg 16 209 1045 INTERCEPTIONS 648 21600 Troy Whde, Rensselaer :; : 201 1005 NO YOS IPG JrmmyKevrn P~ecew~cr,Henderson.Mass WIS Marrtrme~Stsvens Porn1 :;SR : z”6 4018 121i 15: 628 209 33 Dave Root, Hartwrck 3 1: 2% 98 7 Paul Casanco, MIddlebury 20 Krrk Mallhreu, Marne Marrhme 2 307 0 47 57 705 50 Ted Brockman. Kenyon z: 28 296 98 I Paul St John, Rensselaer. : 5: 15 Trent Nauholr. Sampson 600 200.00 Alan Pteckrewrcr, Western Mb i 98.0 Mike Swlh. Capital 4 24 13 Damon Klssa. Hanover z; : 5203:; 2:: : 3:: 598 19933 Joe Rrchards. Johns Hopkrns 4 1: :zi 98 0 Todd &bold, Albron 4 5 Malt FrIedman, Plymouth St SR 2 10 0 316 19300 VIC Moncato, FDU~Madrson i 16 292 97 3 Chad Van Den Berg, Johns Hopklns 1: i 571 19033 Nrck M shorn, Colorado Cal :: a 194 97 0 Ross Gaharl, Central (Iowa) : 1:: 13 JamsyKelvrn GladneGoss 8 ewanee.Mrllsaps JR : 4ao 3:: 5: 173 561 la700 Jam@ i rendr, Central (Iowa) : 19 291 97 0 Aaron Mmor. Macalester Steve Anderson, Rowan ?I 3 20: 62 151 134 547 la233 Pete Marrne. Cal Luthsran :i 16 291 97 0 Charlre Ambroult. Fdchburg Sl : 1; 1.: 543 181 00 Jelt Kasppe. AuQSburQ : 285 95 0 Peter Odchman, Chrcago 5 50 13 JohnEd Bubanrcs. Lutz. Colorado Mount CalUmon SR 3 35: 474 650 i 359 17950 Anthony Robmsan. Upsala :i 3 1: 282 Jell Wall, Neb Wesleyan 5 a1 13 Ron Hermann, DePauw i; : 144 16: 38 ia9 534 lraoo lodd Brerowskr. St Norben 276 ::i Brll Dattalo. Brockporl St 3 5.5 10 Al Whrls. Wm PalersOn 3 352 35 0 137 524 17467 Gre Lehrer. Herdelberg : ;: 274 91 3 Steve Erdmann. lllmors Col 3 11 Rodney Bond, Jersey Cdy St 518 17267 R Y Taylor. Hamltne 274 91 3 Paul Prcciano, Tutts 1 7 1: Jrm McCarthy, Nonh Park 345 17250 Chrrs Rergle. Rensselaer ; 178 a90 Jason Kast. Marne MarltIme 2 31 10

n Division Ill team Through September 25

PASSING OFFENSE SCORINO OFFENSE RUSHING OFFENSE c c drr CMP PCT INT YDS G TO XP PTS AVG CAR YOS YDSPG Mount Unwon i ‘iii 79 699 3 1084 Trrnrty (Corm) i Ii 8 Chlcaga ;i 243 1473 368 3 Alma 1044 St John’s(Mrnn) 1;: 5571.0 0 p;y (Con” ) 63 366 366 0 Bethel (Mmn ) i ::: 10592 48652.3 : 1035 Defiance : :: :: 189 47 3 : 186 1001 128 1265 Colorado Col. 12 11 WIS -Rwer Falls 4 258 1334 iii : Kz : 94 i: 65654 3 s 932 Mount Unwon i ia 14 1:; 4342 07 Rochestsr 3 207 863 287 7 Western Md ” ” 131 916 Anderson 17 16 124 41 3 Redlands 161 a50 283 3 St John’s (Mmn ) : 92 1: ::.; z RoWan i 124 41 3 Alfrsd 4’ 2j5 1112 278 0 3 165 Moravran 3 109 ii:: Mrlllkrn 1: 1: a2 41 0 Wrrtenberg ala 272 7 Johns Hopkrns 112 2 6149.1 5 i a29 Albron .: 22 17 158 39 5 N’western (WIS ) 3 172 814 271 3 166 Neb Wesleyan : 140 10% Union N.Y) ii8 39 3 Orckinson a01 267 0 Renssslaer :: 550461 41 545 Neb d ssleyan : 151 37 a Monmouth (Ill ) : 182 794 264 7 FoeThomas (Mmn ) i 1:; 799 Allsghsny Mass -0arlmourh. 2 116 528 264 0 6046 51352 3 : 785 toe i 112110 ii: Urslnus 3 154 786 262.0 Carleton .: 1:: 785 WIS -Rrver Falls 4 Mrddlebury 1 262 262 0 upper Iowa 3 136 :i 5og51 5 F 761 Redlands 3 1: 1: 139102 i:: Anderson 3 784 261 3 Prlnclpla 148 75 50.7 759 LOtas 4 135 33 8 Hamlme i a3 46 55 4 i 756 Merchant MakIn’ 1: 1: 101 33 7 RUSHING DEFENSE Kenyon 3 131 70 53.4 755 Frostbur St ; 15 9 101 33.7 CAR YOS YOSPG Wilkes 86 i 740 Central (P owa) 10 101 33 7 29 -32 -32 0 i 114 i: :i: 4 734 WIS -Stevens Pomt ; 1: 12 75 -34 -11 3 Rhodes 44 Hartwrck 114 54 47.4 7 724 Carleton ii 33 0 95 147 CoaslGuard ” ; 473 Baldwrn-Wallace ” ” : 1: 1: :: 3232.7 7 115 28 8 WrItrams 1 :: 4421 Ei z 235 La Verne 3 13 8 1:; 111 37 0 Carnegie Mellon : 4 10 128 32 0 116 145 48 3 PASS EFFICIENCY DEFENSE Wrttenber ..3 1; 9 96 32 0 150 50 0 RATING Thomas 9 ore. 4 18 13 128 32 0 151 50 3 G An CMP PCT INT YOS TO POINT 167 55 7 Mrddlsbury 1 22 5 130 SCO:NC OEFENSE 170 56 7 Trmdy (Conn ) 1 7 2233 73 i :; : 23 6 TO XP PTS AVG 177 590 Orckmson :E, 381 11 337 0 464 Middlsbury i b 178 59 3 Unwon (NY) ; 77 ;i 32 4 5 255 1 51 6 Trmdy (Corm ) . ..l 0 i i i.: Wdtsnbsr 3 75 26 34 6 6 259 52 0 Dickinson. 1 0 6 TOTAL OFFENSE Merchant Bnarm.! 27 41 5 9 29s 1 57 1 Umon (NY : 10 :.i G PLS YOS YOSPG Wis -Stout : i: 33 9 6 251 1 57 4 Montclair !2I : 1 Oehance 2079 519.8 Weottreld St 3 :: 37 5 6 347 590 Wdtenber z 1; :z Rowan 188 1525 508 3 Monmouth (Ill ). t: 17 404 6 250 i 61 9 Westfield J I SI John’s (Mann ) i 204 1454 484.7 477 3 Mass -Dartmouth i 32 0 4 198 2 62 5 Merchant Marme i ; :1 1: :.i Mount Unron. ..3 207 1432 Montclarr St.. 2 i; :t 0 63 2 Emory L Henry 3 Coe 3 222 1425 475.0 1402 467 3 Colorado Col ii.: 42 254194 1 St John’s (Mmn) : 2 : 2117 :: Carleton 3 51. John’s (Mlnn ) : ii: if 41 5 6 366 k2.i Hamilton 1 1 0 Allegheny 3 sii 1352 450.7 Kalamazoo 63 22 34.9 7 334 67 7 Wesleyan fi Albron 4 285 1770 442 5 Emory L Henry : 115 48 41 7 a 511 68.0 Wilkes ; ; 01 Kalamazoo 3 231 1313 437.7 1732 433 0 worcenter St 2 27 11 40 7 2 102 699 Mount Unwon :1 ;!70 Loras 4 287 Ohro Norlhern ” i : : Trinrty (Corm ) 1 76 432 432 0 MARGIN Wash 8 Jetl 3 2 1 :i i.: INT GAIN LOSS MARGIN Baldwrn-Wallace 3 4 2 TOTAL OEFENSE 0 5.00 Wrllrams 1 1 1 26 :.i YOS YDSPG Trinrty (Corm ) 150 Bald&wWallace i 1: 3 66 WlS -stout : 4 2: Trmrty (Conn. : 3 66 Occrdental i :z 2 Frammoham b t 2:: 1135 Wilkes 429 1430 Gettysburg 6 1: 0 3 33 Brockport St. : : Wdte&rg. 174 E 3 00 )VV; -La Crosse : 3 29 :: Unwon NY) i 194 436 1453 Ferrum. 1750 Neb Wesleyan 11 :i i 3 00 2 20 100 Middle b ury 1 175 533 177 7 FDlJ.Madrson 7 12 4 2 66 Albran. : : SI John’s (Mmn ) 2:: 6 9 4 2 50 Wesle : 2 10510.5 Wrlkes : 187 534 1780 Rensselaer 358 1790 Montclair St 2 5 2 50 Mame Mardrme 2 : z z: 113105 MIT. 2 6 ; 2 50 4 4 Brr’water (Mass ) 1:: 543 tat 0 MIT 565 1883 Orckrnsan 11 1: 6 1 7 2 33 :: 113 Westheld St i iao 578 1927 St Nurhcrr 4 12 4 1 5 7 33 Ferrum : : Merchant Ma& 3 190 October 4,1993 The NCAA News Page 13 n Championships dates and sites

Ice hockey Division Ill, 10th University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh 3/l l-l Z/94 - Men’s - Wrestling Division I, 47th St. Paul Civic Center 3/31 a Division I, 64th University of North Carolina, 3/17-19/9A St. Paul, Minnesota 4/2/94 Cross country Chopel Hill [University of Minnesoto, - Men’s - Twin Cities, host] Division II, 32nd University of Southern Colorado 3/36/94 Divsion I. 55th lehiah University 11/22/93 Division II, 9th To be determined 3/l l-12/94 Division III, 2 1 st University of Wisconsin, 3/A-5/94 Division II, 36th Universitv of Californio, Riverside 11/22/93 Stevens Point Division III. 1 1 th To be determined 3/l a-19/94 Division Ill, 20th Grinnell College 11/20/93 - Women’s - Rifle Division I, 13th Lehigh University 11/22/93 - Men’s and women’s - 3/10-12/94 Division II, 13th University of California, Riverside 11/22/93 National Murray State University Collegiate, Baseball Division III. 13th Grinnell CoIIeae 1 l/20/93 15th Division I, 48th Rosenblatt Memorial Stodium 6/3-l l/94 Omaha, Nebraska Field hockey Skiing lcreiahton Universitv. hostI Division I, 13th Piscatowoy, New Jersey 11/20-2 l/93 - Men’s and women’s - Division II, 27th Paterson Field 5/286/4/94 (Rutgers University, Montgomery, Alabamo Notional Sugorloof/USA 3/9-l 2/94 New Brunswick, host) [Valdosta State University, host) Collegiote, Carobassett Valley, Maine , Division II, 5th To be determined 11/7/93 41 St IColbv College, hostl Division Ill, 19th C. 0. Brown Stadium S/26-3 l/94 Battle Creek, Michigan Division Ill, 13th To be determined 1 l/12-13/93 Swimming (Albion College, host) Football - Men’s - Golf Division I-AA, Marshall Stadium 12/18/93 Divi ion I, 71 st University of Minnesota, 3/24-26/94 16th Huntington, West Virginia Twin Cities - Men’s - (Marshall University, host) Division I, 97th Stonebridge Country Club 6/ l-4/94 Division II, 3 1 st C. T. Branin Natatorium 3/9-l 2/94 McKinney, Texas Division II, 2 1 st BroIy Municipal Stadium 12/l l/93 Canton, Ohio (Southern Methodist University, host) Florence, Alabama (Ashland University, host) [University of North Alabama, host) Division II, 32nd Horbour Yacht and Country Club 5/l 7-20/94 Division Ill, 20th Williams College 3/l 7-19/94 Jacksonville, Florida Division III, 2 1 st Amos Alonzo Stagg BOWI 12/l l/93 fUniversitv of North Florida. host1 - Women’s - I- -~I- I , Division Ill, 20th King’s Grant Coun Club 5/l 7-20/94 ~~f!%~nd Old Dominion Division I, 13th lndiona University Natatorium 3/17-19/94 Fayetteville, North ‘;y orolino Ath etic Conference, cohosts) lndionopolis, Indiana flndiana Universitv. Bloominaton. host1 (Methodist Colleae. host1 Soccer - Women’s - - Men’s - Notional Or on Golf Club 5/25-28/94 Collegiate, Port“ pand, Oregon 12/3&5/93 Division I, 35th Davidson College 13th (University of Oregon, host] Division II, 22nd To be determined 12/3-4 or 4-5/93 Division Ill, 20th To be determined 11 /19-20 or 20-2 l/93 lacrosse - Women’s - - Men’s - Division I, 24th University of Maryland, 5/288,30/94 Division I. 12th To be determined 1 l/19&21/93 College Park Division II. 6th To be determined 1 l/13-14/93 Division II, 10th To be determined 5/l 4 or 15/94 Division Ill, 8th To be determined 1 l/13-14/93 Division Ill, 15th Byrd Stadium 5/29/94 Volleyball College Pork, Maryland (University of Maryland, College Park, host) - Women’s - Division I, 13th University of Wisconsin, Modison 12/16& - Women’s - 18/93 National Universi of Maryland, rjX$giote, College 7 ark S/2 1-22/94 Division II. 13th To be determined 12/46/93 Division Ill, 13th To be determined 11 /19-20/93 Division Ill, 10th Byrd Stodium 5/2 l-22/94 College Park, Maryland . Water polo (University of Morylond, host] - Men’s - Notional 8e$nmnt;n;y~I.9b’ Pool 11/26-28/93 Softball r2L$giate, - Women’s - a r orma Stote Universib, tong Division I, 13th Amoteur Softball Association 5/26-30/94 Beach, ond U.S Water Hall of Fame Stadium Polo, Inc.. cohostsl Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Divrston II, 13th To be determmed 5/l 9-22/94 Division Ill, 13th Ci of Salem Vir inia 5/l 9-22/94 [Ok Dominion Athletic Basketball Conference, host) - Men’s - Tennis Divrsion I, 56th Charlotte Coliseum A/2&4/94 - Men’s - Charlotte, North Carolina [University of North Carolina, Divrsion I, 1 10th University of Notre Dame 5/2 l-29/94 Charlotte, host) Division II, 32nd Carriage Club ond 5/l 3-l 9/94 Homestead Club Division II, 38th Springfield Civic Center 3/23-26/9A Konsos City, Missouri S ringfield, Massachusetts (Southwest Baptist University, host) (Springfield College and American University of Muine junior M&t Martin celeb~de~ International College, cohosts) ufter thP Black Bears rullitd to hvd Lake Su@rior Division Ill, 19th To be determined 5/l 6-23/94 Division Ill, 20th Sports Arena 3/18-19/94 Stute University, 5-4, in last season,‘s NCAA - Women’s - Buffalo, New York Division I, 13th University of Georgia 5/13-21/94 (Stote University College at Buffalo, host) l3iviGon I Men Ir IMPHockq Championship. Division II, 13th California State 5/l O-l 6/9A Polytechnic University - Women’s - Division II, 13th C. T. Branin Natatorium 3/9-l 2/94 Pomona, Californio Division I, 13th Richmond Coliseum 4/2-3/94 Conton, Ohio Division Ill, 13th To be determined 5/10-16/94 Richmond, Virginio (Ashland University, host) (Virginia Commonwealth University, host) Division Ill, 13th WiIlioms College 3/1012/94 Outdoor track Division II, 12th To be determined 3/23-26/94 - Men’s - Division III. 12th To be determined 3/ 18-l 9/94 Indoor track - Men’s - Division I, 73rd Boise State University 6/ l-4/94 Fencing Division I, 30th Indiana Hoosier Dome 3/l l-12/94 Division II, 32nd To be determined 5/25-28/94 Indianapolis, lndiona Division Ill. 2 1 st North Central College 5/2.5-3~19~ - Men’s and women’s - (Butler Universrty and USA Notional Brondeis University 3/l 8-22/94 Track ond Field, cohostsl - Women’s - Colleaiate. 50th Division II. 9th North Dakota State University 3/l l-12/94 Division I, 13th Boise State University 6/ 1-A/94 Gymnastics Drvrsron Ill, 10th University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh 3/l l-l 2/94 Division II, 13th To be determined 5/25-28/94 - Men’s - - Women’s - Division Ill, 13th North Central College 5/25-28/9A Notional University of Nebraska, Lincoln A/22-23/94 Division I, 12th lndiano Hoosier Dome 3/l l-12/94 Collegiate, 52nd Indianapolis, lndtono Volleyball - Women’s - (Butler University and USA - Men’s - Track and Field, cohosts) Notional Universitv of Utah 4/2 1-23194 Notionol Indiana University-Purdue 5/6-7/94 Collegiate, 13th Division II, 9th North Dokota State University 3/l l-12/94 Colleaiate.25th Universitv. Fort Wavne Page 14 The NCAA News October 4, 1993 Officiating videos available couflcil Set to review legislation Basketball officiating video Purchaw Odor Form cassettes are available from the NCAA OFFICIATING VIDEO CASSETTES b Continued from page 1 tee and Interpretations Committee NCAA for use in preparing for the actions, membership applications 1993-94 season. 6201 College Boulevard, Overland Park. Kansas 6621 l-2422 Telephone 913’339-1806 following standing and special and requests, and routine or non- Instructional videotapes for the committees: the Academic Require- controversial legislation. men’s and women’s games can be ments, Executive, Infractions Ap- One change in the fall meeting ordered by using the form that ame - peals, Legislative Review, Student- is that the Council no longer accompanies this story. The in- treet Athlete Advisory and Two-Year makes its appointments to fill va- structional tapes are available in ltyl.statemi College Relations Committees; the cancies on Council-appointed com- VHS format for $15. etephona Administrative Review Panel; the mittees in this meeting. Those The 1994 women’s instructional tuanMy Name of Video Cassette Format umt Pnce Amount Committee on Financial Aid and actions now will be taken in the video demonstrates the prin- Amateurism; the Committee on Council’s January meeting. ciple of verticality, post play and BlockIng. chargmg, hand checking. screenmg. Review and Planning; the Council In conjunction with the Council free-throw contact situations, in hanging on the nm. post play, prlmiple of Subcommittee on Initial-Eligibility sessions, the Administrative Com- addition to miscellaneous situa- Waivers; the Special Committee to mittee and the Nominating Com- tions. Hanging on the rim. prmc~ple of veWality. rough low-post play, coach and bench decorum, tauntmg Review 1990 Convention Proposal mittee will conduct separate The 1994 men’s instructional No. 24 (graduation-rate disclosure), meetings October 10. video highlights blocking and Traveling. vetliealltyy, post play. screening and and the Special Committee to Re- The highlights of the Council charging, hand checking, screen- miscellaneous vlolations (40 min ) view Student-Athlete Welfare, Ac- meeting will be reported in the ing, hanging on the rim, post play, 1 eel Men’8 Inotructian Bkckmg, charging, continuous motion. cess and Equity. October 18 issue of The NCAA the principle of venicality, and miscellaneous vialatlons. court-wveraoe philosophy (50 mm.) Also on the agenda are the usual News, and the complete minutes traveling, in addition to other spe- lwo Men’s Instruction review of governmental affairs of the meeting will appear in a cial situations. Intentional IOU. screenmg. pnncipte of wlicallty. VHS $15.09 post play (50 mm) activities, Administrative Commit- November issue. Videotapes of one of the men’s 1989 Men’s Instruction or one of the women’s regional Five seuands cloeelv auarded. three seconds In officiating clinics can be pur- chased for $20 after November 8. Basket lntelference, goaltending. Intentional toul Montclair State baseball In their ninth year, the regional Prlnclple of verticality post play. free-throw clinics are administered by the reprimanded for damages NCAA Basketball Officiating Corn- Blcckmg. charging. post play, screening and VHS $15.00 mittee. All supervisors of officials, spewal situations (20 mm) after discussions with representa- officials and a full-time head or lOB2Women ’0 Instructlon The NCAA Division III Baseball Post play. screening, traveling. venlcallty and VHS $1500 Committee has reprimanded the tives of the college. assistant coach from each school block charge (25 rn;nJ In addition to the public tepri- in Division I are required to attend lQB1Womm ’a InstructIon Montclair State College baseball Player c~nlrot, blockmg, traveling. screening. VHS $1500 team for damages that occurred at mand, the committee also decided one of the clinics for 199394. principle of veltlcallty and post play (21 mm.) 1990Women ’sInstruction the headquarters hotel at the 1993 to withhold transportation and The women’s clinics will be con- $15.00 Block-charge. illlrgal screen. past play, VHS NCAA Division III Baseball Cham- per diem reimbursement to the ducted by Marcy Weston, secretary- handcheckmg. principle of vetifc.slity. rntentionel foul and traveling (16 mln ) pionship last spring in Battle college for seven individuals- rules editor of the NCAA Women’s 1989 Women’s InstructIon VHS $1500 Creek, Michigan. the number of rooms that were Basketball Rules Committee and Traveling, chargmg. blocking. screemng and post play (I 6 mm.) The committee took its action damaged. Also, Montclair State coordinator of women’s basketball 1968Womon ’sInstructIon VHS $15.W paid the hotel for the damages officiating. Weston will be assisted Airborne shooter. three-potnt Reid goal, charging. after receiving reports from the blocking, post play and screenmg (20 min.) Stouffer Battle Creek Hotel and incurred. by Bill Stokes, supervisor of off% Mm’s Cllnlc (lS93 ) 1.5 hours VHS S20.00 cials for the Metropolitan Colle- AvaIlable affer November 8. 1993 giate Athletic Conference, the Atlantic Coast Conference and Ex-assistant coach sanctioned the Big South Conference. The men’s clinics will be con- The NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Com- tions toward the crowd were ducted by Henry 0. Nichols, secre- mittee publicly has reprimanded unacceptable. tary-rules editor of the NCAA Terry Mangan, a former assistant “The committee recognizes that Men’s Basketball Rules Committee men’s lacrosse coach at Washing- participants in championship com- and coordinator of men’s basket- ton College (Maryland). pet&on may experience certain ball officiating. Nichols will be All noncredlt-card order forms must be accompanied bv varsonal said William E. check or money order NO C O.D. orders acc~pred li%hlp to’ TOTAL frustrations:’ assisted by Don Shea, a former address 16 dlfferenl than above address. please list on a separate AMOUNT The sanction comes as a result Sctoggs, assistant athletics director Division I basketball official. pkwe of paper ENCLOSED of Mangan’s actions during the at the University of North Carolina,

Instructional video cassettes l Mqor credit card semifinal contest of the 1993 Chapel Hill, and chair ofthe com- from previous years and from past Card Number NCAA Division III Men’s Lacrosse mittee. “Such frustrations, how- Expiration Date clinics also can be purchased by Signature (required for credkard order) Championship. The committee de- ever, should not escalate to an using the accompanying form. tennined that Mangan’s public ac- unsportsmanlike level.” Lengthy testimony presented in Drake wrestling suit

U.S. District Judge Harold Vietor which in effect limits the squad terns over the decline of collegiate heard testimony September 27 in size. Scholarships in all but one wrestling. Noting that the number a lawsuit asking for a temporary “Drake has effectively accommodated the (male) men’s spvrt can be divided, allow- of NCAA wrestling programs has injunction to prevent Drake Uni- stuo!ents’ interest. ” ing mote athletes to take part, he fallen from 374 in 1980 to 265 now, versity from eliminating its wrest- said. Kerr said wrestling has become a ling program. “You’re saying there are more convenient activity to drop because Attorney Inga Bumbry Langston The suit, filed by five wrestlers, n opportunities for males than fe- it is defined as a nonrevenue sport contends elimination of the pro- males?” Drake attorney Jim and has no female counterpart gram violates their constitutional Swanger asked. At the same time, Kerr said, rights and also Title IX. Drake could show that Drake violated offer proper accommodation.” “That’s correcti’ King replied. participation in wrestling has in- officials say financial constraints Title IX. “Drake has effectively accom- When Drake announced its de- creased at the youth and postcol- forced the move and contend the Arguing for the wrestlers, attor- modated the students’ interests,” cision to drop wrestling on March legiate level and retnained stable school still offers males ample ney Lawrence Marcucci contended she said. 11, officials said the school could in high schools. opportunity to participate in sports. that Drake was indeed violating Evidence presented at the hear- no longer afford the program. “I’m in mankind’s oldest sport, After hearing 6% hours of testi- Title IX because it gives more ing shows that Drake is spending Marcucci, however, noted that and I’m afraid it’s just going out mony that included an appearance scholarship money to women ath- $967,000 on scholarships for five aside from scholarship money and the window,” said Kerr, president by University of Iowa wrestling letes than to men athletes, even women’s sports and $824,000 on salaries, wrestling cost Drake of the National Wrestling Coaches ’ coach Dan Gable, Vietor said he though there are more male par- scholarships for six men’s sports. $40,000 fast season. Association. would rule within two weeks, ac- ticipants. Currently, the percentage of ath- That figure is “infinitesimal” Cable said Drake officials asked cording to The Associated Press. “Dropping the wrestling pro- letes at Drake is 65-35 in favor of compared with the university’s over- him a few years ago to help in “I don’t think anybody in this gram exacerbates the level of vio- men, testimony showed. all budges he said. their effort to lure the headquar- room is the least bit happy about lation,” Marcucci said. Drake athletics director Lynn H. Marcucci also elicited testimony ters of USA Wrestling from Still- the elimination of the wrestling Attorneys for Drake countered King said more scholarship money showing that while Drake spent water, Oklahoma, to Des Moines. program at Drake:’ Vietor said in that even without wrestling, men is available for women because $136,000 on wrestling scholarships “I don’t understand why in a his Des Moines, Iowa, courtroom. still have plenty of chances to the NCAA allows more scholar- last year, those athletes paid the short period of time they’re going Vietor also said that while he compete in athletics at the school. ships in those sports than in the university $215,000 to cover costs from wanting to be the No. 1 insti- was sorry to see that wrestling Citing similar cases, attorney Inga men’s sports offered at Drake. beyond their scholarship money. tution in wrestling in this country programs across the country are Bumbry Langston said courts have King also noted that in three of Gable and California State Uni- to eliminating it,” Gable said. “Be- being dropped, he would not grant ordered a sport reinstated “only the women’s sports, each athlete versity, Bakersfield, coach T. J. cause of the dramatic change, I’m the injunction unless the plaintiffs when they found schools didn’t must receive a full scholarship, Kerr both told Vietor of their con- very confused.” October 4, 1993 The NCAA News Page 15

Presidents

Commission calls for membership structure study Following in a wsolution adopted by the NCAA Presidents Commission at its .%ptabcr 2829 mwting in Kansas City, Missouri: ) Continued from page 1 the (;oniniission’s rolling thrrr- issues that have arisen in addition year strategic plan, rt=portcd this to those topic-s. Resolution greater frderation in the Assc,ci;l- time that it does not intend to For exaniplr, additional actions t ion br by institution, rather than idrntify a specific. rlrw topic for may be warrarurtl in the areas of Whcrcas, thr intcrcotlrgiatc athlctirs rvcnts of the NCAA by sport. thr time period ending with the presidential authority and institu- rnrrnbei~ irlstitutions must rrflrct high institutional and social 1!)!a7 (:onvcntion. tional control (the 1993 Convcn- St;lrldil& Orl ttlt* [Jilll of plilycrs, (()a( hcs aIld slaft, and Instead, the subcommittrr br- tion focus); financial conditions Strategic plan Whrreas, the Presidents (:ommission of the NC:AA on previous licvrs that it will bc appropriate in (1994); studcnt~athlete welfare, a<-- occasions has expressed its concern about the dcchnc of thrse .l‘hr (:ommission’s Srcbcomniit- that year to revirw and take any ccss and rquity (I 995). and ethics standards and, specifically, about the increasing lcvrls of violrnce ree 011 Strategic Planning, which ncccssary additional actions in and integrity issues (199(j), as well in intercollegiate athletics; and recommends in rhr Edl meeting the topics identified for earlier as the membership structure and Whereas, the current football season provides disturbing each yrar the next major topic in years in the plan, as well as on gender-equity concerns. evidence of rhe disregard of sportsmanship and adhcrentr to essenrial srandards of competitive and personal conduct; Now, Therefore, Be It Kesolved, that the Presidents Commission depkJrt? this cwrldiJtt iilld calls upon every member inStitlltiOn, cvcry confcrcncc and cvcry appropriate entity of the NCAA to

In othm actzonsa1 ils SqWmbrr 2X-29 meeting in and decisions of the Presidents COnmliSSicJrl. take prompt action to plmrvrnt any rccurrrnrc; and Kansus City, Miwwi, the Presidtnts Commi.won: Be It Further Resolved, that every campus CEO is requested to Financial conditions convene a meeting with the athletics dirrctor and the football n Reviewed the legislation submitted for thr In addition, the Commission officers, in their coaching staff to discuss the stalldards of drponment expected by I!)94 <:onvcntion, as well as an analysis of propos- capacity iis thr g~c~Lip’s executive committee, re- rhe university: and als that might erode the progress made in thr viewed the seven longer-trrm concepts that were Be It Further Resolved, that confcrcncr officrrs instruct reform rnovcmrnt in recent years. The <:omrnis- developrd by thr Special Committee to Keview football oflicials to take decisive, prompt and, when necessary, sion took trntativc actions to suppon or oppose a Financial <:onditions in Intercollegiate Athletics. severe steps to enforce proper compctitivc hrhavior; and numbrr of proposals but authorized its four In order to assure continuing attention to those Be Ir Further Resolved, that the NCAA Football R~JICS Committee officrrs to take final action in thar regard after the recornniendations, thr Commission’s executive should promptly review the present rules governing proprr NCAA Council’s October 1 lL13 actions are known. ronimittrr: tlepolm~ent to ascertain their efficacy and severity; and It is the Commission’s basic intent m join with the n Rrferrrd to the NCAA Committee on Finan- Be Ir Further Kesolved, that the Prcsidcnts Commission asks the Council in opposing proposals that clearly would cial Aid and Amateurism the proposals regarding (Zoarhes Association to advise the Commission add grants-in-aid, add roaches or cxtcnd playing tic&based aid models and the concept of keeping and thr NCAA rrgarding appropriate means of maintaining seasons. initial grant-in-aid limiralions but eliminating sportsmanship and high levels of proper competitive conduct; n Heard a presenrarion by Henry 0. Nichols, overall limitations in football and basketball. and secretary-rules editor of the NCAA Men’s Basket- n Referred to rhe NCAA Recruiting Committee Be It Finally Resolved, that the urgency of this matter 10 the ball Kules (:ornmittrr and national coordinator of the possible elimination of off-campus recruiting NCAA and its member institutions bc emphasized at every men’s basketball officiating, on efforts that have and rhe idea of limitations on off-campus housing opportunity and by every means. hem madr and additional steps that might be during a prospect’s official visit to campus. taken to address concerns regarding trash-talking, n Urged the NCAA Legislative Review Corn- taunting, benrh decorum and crowd behavior at rrlittrt. 10 continue and increase its cffotts to basketball games. simplify or clirninatr NCM Iegislarion in appro- H Keceived reports from its Subcommittee on priate areas. colora~, Miafni (Floaa) Minority Affairs; the Special Committee to Review n Noted that the concept of five years of Student-Athlete Welfare, Access and Equity; the eligibility for all student-athletes will be voted set policies on fighthg Presidents Commission Liaison Committee, and upon at the 1994 Convention and did not need the Executive Director Search Committee. committee rcfcrral at this time; ftnther, the Presi- Football coaches at the Univer- thing of his players. n Rrceived a presentation by the Athletic dents Commission will strongly oppose that pro- sity of Colorado and University of Colorado President Judith E. N. 1~~~~sT;lsk Force-which includes representatives posal. Miami (Florida) announced new AIbino said she had met with both of the Division I-A Athlrtic Directors Association, n Ageed rhar the study of thr rnrmbership policies for their teams September McCartney and athletics director the Division I-AA Football Issues Committee, the structure that has been proposed by the Commission 2X in the wake of a bench-clearing Bill Marolt National Association of Basketball Coaches, the will include an opportunity for members to propose brawl between the two squads the “I am deeply disappointed by American Football Coaches Association, the ColL development of different minimum numbers of previous Saturday. what happened:’ she said. “.. ..I Irgiatc Commissioners Association and the Collcgc required sports for men and for women in all Colorado coach Bill McCartney have approved the coach’s swift, divisions, as well as to pursue the concept of greater Football Association--lhat primarily emphasized and Miami (Florida) coach Dennis strong and appropriate aCticJIlS to the desire ofroarhcs and athletics administrators flexibility in classifying sports, including liberalized Erickson said the new policies will ensure that no such incidents oc- 10 be iIlVcJkd more effectively in the deliberations access 10 the Division I-A football ckissification. not bc retroactive to the September cur in rhe future? 25 game in which dorcns of players (Colorado senior captain Ron from both reams’ benches ran onto Woolfork said of the incident, Ib!Ii.flOl?i~ the field 10 join in thr fighting, “With the magnitude of the game, according 10 The Associared Press. tempers flared up and it just got Sevrll Miami (Florida) players out of hand. We’ve Iearned our Committee explores relationship with Commission and fivr frOll1 C:cJkJradO were lesson, we’ve just got to IIlcJVe on: cjc~~ttd. Keep players on bench F Continued from page 3 for other conferences. iry. YOLI Itl;Iy ~liIVl7 confcrciiccs .I’he fight was one of scvrral “We are not trying 10 Ihrow new doing these things already. Thrrc that ocrurrrd during garncs that In the wake of the game, Erick- rules 0LiI there:’ Whirronib said. may be some grear modrls 0~1 weekrnd. Fights also occ m-red in soli said his top priority was to Stop kCtiVe :lIld ClpatiVe efforls ~hrOlJgh “WC support the notion offlexil)il- there that WC’ would like to have thl cc games involving Atlantic players from leaving the bench the program to sewe as an rx;implr ity alid the notion of accountabil- made available for others to see:’ Coast (Zonferencc triinls. Howcvrr, area to join a fight. bcc.;luse the Colorado-Miami (Flor- “We’re going to Stilll grttirig ida) game was nationally tclcvisrd, COlltrO~ Of th;Jt type Of ~hillg~’ he ir attraclrd Ihr lion’s StliiI? Of at- s;iicl. tention across the UJlJrl~ry. (:oarhes of several Atlantic ln other actions rrt ifs .%ptumhur 26-2X mrftzng in n Iicard iJ report from Betty 1~.Norne, NCAA (:oast (Zonference teams made sirn- One-game suspension Kansas City, Missoun, thu Minon’/y Opportunrtws and Founclatioll program coorclinalor, on the N<:AA ilar statements after fights Septcrn- Intuw\t.\ (,innmittff: Lift-Skills Program, for thr purpose ofcxamining The new guidrlillcs AI (Colorado her 25 in three games: hkc the possibilitirs of utiliritlg the diversity prow;1111 and Miami (Floricla) include ;I University vs. LJnivt-rsity of Vir- n A~lnounc-ccl ;I joint nlrcting with the NCM within the life-skills program. olic-game suspension for any ginia: Llniversity of North hrohrlil, (;ommittee ~JU Wornrn’s Athletics in January to W Mel with Ursula R. Walsh, N(:AA clir t’( Ior 01 I>liiyrU leaving the IIt-nrh to partic- (:hapel I Iill, vs. North Carolina tl~lt,rmlnr, how the two ( cmnnillees m,iy ronsolidatc rcscarc h, regarding NCAA dara on Proposition 4X ipalr in a fight. !-&ate University, and University of cfforls. ‘l‘he C:ommittcc is p;iIlic uIarIy interested iIi and Cl~1‘I‘Clll graduation 1‘;11rS as they ICl;ltr IO <:lJiIChrS at both sc BOONS de- Maryland, College F%rk, vs. Vir- dctclrnining how the exposurr of women’s sports minority stiicirnt-:lrhletes. clined to take action against play- girli; Polytrc-hnir Insritute. in ccrtaili communities iliay scrvc lo srrengthcn n Agreed to rrcltLrs’ approval from the N(ZM ers who wcrc involved in the brawl Dukr coach Barry Wilson was gender equity at N(:AA membclm illstitulions. The ~~OllllCi~ ol‘a study rcgiirding the number ofethnic that prompted thr a(-ric)ns. the most emphatic of the hqq~r’s committrr met with I&hard A. Rasmussen of the minorities currently serving as graduate assistan “I looked rxlensively at the coaches in warning against a reoc- Llnivcrsity Athlrlir Association, a member of the football coaches in Division 1-A. (garnrj film and I lookrd 10 see if currence of fighting. <:ommittrc on Women’s Athlrtic s. n Agreed to explore the concepr of rreating WC had anyone flaffantly out of Wilson revraled during the n (;onlinued organi,arional efforts in the programs similalm 10 the ACE Fellow program, control where hc wasjeopardizing ACC’s weekly coaches’ teleconfer- c r-ration of thr pilot diversity workshop. The recognition programs for institutions 1tia1 have the health of others:’ McCartney ence September 29 that he mailed committee is intrrviewing companies that have advanced minority cnhancernent, and ways to said in a news release. “Ijust didn’t a letter outlining his feelings on submitted bids, and committrc rhair Charles further ethnic-minotity and women’s officiating see it. I just in good conscience the situation to the other head Whitcomb said rhe committee likely would choose rnhanrement couldn’t suspend anybody unless 1 coaches. the company within the next few months. suspended everybody.” Erickson said virtually the same See Brawl, page 17 b Page 16 The NC&4 News October 4,1993

Calendar Young named athletics director at Yeshiva OcwJlJtl 7 (;ommitlr~ otJ AIhlclics (:rnifJr :,IJOI~ rLJll& Stephen Young, athletics director and 0, lot’c~l IO Nomin:uirJg (:ommirlcc K.anh.~b (:ity, chair of physical education at Columbia Missouri Grammar and Preparatory School in New Kanh:~b (:iIy, York (:ity for six years, has been named Missouri athletics director at Yeshiva. Young succeeds Mill-cw Idand, Florida Gil Shevlin, who retired from the post after Infrxtions Appc‘ds (1ommirtrr PhorrJix seven year-s. SlJcc Lll (:onJtnirrrr 10 Overbcr Implemrnra~ Kmsab (:ity. Young also will serve ah chair of the physi- Iion (Jf the N( :AA lrJiIJat~Eligil,ility (:lr;lring~ Missouri cal education departments at Yeshiva and h,JLlX Stern Collrge for Women, which sponsors Kansas (:iry, teams in basketball and tennis. Missouri I’rcsidrnrs (:ommibsion Excculivr (:ornmiIrrc Young Denver Young srrved on the board of the New Iqislxivr Krvirw (:ommiIrec GJronarl,J, York State Basketball Coaches Association and as basketball (::itilcJrnu commissioner for the Indcprndent Schools Athletic I.rague and Klc hmond, Girls Independent Schools Athletic Lca~e. He also was vice- Virfiini;t chair of the New York State Association of Indrpcndent Schools O( Ir,l,c-l‘ Yb'Jtii Olympic Sponr I .i;iivm (1ommitrcc New Yot~k (:ity Athletics Directors (~ommittcc. o,lol,cr 'Ji-aiL SlJcci.11 (:runn~irtrr ,o Study Kulcs Fcdrr:l~,~~rl (:hic.igo t,y S~J,Jll Kan\;ls (:iry. Missouri Men’s basketball assistants-Uifl Snuthcml (:alifoJ ni.1.. .Sharon Dawley

n;lnwct .Ibbist;ul( co:u h ;,I Navy.. Carol Owens hitrtl ds rcstri~tcd~r:ll.tiiti~s coach at Michigan. ..Shelly Respecki n;~rnrcl at Indiana (Rnnsylv;mia) afrer sclving :Js Men’s golf assistant ~ Joseph Wolo- Kevin Gibson n;w~rrl rlt (:olby-S;n+ an ;lssirtant at Mcnowrtl Junior High nowski joirwd the statt a~ Utica l‘rc h. ycr.. C:hriscy Glover namccl a~ W.rshing- School in Erie. Rnnsylv;mJ~, in IOOZ- Woman’s golf-Cindi PadRctr narrlcd fr~fi dnd 1.w. whcrc she :JtuJ will scrvc ;,s 93 Melanee Wagener. a four-yrxr brad coach at Texas-l%n Arncrican. .wisI;inl women’s voltcylJ.\ll co:Jc tJ pt9y.3 al Virginia, namrd absibI.uiI coat h Men’s ice hockey assistants- Bob Di- Chrryl Kennedy. head co;rch a~ ;II Amrrican. Masi, Chris Donovan and Steve Mattson Stipp-1 y Rock for Ihr {,a~[ five FC:ISOII~, Men’s and women’s cross country- named c oarhcs at St. Micharl’s. iiwrrrd lop assistant c oath ;it (2 Starr Richard Mark hired at NewJrrsry’ltich. Man’s lacrosro assistants--David Fa- NcJnhridjic. Men’s and women’s cross country os- race namtd assirrarrt coach ;Jt Washing- Kevin “Bo” Kuncr, .lasisr;rnr

Polls

I? I’1,,1,~rr~Jlr (4-O) ...... si I?. Anado St (S-t) ...... 36 X. I!( 1 Kivrlslde (!lLP) ...... 4x2 13. R,dl St. w4)...... 4n 19. W.,yw Sf. (NrtJ.) (4-O) ...... :it !I. Cal St I.lJ.5 Ant&? (12-Z)...... 434 II Mb tqpn CS-II)...... II) 14. Ix: IL,V,S (2-l) ...... 26 IO. tl;, S,Julllerll (X-O, ...... :49 5 I5 (bllncrti~ 111l ’i-‘L-t)...... 38 I5 N,JntJern f :,,I,, (4-01 ...... 24 I I Mmkato St. (tli-0)...... XH tti. hlK~‘\ (6-y) ...... “x tti (:r.l,,d V.,IIry SL (J-I) ...... ‘LI I2 (::,I St. I :tlic 0 (I 1-f;) ...... :w 2 17. New H.ur,,>sh,rr (i-L’, ...... 2.5 17. Altmny 4 ((;:I.) (4-O) ...... I ‘I I:1 Nrhr;,\k.l-Otnaha (IO-J) ...... :I1 ‘L IX. Willi.~n) X- M.~ry (6.2) ...... I!1 IH NcJdlrrn Mic t, (4-O) ...... IO 14. Wrd ‘Tcx. A&M (12-t)...... ‘307 I ‘I sy1 .I‘ ,,se (:fL’t) ...... III to Imo,-Kt,yrJr (3-O)...... 7 15. (:vnual Mu St. (14-3,...... 2G 20. v:i. ~:~llr,,n,,1lw~:~llll (‘<-‘I) ...... Ii “II. kc,\, Tcx. St. (‘L-2) ...... 5% tti. (:a1 Pdy Po,lIcJllil (‘f-5) ...... 25 7 17. I ;*rn,Jd (7-l) ...... ““‘4 Division I-AA F&ball Division I W~~men’sVolleyball IX (;‘,11,1011 (111-0) ...... 202 I‘tJr I’artlik;,rs top 25 N(:AA I)lvl\iorJ I I II<. .Sprh Nrrr\v~ k ,r,,> “5 N(:AA I)tw.~rr~ 1’) MI< t,11;;,,, ‘f’u h ( t 2-5) ...... I”4 I-AA t,J~,~l~.\tl ,,.,,,,I\ ct,,cs,,ct, SqJtc,nt>~~t 5. wolll~,,‘~ “,Jll~ylJall ,t’.,r,,r 1t,r1,,,gt1 s,p’lll- ?I,. f ;r;mrl (:.,,lvnrl I I?-3)...... I tfi wlltl lcccnlil\ io ~~.4lcllltll~u~~ .ulcl tJo11,1\ hrr 2X .u sclc~trcl by lhc Anwril .u~ Vollcy- 21 Sc,,1r,111.1St ((i-3)...... 97 l,.ilt (:oarhc\ Asw~~at~o~l, with ~r-~~ntrl* iI1 I, ,M.lr\t!.dl (:cLo) ...... I .5x! Y2 AllpJ”L”“.‘ (S.D.) (I i-5) ...... Hh 2. Irt.ltl<, (:uI)...... I .I’22 tJ”“ll’tl~u’* .,lld ,JO,,,b. ‘1”. Oi,klwd (14-0, ...... m ::. Dd:lw‘ll I’ (I-0) ...... I.420 I, I .<,,,a I~c.d, 3. I III-O) ...... I.? 1x >I. Nc,rtt, Ha. (I?-I) ...... 7J ? I!(.l”A (!lLIl) ...... l.I’l’l 1. Mlddll. ‘I C’JJJJ.Sf. (2-l) ...... 1.317 25 h&r.-St. I.oui+ (133)...... 57 ‘9. lro, 51 (4-O)...... I .-T7 :i I’cxas (!I- I ) ...... I I :%I D&i&n III Womm’s Volleyball 0 No,1hc:,at I ..I (%I)...... I __“34 4. st:,lllorrt (7-2)...... 1.07!1 I hr ‘T.r< hlhara trat, 15 N(:AA I)ivuf,n III 7 (,.t SulJltll~rlJ (3-l) ...... l.lO’l 5. Nc.tJr.,\ka (I I-I) ...... I ,0 ”-.5 ,“ollll.n’s VotlrytLIll team * ftlJol,gt’ 8 Y~,llll~\tOW,, St. (‘r-t)...... I.107 Ii. tlriyt,.,lll Yor,,1p (‘I-I)...... !lH!I Sq~fc,iJlxr 2X ,,\ *elected t)y ,l,r Anlrric .J,, !I. Nnnh (:.rn,. AK- I I:\-0) ...... l.(l” I 7. Kentucky (I?-II) ...... !I72 Vdryhall (:o.u ha Awn i.ilwn. wth RY c)r~ls IO. s,lrlJlr~lct (3-l)...... !I10 8 S~Jl,ttlrl I, f :.,I (8-Z) ...... x70 in paieiith~w* and point*. I I. N,,tit,rn, IOW;I (2.2)...... 825 9 Pen,, St. (10.2) ...... 7% I. wil>hirlflou (MO.) (I’)-1)...... ‘LHh 12. Mrn~tana (3-t) ...... 71% IO. Padi< cc:31 ) (C-4)...... 766 2. Jlrrli.lla (I l-2)...... ‘Lx5 19 Stqhen F Aurt~,, (3-l) ...... 725 I I. ~:OtOr.at~r (IO-‘2) ...... 75H 3. IK: S.,ll Ihcg~ (0.4) ...... ‘?.51 1’1 II,,IIcI:, AIL!vf (TO) ...... 597 1”. Ii,: s.rtm Barb. (9-I) ...... 717 1 ‘l‘tl,Jlllas MOJC (I:l-:i)...... ‘?L’ti I’, K,ctllrmJd (%I)...... 574 I3 Ohicl Sf (X-P) ...... 040 i SI Benrrli< I I’,-?) ...... ”_ I ti Iii. (:cl,ll.,t I..la. (2-I) ...... 5l!l I1 Ncrwc Iklmc~ (to-:i, ...... 6?7 ti Wis -Wl,ilcwntcr t I?-‘?) ...... Iti 17. Al~~rr‘,, St. (:tLI, ...... 4fili I5 (:rorgl:l (12-I)...... 51‘2 7. WiL~rtlh~J~h (15-l) ...... I13 IX W,tllaln (G May (Z-2) ...... 400 Ifi. Fl0rid.l (I l-2)...... 50? x ~dl,l c.llnr>tt (21-3)...... 12’) I’1 McNw\c SI. (P-2) ...... :iw, 17. W.I~tIlIl~1U1l ?+I t'b-t ) ...... I?'4 ‘I Illl.,r:l (20-4) ...... II7 ‘20. IllinrJi\ 9. (%I I...... :i:iti IX Al.,/ot,i, St (n-2) ...... 107 IO. I<,,< t,,wr, Inst. (‘l-3) ...... I0 7 ‘II 4mJlt,rJll-tI.K (+-cl)...... SIX I’1 (:c,tor;ldcJ SI c 10-l) ...... :w1 I I. Mc,Jl (Minll ) (t-7) ...... I6 ‘l-l. W~\l~ll, Kv (‘1-I ) ...... I50 23. Illuwi* (i-5)...... I !m, 2.1. I~Jy0l.i .MI1rvI,lOl,,,, (10-3) ...... Xfl I5 Wi* -F.A,, (:l;,,rc (l4-.1j ...... I I Division II Fourball ?5 Ihkc (IO-?) ...... Ii’\ I’t,c- ‘ot, 20 N(:Ah I),vI\,<,c, II t~,~,tlJ;,ll Mm’s Water Ydo ~~.tnis fhr~r,,glr .Sct~lcnrlwr L’li. w,tll Jrc~rrd\ ill Diviaiun II Women’s Volleyball pm’~nrt,~\~r .,,ld ,Jcrllll\ I IJc I ,I( hikria t,JtJ ?5 NCAA Iliviricr,, II I Nc,lttl I);,k Sl 1:Ul) ...... HO w.Ollll~rl’\ VOllrytdl 1e :, 111\ ttll,,,,Ktl 2. Nor~lt At., (:Ul) ...... 7f, sq’I~JlJl,cl 2x ,,\ rcl,xtrd IJ? ltlr h111c111 ‘llJ ‘1 N,w tl.wc,, (‘1-O) ...... ,711 \‘~JtlcylJ.,ll f :o.u t,r* As*cJc idliorn. wttl ~(1, nrttr I S,.,IIICJ~~. IOO, 2 Swttw 11 (:.dilrJ, ma. ‘15. :1 I\Jlll:llrd Sl. 1’1-0) ...... 70 111pairnltlncr .tnd IJoirll\ 3 (:.,lilol Neil. ‘Ill. 4. U:I A, 84. 5 Iflr~li~ ((:.,I ). -I t1;Jmpl”!l 1.1-II) .... Ii:4 I. Rlrmt,lm M,Cll. (I i-0) ...... I2 1 +Xl: (3, UC Saru., R.,rlJa~;l. 7fi, 7 II<: IwilJc., 70. X. 0. NcJrttJ IL,k (J-II), ...... ,131 ?. (:.~l SI ILtkvt\lic.ld (l&O) ...... H 7 I’qJp~ntirJc, fi5: !I. I rrn~ I%c.a II Sl;l,r. till: IO. UC: 7 Irdi.m.r (RI.) ( I-II) ...... 5li ‘4 1’11111.111~1St. (I I~?) ...... -IX1 S.,n I)ir#u. 55: I I Nay. 50: I2 l’rin,rtolJ. 45: R M.,rrk:,tr>St 1.1-o) ...... ‘II 1 M~llqJotit.,,, Sf (H-I)...... i45 I3 M:,sr.l~tlr,rcll*. 40: I4 I If: n.w,r. ‘I’\: I5 !I v.,Ido\I:l 41 (:I- I ) ...... 47 5 NonI, I),,11 Sf (!I-4)...... 51’1 I~wwn. :\I. I Ii Ai, F‘cJ,cc~ “Ii. 17. (IIC) stlt’t”” y IO. (:c~,t~al Okt., (4-O) 4fi ti N<,llllrrll (.,Jl,J (15-l) ...... :>1 ‘2 t&k and A, k.rn\.wtxtle tb k. 15: ICI. llru kdl. I I. FClll\ St t:1-o-l, :i!t 7 IY: I).l\ir (6-l) ,,,,,,, I% t I: 20. Krltt.ilKl*. 5. October 4, 1993 The NCAA News Page 17 NCAA Record

b Continued from page 16 (:ollr~t tram rat II wrrk thih sea.vm. Louise sports information orsistonts- O’Neal, athletics director at Wellesley, Mirharl Mryrr. prcviourly \lxms infor- narnrri the 10th rccipicnt of the Eastcrt, Men’s and women’s skiing assistant- Lockhart named faculty representative nution director at (:arholic and (:harlrs- Collcgc Athle1ic Confcrencr’s Katherinr John Quackenbos named assistant Al- Barbara Day Lockhart, a professor in the 1011 Southcrrl. narnrd abwc Iale dirrctol Lcy Award, giver, annually “to honor at, pine c oar h al Cblby-Sawyrr. college of physical education at Brigham .)I Ir1c11ar1.1 (~~llrl~ylvat~ia)...Denisc Eastern collcgc athletics administrator Men’s soccer- Lee Ellis, vi< r~prrsi~ Young, has been named there as faculty O’Meally n.mlcd assistant SIl) ;It Morgan who rxcmplifier thr valurr and charac dmc of sales for F. Walrrr Lavrr & Son in athletics representative. She replaces Clayne St.,tc. whcrc rhr ;,I*0 will scrvc a\ wonts rrristic \ displayrd by Kathrnnr Lry:‘ Lry Fairpon, New York. named at Utica. cn’p tcnnir uuch Jacquclyn “J. J.” wa?, <3,1r ot thr four,drrs ufthe ~:oI,,rr,rs~ Men’s soccer assistants- David Carter Jensen, who served in that post for 18 years Spright x (rptrcl rl qm,~b Ir,lor,natio,, sion of Intcrcollcpiatc Athletics for namrd assistant coach at Iltic;, Trc II before bcroming the institution’s athlrtics IIiIct rnlllp posltiot, .,t llt.,h. Women .Tony Corbett hirrd 3s men‘b abs~s~dnt director. Strength and conditioning coaches- Amy R&y, w~mcn‘s basketball roach at Washington and Lrr Charles Dean I.orkhart scrvcd for four yrars as director Kevin McMullan givrn Irr\ponsibility .,brl,.,ll C’O‘LI 11. Womrn’c Raskethall Championship rim Women’s soccer-Leah Furss named physical education brforr going to Brigham Assistant trainers-Barbara Pauly, tll- Tara VanDrrvrer. hcxl womrn’~ head coach at Utica Tcch...Brian Le- Young. For the past year, she has been a Lockhart I,r:,d rraincr at Indianapolis for thr ~:LSI b;,skrth;,ll c <,a, h at Stanford, namrd nosky hired at Indian;, (Pum~ylvania) mcmbcr of Brigham Young’s faculty comtnit- fivr yr;,rs. named assn~ iate a1hlrtic s hrxl , oath of the I!)!)4 lJSA womrn’> afirr serving JS an assistant mrn‘b coach tee on athletics. tl~;,illrl~ at Marshall... Joanne Smith World (:hampionrhip and (bodwill thrrr I~fwc that pm~wm was disrorl~ A world-class speed skater in the 196Os, Lockhart compctcd for joined the traininp staff .,I Wabhingtor, (::llllrs Ir:Lrnb tinrrrd in 1991. the LJnited States at the 1960 and 1964 Olympic Games. She sewed and I.cr a5 an assiatn1.. Steve Pritchard Women’s soccer assistants-Sur from 1988 to 1990 as a consultant to the President’s (:ouncil on pit krd a5 assistant trainer at St John’\ Behmr namrd at Wabhington and lee. (NW YIN k). whrre shr albo will setvz as assistant Physical Fitness and Sports, and was national commissioner for Etc. CONFERENCES women’s Iacrossr c oat II Vicki Fuess thr commission on international rompetition for the Association Raymond R. Gilbert* :~thlrtic\ dirrc k,I SPORTS SPONSORSHIPS joinedrhr staff at Uti~a’l~ch...Kasrandra of Intrrrollqiatc Athletic-s f’or Women from 1974 to 1976. at Wol~t.btel Polylrt hlll~ 101 1hr p.1s1 Inrli.,na (f’cnnsylvania) annr~unccd it Lewis, a fc,rmrr player dt Uticz namrd at srbt’t, ycat’s, .,ppui,,1cd IO the prcsidcncy has added women’s 5occcr a5 an ititcrcol- her alma Indte1‘. ot Ihc NW Er,glmtl (:ollcgc Athlctir Icgi;,tr span. rffcctivc with thr I!)!%!14 Women’s softball- John Byrne (:onlcrcn(c.. .Linda E. Hopplc. asroci- :u xlrmic yrx named wo,~,cn’s softhall < <,a~ h at Mora- nia), whcrr hr cull1 work pnmarily with .,tc athletic5 diln=ctor at Fr:,nklin and CORRECTION vian, s,,ccerding Mary Beth Spirk. who thr 1ne11‘5 c‘lnl. M;,rrh:lll. n:m,cd cxcc utivr clirrt 101 of ‘I hc spot1 Ibr which Jay Miller W.IS wC,s named athlrtic b rrc ruitiq coordi- the Middle Atlantic Stalrh (bllrg~&c named head coach at Rucna Vista w.,s nator at the institrction David Fonrainr. Athlcoc (:onfcrcncc _. Michelle Strang ~rrpnncd inconcctly in thr Rrcot-d srctio,, dirrctor of intr;,m,,r;,ls and physical cdu- and Chris Theisen named sctvicc Ourcdu of the AIIFI\, IX iaur of Thr N(:AA c Ctlion in511 uctor at 1111, a, n;u,,cd thcrc Wrestling assistants-Adam Drrrn- .wbiant5 .\I the Big Eight cr~nrc~cncc. News. M~llcr w:,\ r,;,mcd Ix~..,cl>;~ll a< h. Rowski, dtl .&st,,t,r 1;~ IWO years .(I low., 1.h~ SO,,I~WCSI C:o,lfcrc,lcc signed :, Maryr Willadscn c onllnut’s lo \crvc- :IS ‘ir.,tc, ,,,,,,,cd .,I (:urr,cll. which albo im- two~yc.,r I haner p,anncrship with ESf’N2 \vo,I,(.I1‘\ \otll,.,ll , Od, h :,I thr \C IIOOI. no~~tl~ cd rh,,t Brian Smith. the No. 2 hr the apo,a cable network IO lx oadcart I I,c poslrlotl IO whi, II Walter Riddle absi*t.,t,t thcrc I.151 season. h.,a been I I d tllc conrclrncc~s ,llcll~5 bashcth;,ll w.,> I,‘,,llc.,I .mcl IhC Ic,,!gh of IhC lc‘l‘,l, Women’s tennis-Gary Grors nxr~cd promotctl IO 1op .,asist.,nt...Scolt Ferter- g:.,n,c\ and two women’\ I>;,skctl,:ill that Peter Artnacosl will sc,vu .,s prcbi- wmcn’s Icnnis coxh at Nrw Irt\ey man ;,pp~riritcrl ji,~xlr,atc assistant coach fiWlC%. tlcm 4 the Sunshine ‘it;,tc ‘ICC II.. Denise O’Mcally n;~mrd :II MO- .~ntl Mark Marshall ,,~,,,,cd pal~ti,,,c. ~:otlrc~ctlCc ASSOCIATIONS wcrc rcpo,~ctl incr~rrcc~ly in the Record I$,,1 St;,tr. whcrc \hr also Will be’,YC ‘lb .,\\irt,,,,t ~o.,ch at (:.,lifor,ii., (Pc,,nsylv.,- Jot O’Brien. cxccutivc ditcctor of thr \CL tirrn ~rl’thc Srptc,nhrt I3 irrur ot ,hr assistant spon5 information dirervx ni;,). Naismirh Mrmorial R;,5ketlx~ll Hall of Ncw5 Riddle w;,~ named a\\i\t;,nt to tht Men’s and women’s tmck and field STAFF Fame Gnc c I!#‘,. protuotcd to p,uG I omnlis5ioncI ;,nd Atnn;,~ OFI’\ ttv 12, i\ 1~~1 assistants- lohn Grcgorck ;~ntlJim St. Academic adviser- Brother J. D. Con- drnt __.Mike Jacki. p~rridmt and CXCCII~ Pierre n,~mrtl .It IIrown. whcrc they ;~l’io cannon ~,ppoi,,trtl d, .,dc,,,ic .idvisrr .,t tivc di,cccor of LISA (;ymnastics fo,~ the Will \crve .L!l .Ibbl\tdtll Il,C.,,‘b ‘md wu,,1c,1’s IO,,‘, past If) years, named prcsidcnt and (X0 c IOM ,OL,IIII~~ cox he>... Julie Harris Business manager- Erika Renwick. of U.S. Skiing. replacing Howard Prtrr- hired as assistant ,nen’s and womcn’~ w0mr11’~ ~ot,~~:~ll ,.O;LC h ;,t Indi;,n:, (Penn Deaths son. who will rrrirr next sprir,g...Stevr coach :,I St- ,John’s (New York)... Alan *ylv.,nl‘l) t;>r 1hr [>i,bl thrrr yrars and Sof+ball assistant: Knin “Bo”Kuntz Veal namrd program dircrtor at the Pugh .md Robrr~ Vranirh n~~mcd .n ditrr~tol of inrr:,muIml and rrcrc:lrion:ll N:,t~on:d SW c CT (:ox l,v\ A.ao< ,a11on 01 Golf: Cindi I’adg:Pttt India,,:, (I’cnn\ylv;,ni;,) rpon\ Illrrt, 11, Io!u~!l:l. r,amrd bL1.411,C.Sh Amcr,~ a .,ltcr 14 ycarb w,th 1hc N,&,,al Women’s volleyball-Lori Duncan, m.m.,gcr .,t 1hc inslitutio,,. She .,160 will1 Association of Intcrcollc~iate Athletics. mcn‘b .md women’s vollcyhall coach a, rcrvc a5 rxm,pli;,ncr officer. whrrr hr 5rrvrd mosr rrcrnrly as vice- Women’s softball assistants-Mary km Starr’s MrKrrspon c ;,mp,~\ \,,I, c Camplionce officer-Erika Rcnwic k prrbidrnt for c hampionship~. Jo Firnbach appnintcd rcsrricrrcI~r.,rr~~ I ‘)X7. n:~mcd at Indi:m:l CI+r,nhyIv.~b ~,.,mccl .I, II,c~I.u,:I (I’tnrisylvania), whrre ‘l’hc Flortda (3 rus Spans Association ings , ox h at Mic higan Kevin “Bo” Ili.1). _. Bob Fordi, I~oyb vullcyball coach *hc albo will 5c,vc a\ Ia,si,,css tuannpcr. mrwut~rcd it has cntercd into a two-year Kuntr, dbbia,nt co.,ch for women’s has- .)I 51. Jo~cph’~ I Ii@ Sichrmlin Metrlchrn. Marketing assistant-Kevin Rochlirz a~rcrmcn~ with TRC (:ommunication5 kctball and rofthall at Sty loscph‘s (Mainr) New ]crrcy. named wornr~l‘\ vollryb:,ll h,,cd ‘IS ‘1\*,\1.,111 Ir,.ukc~IIl~ d,rcCcor ‘II of (:h:,mp:,ign. Illinois, for radio I~rtx~& 5inc c I!,#, namrd lo 4111111.1, p)obtb .,I c ox I1 :I, Nrw.]rl sty Tee II.. Lisa Vivac- lGc\,~o State aftcrwor king at NC-W Mcxic o < ;L\I n&s 10 1l1r 1094 and 1995 CompClSA Fcrrix Stair. qua nan~cd hc.~d roach at L!tica Tcclt St;,tc in fund-l ;,i\ing :IIXI :,t Wyoming :LZ Flor~tla (:itrua Ibwl ga,i,cs. Men’s and women’s swimming-Rich ,I tn,~rhct ~tig intern. Codbout. an assistant men’s and worn Recruiting coordinator ~~Mary Beth CII‘~ roach a his C,lm., mater, St. Mary’\ Spirk. wo,ncn’c Iu\kcrlx,ll and v>trb:,ll (Maryland), promoted to head coach. ~o;,~~h ;,I Mol~;,vi;,n. pivrn ;,drlitio~~:~l rr- Notables replacing nine-yc;,,~ co;,c h Chuck Ja- cpon5ihilitier :,F :Irhlcrics Ircc.ruirir,g , o- cobs Erin Hurley, a four~rm~c .,ll~Amrr- Rick Hutr hins n;ur~rd .d Cblby-S.&u- orclil,:itol. SI,c will rcl111qu1~11 ,o.tcl,i,,g Mikr Booth. a linchackcr ~1 Wcbt Vi,- icxm \wirrm,rr a1 Nrlxaka, natnrd men’s ycr.. Teresa Jackson Knoechel named dulicb with rhc snftb.,ll progr.,m. gini:,. narnrd :,s the first mcmbcr of the and wumcn’s coach at Illinois Wcrlry:,n intc, inI brad c.c,:,c,h :I, Wr\rrl II Mic.hig:ln. 1993 (:ollrgr Football Association “Coed Men’s and women’s swimming assist- \uc r crclillg Rob But k, Hh0 IV- Works ‘ltiam: He worked this past ants-Stu Brereton namrd at Wash,ng XI~IC‘~. Barbara Trilhe pit kcd .,t John s,,mn,cr as a m,,lt,cultur.,l mstruc tor in a ton and I.rr. whcrr hr alro will sctvc as J-)Y. program that seeks to cnhancc the quality ;,rcisr;,nr mm’s water polo coach.. Jim Men’s water polo-Kevin Lynch of lift- fi,,~ children living in public houb- Yramans r~;ur~rcl dt Indiana (Pcnn5ylv;1~ Il;,I1lctcw;,tcI polo L 0:1ch :I, lo11:1. mg. The (:FA will n:,mr :I playrt~ to thr ESPN2 rolls dice with younger set Brawl Two schools implement policies By John Nelson announcer, and Su7y Kolhcr, hired is cycling, or mountain biking, or from WPEC-TV in West Palm skiing. ) Continued from page 15 olitia State players were involved Beach, Florida, arc rohosts of the “And there have been a lot of in a helmet-swinging fight along three-hour “SponsNight+” which studies on the increasing involve- “I’m taking a hard-line step. 1 the Tar Heel bench, and two assist- ESPN’L hopes will bc the corncr- mcnt in sports of women who hope thry take the samr stance:’ ant coaches later were suspended stone of its new network. want to see figure skating or gym said Wilson, whose players will for one game for their involvement It is a younger cousin of’the old SportsNight is followed each nastics, and you don’t see thrse now face suspension for fighting in a postgame scuffle. standby, ESPN, and its founders wccknight by “Talk2:’ and a fixture sports 011 shows dcdirated IO the or leaving the bench. Bradley Faircloth, supervisor of hope it will act it, too. callrd ‘:Jock iirld Roll,” statistics set hard-core fan:’ Wilson and Clemson University AC:C football officials, commended “Some people just won’t get it:’ to new-W;JVC music, takes over in While ESPN’L might br aimed at coach Ken Hatfield said they have the initiative by coaches. said Jim Rome, a West Coast radio the early morning hours. a younger audicnrc, it is not in- instructed their video crews to “I think this is a great opportu- talk show host who was hired to ESPNZ also will feature Narional tended for the hip-hop set cxclu- “hone in” during fights, so coach- nity for us to police ourselves and star in ESPN’L’S “T&Z” 011 IaIr Hockey I.eagur and c ollcgc Ijas- sively, <)lbermann said. ing staffs can hand out proper make sure nothing else like this nights. “If you’re looking for thr k&all gamrs, as well as sports “In the mix of this attempt to punishments later. happens in the future,” Faircloth safe route, you can find that jusr aitnrd ;u a young audience such as make the world of sports lJUdCr- North Carolina and North Car- said. about anywhere. snowboarding, parasailing, wind- standablc and cnjoyablr to a “Our dircrtion is a little more surting and mountain biking. yourlgrt ;itJdi~tlt c, we’re tlot simply darlgrt~Ous, a littlc more difficult. “Thrre ;uc a lot of people who going IO forget the older sports HAVE A STORY OR PHmO IDEA? And, as fcjr- all the old fogies, will like spans but rould care less about fan:’ Olbcrniann said. they understand? 1 think there will dry statistics:’ Kolber said. “I think M:li/ sfon’cs :dntl photos to: Jack Copeland, Managing Editor, The NCAA be a littlc culture shock.” there are a lot more of them than News, 6201 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas 662 11~2422. Krith Olbn~mann, a formel thcrc arc so-rallrd hard-c ore fans. “SpotIs(:rntrr” anal ESPN Radio But maybe what rhey’t-e really into Associatwl l’wu. I The NCAA News October 4, 1993 Ten finalists picked for NCAA Woman of the Year Finalists selected from pool of 5 1; winner to be named November 9

Tm top stllrlent~;ltllletes l1aw ;II ;1 dinner November. !I in WasL hrrn selected as finalists in the ingmn, 1)X:. NCAA WO~I;II~ ol’rlw Year c~rmqw The t‘in;llists wcrc st-lrc-ted from tiliori. ;I pool of‘51 regional winners (the l‘tlc lin:llisrs are (Christie Allm, 50 states, pins the Districl of Co- Pi(t‘;l,rlrgSt;llr University; Jennifer lumhia). (Llrbonr, LJnivrrsity of (&rgia; S;mh Edmonds. Gustavus Adol- (;hanipion Products will don;lte Ahn Edmond.r Fernandez Jenn.ings $5,000 ro the women’s athletic b phus (college: Lisa Fernande7, LJni- prC)gIilrll ofeach of‘the 51 regioniIl versily ol’(Xilbrnia, 1.0s Angeles; Karen Jennings, Llniversity of NC wirlners, thr IO finalists and the winner-a total of $SlO,OOO. braska, I.incoln; A~IIJ Kalju- rand, Brigham Young University; Thr ;lw;lrtl honors achieve- Nnrm;~ Lynch, Villanova Llnivcr- ments in athletics, academics and sity; (:ynthia Eli/.aberh Oyler, Wil- community srrvice. All NCAA in- liarn Smith (:ollcge; Lisa Pikalek, stitutions with women’s programs Virgirlia Polytechnic Institute, and arc’ invilrd lo panicipate by naming Andrea Wieland, University of thrir own Woman of the Year. Iowa. AImcar 500 institutions partici- Thr winner will be aru~oi~rl~ rd patcd this yrar. Kaljurand Lynch Pikalek Wieland Hansen Academic team member of the year to pursue degree in fluid dynamics at Oxford

F Continued from page 3 carerr, Hansen hclprd the Huffs mainrain a rumulative GPA of at (men’s basketball), California Uni- Iege; Lisa Pikalek (women’s volley- lo a W-7-3 record and a wire- least 3.2c)O. versity of Pennsylvania; Angela ball), Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Thr formrr all-Big Eight Con- service national championship in Other Academic All-America Harbour (women’s baskerlx~ll), Ca- John Rocthlisberger (men’s at fcrcncc ylayrr graduated from <;ol- 1990. Team Member of the Year candi- tawba (lolIege; Kristy Holdbrooks large), LJniversity of Minnesota, orado in May I!)02 with a X!i40 The three~time GTE academic dates were Christie Allen (women’s (women’s sofO,all), University of Twin Cities; Amy Sullivan (worn- gade-point average (4.001) scale) all-American becomes the fifth at large), Pittsburg State University; North Alabama; Karen Jrnnings m’s volleyball), Washington Uni- in aerospace engineering. At Ox- srudenr-athlete lo be named team Matt Clannon (baseball), Aurora (WOIIICII’S baskrtball), University versity (Missouri); Roderick ford, he will pursue a graduate mcmbrr of rhe year. College; Bruce Elder (men’s bas- of Nchraska, Lincoln; Nncnna Tranum (foorhall), Massachusetts dt-grererin Ihe field of fluid dynam- To become an academic all- ketball), Vanderbilt University; Lynch (women’s at large), Villa- Institute of Terhnology, and Stem ics. Americxn, ~1 athletr must be ;I Aaron Gries (baseball), Evansville nova University; Lewis Miller phani Williams (women’s softballj, In his four-year college playing varsity starter or key reserve and University; Raymond Gutierrez (men’s at large), Kalamazoo

tobor 15. 1993 Send letten of appl~catw re with expenence. Stamng Date. lmmedlate up- mcludc: management and schedukn of pool. sume and three references to’ Debra P Were on hnng Interested candldates should send B training and supervision of student.11t eguardr, Readers of The NCAA News are invited to use The Market to locate Executive Director ren. Director. University of Alabama Aquauc letter of sppkcabo”. resume and three refer. swim instruction and operation ofpml. Each~ 5 rtr. P.O. Box 870387. Tuscalmsa AL ences to: Bob Ronai, Head Men’s Basketball elor’s degree requwed and mauer s preferred candidates for ositions open at their institutions, to advertise open 3!%03l37. The Un~ven~ty ol Alabamais an Coach. Urbana Unwersi, 579 Calle e Way. Experience in manayement of I facility dates In their p P.aylng schedules or for other purposes relating to the Equal Opponu”,ty/Afirmatw Artton Em Urbane, OH 43078. far 4 13/652~38 3 5 and coachng a, advanced leve r necessary. administration of intercollegiate athletics rector Rerpo”sib!litirs !“rludc planning and player Head Men’s Basketball Coach. Palt.time. a Rcwew of ap kcat~ons ~111begin or) Novrm~ implementing the USFA strategic direction: great oppoltunity for head coaching erperil berl.1993. % “dletterofapplication. resume developing and rrrcuung promotIonal Prw ence. Send RSU,-“C or L.II. D,ck Strockb,ne, and three letters of recommends~ton 10’ Don Olson. Saint Mary’s Colle Rates: 55 cents per word for eneral classified advertising (agate grams:expa”dngthe baseofcorporstespo”. Baseball Athleta Drector. Unwerwt of Maine a, Fort e X62,lOOTenace sors and enhancing sponsor involvement: dig Ken,. 25 Pleasant Street. F or, Ken,, Maine Hclghts, W~nona. MN 9 5987~1399. San, type) ond $27 per column inc! f or d.asp tay classified advertising. rectmy the budget procesr: superws,ng the 04743.207/034~3162. Mary’s College is a” Equal Oppaltu”ity/Afir rnat~vc A<,K,” Employer. (Commerclol display advertising also con be purchased elsewhere financial control process; and directing the “a. The University of Miami IS accrptlng appkca~ tlonal ofike staff, Iacllities and operations. [ions for the msition of head baseball coach. in the newspaper at $12 per column inch, Commercial dis lay Qualifications manimum of bachelor’s degree General duues. The head coach wll be re- Strength/Conditioning advertising is available only to NCAA corporate sponsors, o P.IcIal in sports admi”~rtra,io”/ma”agementwith a” sponslble for organmng and adm,n,stenng a Track & Field rmphwr I” marketing and Promo,nn. erpe high~level baseball program, supervise asp licensees and members, or agencies acting on their behalf.) nence in generating significant outside rev s&ant coaches, recru,t-and handle general Head Stren h and Conditioning Coach. cnue sour‘es for an orgamza,,on. excellent admnntrshve responsibtlibes Qualifications. Texas Tech cf.nwersky Invites appI~cabo”s for Assistant Track And Fkld Coach (Rcstrlct~ lkadershp organ,rat,o”al and commun~ca~ Bachelor’s degr& requred. Successhrl the positlo” of head &e”gth a”~‘co”ditio”a”g cd-Earnin s Coach). Term of Contracl’ Sep~ Deadlines: Orders and copy for The Market ore due by noon lion skulls. Salary. commensurate v&h educa~ coach,“g experwnce at the Dw,r,o” I level coach for !%sbhern ( 15) men’s and women’s tember I 8 93-May 1994 (“ine~month a ointment) prior to the date of publication for general tnn and expenence Send le@erofa licsbo” Demonstrated abilit in recruitment and prop sports The strength tranng program I” Salary. $1 ,,oog and resume to. Stephen B. Sobel. U PF A Press motlonofthcrpon. r akliy. Full~t,mepos,tnn. eludes all men’sand women’s sprx,s. Posibo” E esponsibtlitles. Responsible for carryin out by noon seven days prior to the date of publi- Ident. I8 Beverly Road. Cedar Grove. NJ commensurate with expenence Send resume reponr to sen,or adm,“,stratorx and works m coachng. recwting and administrative c?&es 07003. Deadline for appl~cat~onr is October to. Paul Dee. Athletics Drector. Universi, of conjunction with athletics trainers in the reha for men’s and women‘s track and f,eld teearm odvertlsements Orders and copy will be as directed by the head coach Assist coach II Mlamt. Athletrs Depanment. P 0 IL b,l,tatwe p,we>r of ,n,urrd a,hl+,e,. Re,po”~ accepted by mail, fax or telephone 248167, Coral Gables. FL 33124 Unwaty slblllbes include, develonxwnt of ~reseaso” ,ny stalf wth adm,n,s,rat,on of home cmss of Miam is a” Equal Oppoltunlty and Al% ~“~seaso” and partsea&” conditi&i”g pm country and track and field compet,t,o”. as matwe Actlo” Em layer. grams for all spolts (I” consultation with each well as numerous clinic and camp activitler. For more information or to place an ad, call classified advertising at Sports Information Coach/Lecturer tr emllne University I* vek~ head coach), supcwwr ass~sta”, slrength Qual~fi,a,~9 4s d,sabk.d wwra” or veter Equal Oppr~un~tylAff~rmatwe Art~on Em yam’ !qwtS ~“forlnauo” cx rnenrr Prrfw Rrwurrrr. Hamknc U”wrc,ry. I536 Hrwtt Iatrd held: and drmonstratrd ab,l,ty to organ player Applrations from women. minority Avenue. St Paul. MN 55104 Scree”,“g of mze and manage large. dwersegroups Salary an of the Vietnam era. or sexual orientation. ence will be ive” to candl J ater wth layout Fw nl”rr ,nfw”lal,r>” < “1, Hw”.” Rewurr * person,, handlropjxd Puson, and V,e,“am and des,g” sk 111s.and r.x,r”~we ex~enenre candidates will begin October 29. 1993. and is rommrnsurate wth rxpmence ad qualm era veterans are especially welcome wll conunue u”t,l a suItable ra”d,date 1s,de ” ficat,o”s. 12 month, fullLt,me appantme”, Services. 3 141882 4256. or U 5. DeDaltment wth PageMaker desktop pubksh,“g so&are d tdural,on, Off,crof C,“,, Y,gh,$ If& havr Assistant A.D. 1s requred. Salary l<>ymmt OPp,~,,“,ty/Aff;,,.Ilv* appl,c.at,an, o r~\umc md the nom*\. ,,d~ special needs as addressed b the Americans ~,C”CP Appkcauo” deadlIne Srreemng to br wth Dwb,l,t,ec Act and nre d this publ,cat,on Arnon Employer drws and phonp numbers of rpferences Ap Assistant Director of Athletics/Head in r”mediately and wll remain open until I” a” alternative format. not@ us at the ad Women’s Lacrosse Coach. Unlvcrslty at Al- Athletics Trainer 9lllrd To apply, send letter of applrat~on and plicntio” materials will be accepted unbl OCR drew or ,elcpho”r “umbw aLx>vc Rraso”~ bany. State Univcrrity of New York. The U”, resume wlh names and phone numbers of tober 31 or ““,,I the swrcsdul c a”d,do,r I> able efforts will be made to accommodate named Mater,& should be subrutted to verslty a, Albany inwtes appl~cabons for the Athletlo Trainer Hwr* 40 hours per week threp refwwces ,o Personnpl S-rw PS, U”i~ pu’ !PCQf “C?d.J’ Basketball Jeannine McHaney. Arsoaate Athletics DI p>s,twn of as,,,,a”, dIreclot of alhlrlwlhrsd to be arranged, IO months per year Salary vrrwy of Nofit, Dakoa, P 0 Box 8010, estncted Earnmas Assistant Coach/Men’s rectof.A,hletv sDepanment, 1exasTechUn1~ women’s Iecrosse coach. a 12 montl- remor Range IO/Step I. Sl0.56/hour$I .8JO/. Grand Forks. ND 58202 Equal Opportunity and Women’sT&k. Salty $12.000. Term, EmPloy*r/AH,rma,,v- Actlo”. Full-Time Position. Assistant Men’s Baskct- vrrsry. Box 43021, Lubbock. TX 79409 staff arsoc~ate plrltio”. Responaibllibes I” mo”,h. $,8,30O/an”ually. exccllc~ brnrf,, OfAp ,“,me”,’ N~nemonths Proposedstart ball Coach. Qualifications Bachelor’s degree Texas Tech University is a” Equal Oppotiu~ dole. p”o be detemr,ned. Posnllon dercnp,,on. rludr. De,erm~“a,~or of srademlc rllglblllty: package. Definibon: Under the dire&o” of requred, rrrds,*r’> degree Preferred. Cuarh~ n~,ylAffinnd,w Artlon Empkaycr QuaIltied compltance verification and repolting. sew the dwrw” da” ul Phywal educatIonlAth Coachi” responnabilitien I” areas of exper ,“g and recrut,ng experience preferred Bas,c mmontien, women and members ofother pm ,,sr. Pre rr~bly spnnlrn and hurdlers. Asw, ,mg a~ the departmen,‘, T,tle IX rrxxdlnator, letrn. the athletics trainer assists I” the de B Aquatics Function. To assist the head men’s basketball tected qroups are encouraqed to apply the head women’s coach wth the organira swung BP the mntitution’s vobng representa velopme”, and ~r,,Pl~m*“tat,r>” 01 Prvgrams tmr.h ,n the o,gan,za,~m and o,,wa,mn of Ihr t,on and nduI ,>rattrr,. tramng and ,,VP for ,hr NYS Womm’< Collrg,atr Arhlrtr for the prevenbo” of ,“,u”er to student~ath Assistant Aquatic Sports Director, UnivcrsiI men’s basketball program wthi” the frame competitive events. Identify and recnut acad~ Assa~at~o”. sewng on the director’s senior letes. adm,“,st*rs fin, a,d and emergm‘y ty Recreation/Aquatic Spats. (Require>. A work al ,he NAIA. M&Oh,o Conference and Swimming & Diving emrally qual,Rrd and talented student~ath rtati. L”pwvI,,rIg “(lMJ”L sporv prqramr medbcal care. and administers rehabilitation bachelor’s degree from B” accredited insbtu Urbana U”wers,ty To manage the U”wers,ty l&es. Comm~tme”, to and responsibilit for and sew,“g as head roach of women’s for injuries. Minimum Qual~fical~om Bathe km. at leas, two years’ experience I” aqu.ac Community Center (athlebcs building) and adhering to all rules and regulatwn~ of 7owa lacrosse Minimum requ~remenla Include. Ior’s drgree from a” accredwd ,n~t,tut,on managcmcnt, al least o”e year’s rxprrlenrr poss,bl head golf coach or ,“tramur.ls d,~ Head Swlmmln & Dltin Coach/Aquatlcr State University. Big Eight Conference and Md.,er’~ degree ,n phyr& oduratn” or a re and cerbAca,io” by an organuabo” recog I” recreat,on managemenv at least one year’s rector K rrpons,b,l,t,es ,nrludr Aswtwththr Director: Saint &y’s C$gc of f4iMinncaota Ih* NCAA DevcloP and ,vd,“,w” effectwe 111~ lated d,sclpl,ne. three years’ managementex~ “(ted by ,hr Amerran Medlral Association exper,enllcgm,c a,hlc,,c< adm,“,r Appl,cat,o” deadlane, Tuesday. October 19, “auonal level: knowledge of sw,mm,ng pw merits. equipment, etc. Supervise and carr loath,“q a new NCAA Ill w,mm,“g dnd dw stak. &r”“, and the publvr. 8 her duller. as operations: general knowledge of the func~ out all aspects of recru,,,ng Awrt m schr d’ mg pmgmm for women and me” as well as tratmn: head women’s lacrosse coaching 1993. a, 4 Pm. To request the,ob announr Ed assigned bythed~rectorof athletics Minimum tons of a mo,or ~omprehrwvc uwrrr~ty. ullng future opponents Assist in the academy management of a new swimmng facility. The men, and appI,cat,o” matcr,.ls. co”tac~’ Pw ual,fka,,u”s requred. Bachelor’, degree, expmence at the college level and Play,ng cx~ and should have a mastery of ,he bas,c sk,lls IC development of players. Assist with coach~ swimming and diving coach’s responsibilities w,~cr,< c an wmm’s I.CRXSC Salary Range, so”“cI Office, Room 6 16. S&no Communi a rmonstratrd ab,l,ty to roach the h,ghly of organirmg and managing swmming faclli~ ,ng and adm,“,atra,we d&e>. >pe< ,R‘all a, m<.ludr. rc< nuvncn, of qual,fiPd ctudr”,u,h~ skilled female athlete. Appkcation lnstruc~ 410.000 541.000 (SL~5). Starting Date. As ty College. 4000 Swsu” Valley Road, Swan WS and ~wmm,“g ror”~e,,t,o”s. exhlbl, o assIgned by the headcoach AssistwUl al TBP letes. organirabo” of practices and meets. soon as puss,ble. APplrauon Dcadllw untb C,ty. CA 94585: 7071064 7129 Equal Op nastery of human relations and personnel .ectr of scouting opponents. oversee the scheduling. budget management and complex filled Apply ,o’Mllto” E RIcharda. Director of moltumty Employment/Affirmative Action nanageme”, skills). Salary commensurale ,chedul,” se, ups.eb <>Ieve ”& wth,” ,he ,nce w,h college, conference and NCAA page 19 b Athlebcs. Depaltment of Physical Eduwtn”. *pkJyer. vl,h qual,f,cdtlons. Appkratlon deadline. OCR tu.hlet~rs %uld~ng. S&y. Commensurate .ules. The aquatics drector’s responslbllws See The Market, October 4, 1993 The NCAA News Page 19

who have had expewncp roarh,ng and re have a coaching knowledqe ,,I Lhe lvllow,ny comb at 609/652~4217. < nmny *I ,he 13,v,r,on I I*w:I Appllrdrr, areas. spnnts. ,umps. thrnws, hwdlw Hd( hi DMsk,n I11&n ’s &,sketb~ll Nicrd r>nr tcdm should have thorough knowledge of NCAA Graduate Assistant &r‘s dpqrep reqwrd. Coaber15. 1993. or U"UI porluo" II 3,ck Hatfield. Augusta College. 2500 Walton I,rhw. Box 5076, Chdmpalyn, IL 61825~ Ass,rtant. 6 I51372 3922 filled low. State Unwerrny IS an Equal Op May, Auqusta. GA 30910. 5076 Fmtball, Division Ill. Ithaca College has two Head Coach-Women’s Volleyball. Duties, uonunnv/AFhmatwe Action Em~lover Zraduatc Assistant for men’s and w~men’s opendates ,n 1994 and 1995. The 1994 daw. Orgamreanddirectall pharrroflhrwomon’s track iid Field Assistant C&h.‘The Uni- rack and field. Campbell University is seek Sawday. %prrmbcr 17. 1994, could k NCAA D,“,s,on I “r>,l+“bil,, oroaram. sue versity of Rochester IS seeking tu appoint an _ .- ny appl,l&es Include assisting wth coaching. date would have to k ilt horn+. The cwrf~ de&athletes: perform warn relared adm,n,s~ rrnhng and ddm,rwlrrrl,“r dulwz as as ,yo,,d,ny 1995 date< alp Saturday. Septem tratlvr duties Including budgeting. ;Igncd by the head coach Assistance with Men’s Lacrosse Division Ill. Elmira Colkgc is brr 16. and Saturday, November I I A home srhedullng. and arrangrmcn,< for ,rwrl. neet adrmnistration and other coachin IS seekIng trvo D,“,slon Ill teams to corn lete and home ser,~s IS dwrabk. but d qudr&~lre lodging and me& ~nbtru&x and guNdance .,yn,,,en,~ also I, wqwrcd ar dlrcrtrd by thr field for I.C~DSS~tournament on Apr,lY z IO. 15 pm,,blc ,f 0 <,nc~yrrrr only game c~mm,t dwng dally pracbce and actual ronwnr. and wad coach The qualified indlvldual should 1994 Contact Head Coach Preston Chap ment IS avsllable Contact Dab Deming. DI knowledge. underrtandlng. 0r1d will Chr,nn,.s ,numan~rnt 814187 I +4 I 5 cannon unlverslty be revIewed 1, the” 0~ rwewod preferred). roarhlnglrecruiting expenencc in volleyball at the colkglate k”el I%drr,wd. rf~ fectlvo proksslonall~nterpersonal communi c(lhon skills. Position IS B pan tlrn~ rllwnd Volleyball pos1t1on($6.000~~8,000rang~dependIngon ~xpmence and qualificatlonr) rrpdmng IU lhr dlrerw of athktlcs. To apply. send letter of application. resume. acadnnkc ~rdnwrlplb and rhw kltcrs of reference ta. Dr Chuck Taylor, Director of Athlrws, Rddfwd Urn”“” DIRECTOROF DEVELOPMENT i h;ghly comp*t,t,“*-“olleyball prrx,rdm w&h s~ly, P.O. Box 69 13. Radford. Virginia 24 142 The AmateurAthlehc Unton of the UmtedStates, Inc., (AAU) IS acceptmgapplrcatlons for the wll

H Legislative assistance

Coath normally would return to the home transportation they are counted against the maximum permissible number sitr (if the coach had been returning to campus). of contests, and Finally, during its May 21, l!KQ, telephone conference, 2. In Division III, a maximum of two informal prdCtke NCAA Bylaw 11.7.5.1.1 the NCAA Interpretations (:ommittec determined that scrimmages with outside competition (conducted in privacy during the summer, if an inslirution has reached its limit of without publicity or official scoring). limitations on the number of coaches coaches who may recruit prospects off campus “at any one In addition, the following basketball games may be who may recruit prospects at any one time time,” and one of those coaches has a summer residence played after November 15 by Division I institutions and Division I institutions should note that in accordance that ih not in the locale of the institution, it is permissible after November I by Division II or III institutions: .with Bylaw 11.7.5.1.1, if the limit of coaches who are for another of the institution’s authorized coaches to 1. One game against a “club” member of USA Basketball; permitted to contact or evaluate prospects off campus at depart the campus for recruiting purposes onre the coach 2. One game agdimt a foreign team in the United States; any one time is reached, another coach in that same sport returns to his or her summer residence. The committee 3. The Basketball Hall of Fame Tip-Off Classic Came; may not leave campus to engage in off-campus contacts or noted that this standard is applicable only during the 4. For Division II institutions only, one game against a evaluations until one of the other coaches who is off institution’s summer vacation period (i.e., the period after foreign team in Canada; campus actually returns to campus. Please note, however, the institution’s last day of examinations for the spring 5. For Division 1 institutions only, all games in the Crear that per Bylaw I 1.7.5.1.1.1, if the maximum number of trr~rn unt iI I he first day of‘classes or the firsr day of practice Alaska Shootout men’s basketball tournament sponsored authorized coaches is recruiting off campus and another for the fall term, whichever is earlier). t>y an active member located in Alaska, or coach is scheduled to depart for recruiting purposes when 6. For Division I institutions only, all games in the Maui one of those coarhes returns, that coach may depan at the Invitational men’s basketball tournament sponsored by an scheduled time if rhc incoming coach encounters a NCAA Bylaw 17.3.3 artive member located in Hawaii. transportation delay (e.g., flight difficulties), provided the First contest date in basketball-all divisions Fulthcr, during its May 4, 1993, telephone conference, depaning coach does not leave prior to the time that the Division I institutions should note that an institution thy= Interpretations Committee determined that an institu- incoming coach is scheduled to return to the home may not play its first contest (game or scrimmage) with lion’s women’s basketball team may participate in the Hall transponation site (e.g., airport terminal, bus terminal), outside competition in basketball prior to the Friday of’ Fame Tip-Off (Xassic sponsored annually hy the Wom- and the coach who is encountering the transportation immediately after Thanksgiving. Divisions II and III en’s I3asketball Hall of Fame after November 15 and delay does not engage in any additional recruiting activities institutions should note that the first permissible contest exempr such a contest from the institution’s basketball- during that trip. Further, per Bylaw 11.7.5.1.1.2, a coach date is the Friday immediately preceding Thanksgiving. All contest limitations. who combines nonrecruiting travel (e.g.. vacation, speaking institutions should note that, per Bylaw 17.3.3.1, the engagement) with a recruiting trip may be replaced for following basketball contests (games or scrimmages) may This matPna1 was provided by thu l&slutive services staff as purposes of recruitment with another authorized coach, be played prior to the first contest date specified in Bylaw an aid to rnprnberinstitutions. If an institution hat a qurstion or provided the coach being replaced does not engage in 17.33: comment regarding this column, such corr~s~ondpnceshould bP additional recruiting activities until after he or she has 1. In Divisions 1 and II, informal practice scrimmages directed lo Nuncy L. Mitch&, ax&ant exfcutivc director /br returned to the institution’s campus. The coach leaving with outside competition, provided they are conducted in l@c.!ativc sproice~,at thu NCAA national office.ThU injonnation campus may depart no earlier than the time the replaced privacy without publicity or official scoring, and provided is available on th Collegiate Sports Network. n Community service Creighton club raises money for homeless The Pride Club, an organization at Creighton University designed to increase awareness of and raise funds for the homeless, presented four checks totaling $3,200 to homeless shelters in the Omaha, Nebraska, and Council Bluffs, Iowa, area. Since the program’s creation five years ago, the Pride Club has helped raise more than $18,000 for homeless shelters. “As much as the Pride Club enables us to put a positive dent into the homeless problem, it is equally beneficial for our players,” said Rick Johnson, men’s basketball coach at Creighton. “Our campus is pretty much isolated from the real world. Our players receive full scholarships, have a roof over their heads and have comprehensive meal plans. The Pride Club shows our players that there are real problems in the world and that life is very much different outside of their own settings.” Players help sickle-cell fund-raiser Two Baylor llniversity football players and the school’s all-time leading rusher, Walter Abercrombie, helped raise more than $2,500 in donations for sickle-cell anemia research during a fund-raiser this past summer. Abercrombie, now an academic adviser IO Baylor football players, got J. J. Joe and fullback Bradford Lewis IO assist him in raising funds for the Central Texas Sickle-Cell Anemia Founda- tion. “Since this is a disease that afflicts predominantly young black people and takes away any chances of them enjoying athletics, we feel it is appropriate that these athletes help the cause,” Abercrombir told The Dallas Morning News. Hospital program starts at South Carolina The University of South Carolina, (Columbia, in coordination with Ric hland Memorial Center for <;ancer Trr;ltment and Research. ;Irlrlounced a new student-athlete volunteer program, ‘Team (:arnecocks: Athletes Who Cart=,’ during a kic~koff’ event Augusl 23. Through the program, South Carolina student-athletes are visiiing children and adult cancer patients at the hospital every T~lrsday throughout the academic year. The first set of visits was Septcrnher 7. “Our athletics program is certainly looking forward to our involvement with the Richland Memorial Center for Cancer Treatment and Research,” said Michael B. McGee, athletics director at South (Carolina. “Through this wonderful new project of ‘Team Gamecocks: Athletes Who (:are,’ our student-athletes will have the opportunity to have personal interac- tions with the patients in hopes of making ;i positive and Iasting impression on each individual they come in contact with. I believe our student-athletes will benefit from this program just as much as the patients they will interact with.” Premeeting discussions

Volleyball team takes on MS Forty-one oj’the 44 officiul NCAA licensees attended a 1icensee.s meeting September 27-28 in Peggy Martin, head women’s volleyball coach at Central Missouri Over-Lund Park, Kansas. The group reviewed licensing procedures and merchandising poli- State University, brought a group of her former players back to campus cie.sj&- thP 1993-94 NCAA championships. Among those attending were Dick Pope (upper for a scrimmage against her current players and then donated proreeds from the match to the fight against multiple sclerosis. right) qf Wince@, lnc.;Jeff Huff (u#?er l@) of Print-A-Shirt; Dave Brawl-q (lower right) of Martin’s current squad beat the alumni team, which was coached by Ruwlings Sporting Goods Co. and Ericr Rein@der (lower left) of Rawling Sporting Gods Co. the institution’s acting presideIlL Judy Vickery. In the process, the players helped raise more than $400.