Voters face four council seats, Prop. A

Transcription

Voters face four council seats, Prop. A
THE DAILY AZTEC
VOLUME 69 NUMBER 47
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 5, 1985
Comnlittee offers
a chance to get involved
by Todd Da\'is
Dai(\' ..\;:Itl' staff "'ritcr
They come I'Will llIany majors ami various bal'kgrounds. As individuals. Ihey have different inlerc:.ls
:.II[I.\. like the rcst of u:<.. their (1\\"n lifestyles. But now. in
Ihe wle of adive SDSlJ sIUlk'nls. Ihl'\' haw focused their
lalent and energy as Ihe Associaled Sl~ldenls Action COIll. mince.
Acc\,rlling \(1 Bryan .lacl1bs. A.S. e)leclllive vicc presidenl. Ihe c\lmminee was conl'eived by Ihe 1l)8.t-85 A.S.
execuliws. sPl~citil'al1y Mike Irwin. fonllcr excculiw
vil'e president.
l\cel1 nling to a fact sheet prepared by Alisa Scheidel.
A.S. adminislralive assislant for Organizalions. the committee will bl' wl'rking lln several projeels this year.
induding an A.S.'lnternalional Missing Children's
Foumtatilln Dance-a-Ihon.
Other pTlljn·ts the COlllllliUce llIelllhers will work on
illl'lude serving as students 011 large on various A.S. commiul·es. survcyill)! till' nllll1l'rou~ A.S. buildings on campus and ~\!ggc~ting impm\'ement~; to the Alice CCllla
Board. and working with Ihe Student Resource ami Infonmllion C\'nler Leadership Lihrary.
With thl'se and several olhcr aClivilies slaled for the
year. A.S. will have a busy schedule. This is where the
human resourees of Ihe Action Commillec will he most
useful. Jacobs said. since the A.S, directors and olher
full-time personnel havc large areas of responsibililY
;llready.
The A.S. Action Commillee is already composed of
.to-60 studcnls. according to the fuci sheet.
"\ think ;It Icast halfth~se people will be very active."
Jaeohs said.
He added that the purpose of the Action Commillee is
10 provillt: Ihe oppmtunily for every student al SDSll 10
get involved in studenl govenullent.
"The philosophy of Ihis cOlllminel' is: If anyonl' wanls
tll be involved in A.S .. they can be." Jacobs said. "If
anyone has the enl~rgy. Wl' should find an avenue II) get
Ihem involved ...
Like the pellple whll make lip the varillUS buards ,lI\d
cOl1ulIiUees of A. S .. Ihe members of Ihe .'ktion COllllllil'
Icc arc unpaid. Jal·ob:. s.lid Ihe commiuee members were
aUraeled IOlhe l'ununinee llIore for the sake of the philanthropy ami constructive e:<.chan)!es that arc inherent to
group projecls. in addilillnlolearning Iheir way around in
Ihe A.S. coq~ll·alion and gowrnmenl system.
A.S. Presidenl Bill Earlcy said abOUl50 sludenls frolll
a business c1as:. arc devl,ting timc ami energy to getting
sponsors for Ihe A.S .IIMCF Dance-a-Ihon. a 12-hour
fund raiser slaled for Nov. 22-2:'.
The class is James Bclasco's Management 350 .. 'Management and Organization." Work wilh Ihe dam:e-a-Ihon
docs not trans laic 10 a grade exactly. hut counts as one of
the special projel'ls from which Ihe Manag.ement 350
studcnt5 lliily choose ..
"The lirsllhing to remember is Ihal no one in the class
is required to take part in this cven!." Earley said. "If
they dOIl'1 do this one. there arc olher projecls (hey can do
til llIeel the requirements to pass Ihl~ dass."
Earley. who is in tIll' class and opted for the d.mce-;lIhon as a special project. addcd, "They have free choice
:15 10 special projecls. :md (the dancl~-a-tholl) is just one
ahemativc for Ihem. II's nol a requirement."
Scheidel said tlw only memhcrship requirement for
becoming pan oflhe Actilln Commillee is to sign up for it
in the A.S. office in lower Aztec Center.
"Students arc welcome to join Ihe A.S. Action Committee anytime." she said.
Daily ,1U'tl' photo by JtfJ JOIlll!>
A CALL TO ACTION-A.S. Executive Vice Prealdent Brya" Jacoba
and two administrative as.lstants, lisa Price and Allaa Scheidel,
are the guiding force behind the A.S. Action Committee, a new
group that will be the human ntaouree for several upcoming A.S.
projects. Firat on their agenda Is a dance-a-thon Nov. 22·23 In
conJunction with the International Mlaalng Chlldren'a Foundation.
Voters face four council seats, Prop. A
by Dl!boran Moors
Dai(v Attec staff writer
San Diegans will have their chance to vote on
Ihe four open council positions and voice their
opinion on PrOpostillll A. the Managed Growth
lilitiative, when they go to the polls today.
The four open district council scats include
the I sl district; with camliua!es Bi!! Mitchcll
and Abbe Wolfsheimer; 31U district. with
candidates Gloria McColl and Arthur Salzberg;
5th district, wilh candid.ues Ed Struiksma and
Robert Switzer; and 7th districi. with candidates Judy McCarty and Jeanette Roache.
The Managed Growth lnitiutive. one of the
the main isslles in this election, willliU:llIy be
~ctt!ed
when votcr~ decidc whethcr thcy want
finai sayan any amendments to the Growlh
Management Plan established by forn1t~r Mayor
Pele Wilson in 1979.
The Gwwth Management Plan, which calls
for "managed, orderly and cost-effective
growlh," also specified "Future Urbanizing
Arc,\s." lands whkh were not to be developed
r.=======~~====~============~
until i995. Under the pian. any lands deSignated as Future Urbanizing Arcas could be reclassified. allowing them 10 he developed before the 1995 deadline, by a vole in the City
Council. If Proposition A passes, any future
exceptions 10 Ihe Growth Management Plan
would have to be approved by the voters in a
citywide special election.
I'kuc _
VOTE
01\ pall«'
II.
SADD reception
targets recruits
by Kirk Kern
Daily AttIC staff writer
..
'
SKELETON KIOSK- The former automatic t,IIer mlchlne klolk .tlnda .trlpped :~~ Inrnrdl In
the courtVlrd, now providing I bit of .hld. for weary .tuden!l. The klo.k, Iiong with the banking
and vending machln.. It contained, I. being removed becluae Pr•• 'dent Day ..y. It I. III
"eVe• or,."
In an effort wmake studenls morc aware of the d:mgers of alcohol. Students
Againsl Driving Drunk is hoslinA a wine and cheese reception tonight at
Scripps COllage.
"We want to let studenlS kn;)w we are not againsl drinking ... said Micheie
Barach. presidenl of Ihe SDSU chapter. "It's OK as long as Ihey do il
responsibly, ,.
The reception, according 10 Barllch. is planned 10 solicit memhers for the
club. which has been on campus since April.
"II kind of died overlhe summer." she said. "We just realized there i;:l tot
of c.lmpus interesl in our program since I;ISI h'eek (Alcohol Awareness Week.
Oct. 21-25)."
According to Barach. SADD W;J.S fornled to educate students cl1nceming
the probl::ms of drinking ,md dri\,'ng. to promute resp0n~ibte drinking hehavior, and to eliminate alcllh,)I-n:laled accidents among -:ollege students.
Harach said SADD will allempt to iniliate Ihree programs. both on campus
and cilywide.lhis semesh:r. The biggesl of the three. she said. is the eSlablishmentof an 'Tm Driving Club."
'nle program. which has been established in more Ihan 50 college communilies in 15 stales ill' ross the Unitt'd Stales and Canada. encourages pellple
who drive to bars to wear' 'I'm Driving" bUllllnS and for hal1enders to serve
them only nlln-alcoholic drinks.
The program. according 10 Baruch. has l'ndorsement~ from thl' U.S. De
p:lrtrnen' ofl"!'an~rort!l~il1n/Na~ion!!1 H'C;h\v~y Tr~ffh: S.. tcty ";dmifli~truiiulI,
the U.S. Departmenl of Health and Human Services' Alcohlli. Drug Abuse.
and Menial Health Adminislnltion, and the National Assll<:iation of Colleges
and University Residency Halls, Inc.
The olher Iwo pmgrams. Barach said. deal with slliving alcohol-related
problems at fralemily and sorurily parties.
l)n~ I),,'glam calls lor Ihe fraternity or slll\)rit)' SPlIllSlmng the party 10
pnwide shunk services 10 and fmm the pany.
"Each fraternilY and sllrlllily has Iwo dances a sellll'sler." Barach said.
"This melh,llIl10-ers a safe way to get 10 and fmm Ihe dance."
The olher pmgram will involve setting up drinking-il.·wl charts and miml!'li
in each fratemilY house,
Pk_ _ IllllJNK
UII
pace II.
2 - NOVEMBER 5, 1985 THE DAllY AZTEC
· AIRFARES
· TOURS
· RAILPASSES
· INT'l STUDENT \D'S
PLAN YOUR
THANKSGIVING
WEEK
NOW!
Watch For Our
New Location!
Foreign student increase
slows with rise of dollar
NEW YORK, NY (CPS)- A dramatic dedine in the
number of Iranian students and the high value of the
American dollar slowed the increase in forci)!n ~tudent
enrollment on U.S. campuses last year. a ncw censu~ hy
LlJc Institute for International Education (liE) ,aid.
"It's basic:llly money. With the value of the dollar. the
U.S. is about as expensive as anywhere," said John
Reichard of the National Association of Foreign Student
Affairs in Washington, D.C.
"'n view of the cost. it's amazing there ha~ not been a
drop."
Some slate schools - such as the Tex.as system, long a
leader in recruiting foreign students - have rai~ed their
out-of-state tuition rate, making th~m less auraetivc to
foreign students.
Nevertheless, 342,113 foreign students enrolled in
American colleges in 1984-85. less than a I percent
increase from the previous year, the liE's Mary L. Taylor
said.
During the foreign student boom of the seventies.
annual increases reached 10 percent a year.
More than 50,000 students from Iran were studying in
the United States during 1980.
As of 1984-85, cnly 16,640 Iranians were enrolled in
U.S. colleges, the institute found.
While the oil glut has slowed the flow of foreign
students from other OPEC countries, too, the liE found a
continuing increase of students from South and East Asia.
Taiwan sends the greate~t number of students to the
United Stato:~. Then: were '!Z.5'JO Taiwane~e in U.S.
schoob la~t year. ~lij!htly lIIore than the number of stu·
dcnb from Malay~ia.
Data ~~lOW A~ian ~tudent~. who traditionally have
nl;!d, up the h!rgc~t portion ~\f fpTcign ~H_Hjrnt~ in th~
United State~. have replaced Middle Eastern students as
the fastest growing group as well.
"The continued growth of Pacitk Rim students i~ due
to the stmng economy there. and there is a lot of government support in !hose countries for sending students
abroad," Reichard ex.plained.
Foreign students tended to take enj!lncering program~
most often. followed hy husiness and rnanilgernent,
mathematics. computer ~ciences. and physical and life
sciences. the institute said.
Many of them. moreover, arc gradullle students. In
fact. one of every three students allending U.S. gmd
SChO(11s is foreign-born, Reichard noted.
Graduate schools have become so dependent on foreign students they can't afford to give up their aggressive
recruiting efforts overseas. he added.
Some American universities arc even planning to sct up
foreign extension branehes to help them woo student~
abroad.
But those efforts couldn't overcome the economic faetors slowing the rate of foreign student enrollment here.
Reichard speculates about 80,000 to 85,000 foreign
students arc studying in colleges in the Soviet Union, less
than a fourth the number in the United States.
CALENDAR
Calendar is a public service provided
by the Daily Aztec. To announce
events, SDSU organizations should
follow these directions:
• A.S. Action Comm.lDance-athon will host a meeting in LE 40 I at
6:15 p.m.
Entries must be submitted no earlier
than three and no later than two days
prior to publication.
• LASSO will host a lecture on "The
Classic Maya: Ancient America's
Feudal Civilization" in Scripps Cottage at 3:30 p.m.
Forms are available on the Daily
Aztec Office, PSFA-361. No entries
will be accepted by phone.
• Cultural Arts Board will meet in
Conference rm A at 2:00 p.m.
Events should be open and of general
interest to the student body.
• SDSU Macintosh Users Group
will host a general meeting in the
Speerh & Telecommunications rm
207 :l! 5:00 p.m.
For more information, contact Lisa
Estrella at 765-6975.
IHI faRllDE
• Mecha will meet In Conference rm
L & D at 3:00 p.m.
TODAY
By GARY LARSON
~"".
"~
.'
. ,
"If there're monster:; moving In next door, Dannv,
,
",
.
..
.~~
you just ignore them. The more ,ou believe in
them, the more they'll try to get you."
Is the flu bugging you?
Student Health Services can heir.
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8·5
Appointmentr,: 265-5941
Information: 265·5281
Nov. 4-8
DATE
•
Z
10:00-4:00
TIME
DepOSit ReqUired
Bookstore
PLACE
• Pre-Law Society will host the film
and discuss "The Star Chamber" in
Aztec Center (Conference rm C & F)
at 8:00 p.m.
WEDENSDAY
• Campus Y Dr.JcffSalz will lecture
on the politics and the culture of
Yugoslavia with slides and m\lslr in
Scripps Cottage at noon.
• LASSO will meet in the Presideniial Suiic (Azicc Center) at 2:00 p.m.
THE DAILY AZTEC NOVEMBER 5, 1985 -
3
Money, photos
focus of class
Learn nJarketing aspects
by Dtlllllm Martin
I}ai~v
,'zIt'£' .fla!! I4I,;I,'r
Any avitl ~hllllerhllg gladly accepl~ eomplillll.!llh or J1mi~e for hi, (lr her
Bur wilh Ihe help of a c1a~, ollered hy Ihe Colle)!e III' EXlellded
S!Udie~. tho~e phlltll~ may ~oon he worth more than JII~I a Ihllll~;lIId wllnk
The c1a~,. Iii led "MOIrkeling Your Photo~," is a two-day work~h(\p tle,igncd 10 inslruci partio:ip;tnl~ on laking picture, Ihal will ~ell ,lIId resell.
The ~clllinar •.... ill hI.! laul!ht hy \.Vdl-lwllwlI photographer. Rohn Engh.
puhli~hcr of Ihe fWliorwl ncwsleucr. 'fbi' P"lIflllt'lIt'r. and author of Sd'lIId
H,'.ft''' Yllllr Ph(}fOJ.
According to POlity McGuffin. registration supcrvisol' for the College of
blended Studies. the work~hop is not .1 photography c1a~s 10 leach participants how to usc a camera.
"You should already know how to usc a camera when you enroll ill the
class," McGuffin said. "( took the class myself and Ihe main emphasis is 10
learn what types of pictures you enjoy taking most and then he ahle 10 choosc
the besl of these 10 sell. ..
Besides instnJction on what photos ~eJl hest. Engh also covers copyrighl
laws. photo pricing and how to promote and puhlicize work.
A portion uf the e1ass even covers which agencies. magazines and other
publicatons arc looking for certain types of photos.
Engh emphasizes the need for photos to be profel'sionaJly packaged when
sent to editors, so part of the class covers packaging and how to write a cover
leueL
"During the course you're given ~alllples of all the materials you need to
send (mail) your photos," McGuffin said. "Thi:; includcs plastic covering
protectors for slides, elC:!mp!r~ of kw:rs you could write and even the type of
envelope a photo should be sent in."
The workshop also covers how to deal with the IRS when it comes (ime to
be taxed on income from free-lance work.
The main poll ion of (he c1m;!; however. instructs the amateur photographer
on how to get the most out of their photos.
"The class teaches you a lot about how to sell the photos you've taken."
McGuffin ~aid. "You learn how to approach organizing. packaging .md
sending your photos so that they'll sell effectively and you'll make somc
money off them."
"Marketing Your Photos" will be offered Wednesday and Thursday evenings November 6 and 7. from 7-9:30 p.m. in the College of Extended Studies
classrooms on the SDSU campus.
phoro~.
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Contribution:
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THE DAILY AZTEC
OPINION
NOVEMBER 5, 1985 - 4
THE DAILY AZTEC
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Endorsements
G[U'l
With City Council elections being held roday, it's time for our end(Jr~e­
menls. Last Friday we refused 10 endorse either candidate for the 7th Di~trict.
We believe that neither Jeanette Roache nor Judy McCarty is competent 10
serve the citizens of this district.
The San Diego City Council has a direct effect on students at SDSU. From
parking district~ to noise variance pennits for fraternity parties and concerts at
the Open Air Theatre, students' lives arc directly regulated by this elected
/"-7
~
C"'.
(OC::~
body.
Here are the remaining district races and our endo.·sements:
l!it District: Incumbent Bill Mitchell is tighting off an auack from frontrunning Abbe Wolfsheimer.
While we are disappointed in Wolfsheimer's opposition to the Growth
Management Initiative (Proposition A), it is still preferable to Mitchell's
non-stance. He seems to be trying to play both sides of the fence with his
comments that he can't support the proposition as written, but might vote for it
in the privacy of the voting booth.
Indeed, Mitchell is growing stagnant in his office; it's time for some new
blood. Therefore, We enduese Wolfsheimer for the 1st District.
3rd District: In this race, incumbent Gloria McColl is easily outpacing
challenger Arthur Salzburg. This is unfortunate. McColl oppo~es Proposit~on
A on the grounds that supporting it would lead to San Diego be.commg
"elitist. " We would argue that opposing Prop. A shows a callous disregard
for public values and sentiment.
McColl also attacked Salzburg on the grounds that he has only lived in the
3rd District for 60 days and in San Diego for only 2 1/2 years. Longevity of
residence is hardly an indicator of political responsibility or competence.
Salzburg is certainly far from the perfect candidate, though. His political
inexperience could hurt his effectiveness in office.
However, we unanimously endorse Salzburg. San Diego has had enough of
the pro-development elitism offered by McColl.
.
5th District: This race pits Robert Switzer against incumbent Ed Strutksma.
We disagree with the conservative Struiksma's llnti-Prop. A stance, but we are
absolutely repulsed by Switzer's campaign tactics.
Rather than telling San Diego's voters what hI' has to offer, Switzer h::s
concentrated on attacking Struiksma. This type of negativism is inappropriate
in the political arena.
Indeed, Switzer is not only attacking Struiksma's stances on the i~sues, but
his cl'.mpaign. also. Switzer has criticize(i the amount of money Struiksma has
spent, although Struiksma has stayed within legal limits. He also criticized the
groui>s that have endorsed Struiksma.
We would have 10 argue that Struiksma did nol necessarily recruit developers and realtors to endorse him; indeed, they may very well have been scared
off by Switzer's rhetoric.
We fear that this style of mud-slinging campaigning is indicative of Switzer's style in general. He i~ not the type of person we want sitting on the San
Diego City Council.
Therefore, while we disagree with some of Struiksma's platfonn, we
endorse him. He is obviously the more qualified candidate.
Even if you disagree with our endorsements, we urge you to get Ollt and
VOTE. Participating in government is not a privilege, it's a responsibility.
Only by tWl\g full advantage of this right can we ensure our freedoms.
\0Gu(ID(gJ
LETTERS
runaway growth, tranic jams, and
overcrowded schools and parks.
lntluenced by narrow special interests, a majority of our City CounWhy should students vote yes on cil has consistenrly violated the spirit
Proposition A, the Growth Manage- and intent of our adopted Growth
Management Plan. Unwilling or unment Initiative?
able to say no to powerful developThere are two good reasons.
First and foremost, do we want all ment interests, the council has
of San Diego to look like an SDSU allowed the exception to become the
parking lot at 7:45 in the morning'! Of rule.
Our current Growth Management
. course not, but without proper planning the urban reserve of San Diego Plan was adopted in 1979 after y·:ars
could look like this in the near future. of study, community dialogue and
.". i'c~ vote Oil Prvp. A will kt:cp this public hearmgs. That plan sets aside
thousands of acres to provide job
from happening.
Second, irresponsible business in- opportunities and housing as they arc
terests will continue to find loopholes needed, both now and in the future.
in the city' s pre~ent growth- Yet, since the adoption of the plan in
management plan unless Prop. A is 1979, the City Council has squanpassed. Yes on A gives you. the dert:d more than one-half of this precitizen, a voice as to how San Diego cious resource.
will be developed.
It's time for tile citizens to regain
Don't be deceived by the big control of San Diego's future!
money of developers. Vote yes on
Proposition A on the November
Prop. A.
ballot provides a needed check on the
aon Schneider
influence of special interests and enLane,," Gunn~rsen
sures accountability «.'f your elected
Gina HaJe
representatives. Just as government
members. Earth First
was unwilling to curb spending prior
to the passage of Proposition 13,
government is now unwilling to prevent the "Los Angellzation" of San
Diego.
Editor:
Don't be misled by the expen~iVt:
San Diego is at a crossroads: a media campaign waged by the opposhining city by the sea, or a city with nents of Proposition A. Their claims
Vote yes on A to
maintain
control
Editor:
Vote 'yes' on A
to preserve S. D.
of higher talles and rent increases are
deliberatc distortions of the truth.
The facts are that since the passage of
Proposition 13. no taxes can be
raised without a two-thirds votc of
the people, and the passage of Proposition A is unrelated to any possible
future rent increase.
Remember, Proposition A docs
not change the existing public review
process. The City Council could still
say no to future requests to violate the
Growth Management Plan: but if
they say yes. YOII "'ill hili'" fhl! fl,!!!1
1'00e.
Proposition A was placed on the
ballot by 80,000 eoncerned San
Diegans who signed petitions to save
our neighborhoods and prevent urba'l
sprawl.
Just as wc have contiP":,d to fight
to prevent oil drilling off our CO'lstline, we will fight to preserve San
Diego for tom.orrow's children. To
maintain oUI quality of life, I ask that
you say no to slick special interests.
expensive and misleading campaign
tactics, and those who would bulldoze our precious canyons and further congest our roadways.
Support the citizen's right to decide!
No L.A.! Vote yes on A!
Mike Goteh
San Diego City Council
SDSU Class of '71
Morality is not a matter of more guns
The olher day I saw a couple of bumper
stickers on a jacked-up Chevy - bumper
stickers which arc signs of the time.
One bumper sticker said' 'Guns don't kill
~ople, people kill people." The other said,
"Military and morality, re-ann America."
The implications (not that this person probably cared about the implications of roting a
gun) are frightening.
This person is saying people who kill
others with guns arc sometimes immoral,
but giving these people guns is moral. Or
maybe people arc moral folk when owning
guns (like Rambo J, Christ, Uzi in hand as
the bullets gleam across his sweaty chest).
In reality, people are sometimes immoral
and guns are one Instrument of their im ..
morality. And to claim that owning an instrument designed to kill gives the owner
sUllie virtuous character IS absurd.
Absurd alsc :s the notion that' 're-anning
America" and making more American~
militaristic will help Americans. If that
were so, some of our most moral groups
would have to be the Klu Klux Klan, the
Black Panthers in the '60s and Philadelphia's MOVE, which was recently
eradicated in the bombing that burned a city
block.
All are the perfect miiitary/moral groups;
militaristic, well-LU111ed and ideologically
committed to some vague notion uf a con-
should stand with Angela Davb, an a\,()wed
Communist with a Ph.D., who was one of
the Panthers' intellectual mentors. Davis
supports the re-arming of America. II's everybody's right; especially that of Davis,
who is really no criminal (although I've met
100 many people who still think heint -. _.• 1;
b a crime).
Perhaps I'm stretching thc word "milit-
spiralorial enemy out there. Now these
groups, especially the KKK and MOVE,
have gone too far in using those instrument,
of "military and morality" provided by the
great God abo\'~
Before the buthers used their arms, they
merely threatened cops and white folk. So
what'! Conservative groups everywhere
ary" t()O far in thl! context of this ollenslve
bumper sticker. The sticker, as far as I can
tell. implies a religious devotion to thc
Am\'ril'an anned force,. Of ';\lUI ~C, (lwninj!
a Saturday Night Special dllc, nothing III
help our servicemen 'Ibroad, but it', :hc
thought that counts.
The military, however, is a necessary evil
to defend our country, and those who give
up some years of their lives to servc as
drones for their country are making a truly
nohle sacrifice and shoulli he praised. Yet
cenain people think the wily 10 be patriotic
is to help!'!) the military hy owning arllls
and brown-nosing IlIi:::ary men II) let the
military run ollr country. The military i.,
111!.'rdv the mercenary arm llf the l!.0Venlme-nt: the trainl.'d killl.'l" II'C have to call
on tll defend us. Giving. thellll'arlC hlanl'ilC.
"long. with ICltillg. every junKie alit! hum Oil
the strcCI "defend" u, with dll.'ap handguns, is "bsunl.
Ileace, hwe and unlierstmllling. cenainly
can't sulvc all America's problem" but II'C
gave up on that a long timc ago (csfll'rially
thc IlHl'it important aspel·t -- understanding.).
Maybe that'~ m)' problcm. I hawn't bCL'n
hit with the divine n:\'datillll that owning.
some sort of g.un is till.' quickest way til
heaven.
LETTERS
'Country' is not
the government
Editor:
On Oct. ZI you publish.::.! d leiter
from !'.1aiihcw 1. Heslin who v.as
"damn proud" of his brother who
died in Vietnam because his brother
had fulfilled a "moral obligation to
tight for his countrv." I think this is
illogical.
'
To do the standard (but no less
sincere) disclaimer, I am sorry about
the dcath of Heslin's brother and am
SUre he was a !!reat I1I1V. R"all"
Given that, i think tlesli~ sh~uld
realize tirst the difference between
his country and his government, and
~econd that wars are not inevitable.
In retrospect, most people agree
that the U.S. government should not
have "spent" 50,000 men (brothers,
hu!>bands, sons) in Vietnam. Sometimes our government is wrong in the
things it asks us to do. It is not unpatriotic to disagree with the government. If that were true. the definiriol)
of patriotism would change every
four years.
Personally I love this country because it does not ask blind obedience
to the go~·ernment. My proof:
, •... governments are instituted
among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed",that whenever any fonn of government becomes destructive of these
ends, it is the right of the peoplc to
alter or abolish it ..... (from the third
line of the Declaration of Independence). Don't be afraid to tell vour
government it is wrong! This i; not
an unpatriotic act!
My second point revolves around
the fact that I didn't know anvone
who died in Vietnam. I am very'glad
about that. And I would like it a
whole lot if no one I ever know, or no
kids I ever have (known), dies in a
war anywhere. The point is wars are
not inevitable. That's right. Wars are
not mCllitable. Given that, shouldn't
we try and stop them?
Heslin should not mourn his
brother less but should learn to ~:ty no
to any government that wants to take
our countrv inlO an avoidable war.
Again, Heslin. I am sorry about
your brother, but don't start the
name-calling "Communist" stuff. It
really doesn't help.
Greg Jay
engineering student
World situation
requires reason
Editor:
I would like to respond to a letter
by Matthew J. Heslin in the Oct. 21
Daily t\=rec. I think Heslin is one of
many who feels it is our duty to participate in a war simply because our
government has told us to do so, no
matter what the cause.
Yes, our country came into being
as a result of the America.'l Revolution. What our forefathers did was
just and morally right, for they and
their families were living under a
suppressive government and the
opportunity was there to establish a
new government in a new land that
was to be dedicated to servin!! the
people by the people. r am as proud
of this as anyone could be.
Today, for many vague reasons,
our government (and "we the pt'\lpIe," through our taxes) is intervening militarily in Central America.
Are we preventing the people of EI
Salvador from having a revolution of
their own? Should we be? In Nicaragua, are we preventing the revolution there from becoming effective?
And should it?
Am I also a communist. Matthew,
for making an attempt to recognize
these things, and for trying to figure
out what's right and what's not? If
so, well I guess I've been called
C:1.'.Ln
Pet c..tb&:>
n,t1pl!Ot 1t.d
(CI .... "")\...\1 In .,
l)ut
ef
~.. \;(I ;':"4.4d·~~'1'1.
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,l .t {~I t.4 .....'\...
~lIff ~i~6)'\
\ WAI.K INilJ !\ 13M., \
~'-_ _ _ _ _........
/S-'~/
THE DAILY AZTEC
NOVEMBER 5, 1985 - 5
worse things.
The point of this letter is not to
argue the whys of Central America or
Vietnam or the position of Ben Sasway, but to emphasi:r.e the importan("e' of having a re~.on~b!y kiiOViledgeable understanding of what is
going on in the world. Wc cannot
ignore how different nations affect
e;!ch other, and especially how we
affect other governments and peoples. What goes around comes
around.
I am truly sorry your brother and
many others died in Vietnam. There
was something we didn't realize then
that is just as true today. Perhaps
Bruce Springsteen said it best during
his recent concert tour: "Today in
1985, blind faith in your leaders, or
in anyone else, can get you killed ...
We have to care about why we risk
getting killed and whom wc risk
killing.
Bill MlK:k
rf.!creation administration senior
Freedom, thanks
to draft resisters
Editor:
I would like to thank Howard Agster and David D. Cook for openillg
r.1y ey~s. Ignorant per~on that I was, I
thought the purpose of the draft was
war-making, not peace-keeping,
I don't know how I could have
been so bliild, how the peacekeeping ability of the draft eluded
me. I guess I'm just stupid. I mean,
look how well the draft worked at
liAVf. l.<iL
8u N I\BIt ro <'/oPloQi. n'~
OrvL'f R[CtAlll 'r
IIIJMQ. O(;PT/150':- rllS
}iVIfIIIN illiND
keeping peace in Vietnam! Heck, if it
weren't for tlle draft there might have
been a lot of senseless bloodshed
over there!
Also, thanks for infonning me that
"real Americans" are pro-draft. All
this time I thought "real Americans"
were pro-freedom. I didn't know
"real Americans" are sheep, going
anywhere the sheep dog decides to
take them. Wake up, guys! The draft
is neither peace-inducing nor American. Draft resisters are not a disgrace
to our country, they arc "real American;; ...
The only thing worth fighting for
is freedom. The real disgrace is that
v.e do not have the freedom our forefathers fought bravely for. Bul, thank
God, when freedom in America is
thre,lIened, "real Americans" sland
up and fight for it. Nonnal people
N:come heroes. Pcople like George
Washington, AbI: Lincoln. the brave
men who fought in World War 1 and
World War II, the anti-war demonstrators of the '60s and the '70s, and
the Ben Sasways of the '80s. AI! of
these people an:: "real Americans."
real he.oCs.
The drafl resisters of todav are
fighting for our freedom, yet yo~ and
people like you spit in their face~.
You and your type are a disgrace to
our country, and as long as rcop!c
like yourself hold judicial and political poSitions there will be no peace
or freedom in this world, only bloodshed and sl'ppression.
1 would like to close this lener by
truly thanking all draft resisters f~r
fighting for me. Being afraid of the
sheep dog, I registered for the draft
like all of the other sheep, and I feel I
owe you something for fighting for
my freedom at a time that I wasn't
strong enough to fight for myself.
Thanks.
Kevin Gerrity
chemistry junior
Health Services
should serve all
Editor:
As a graduate student who works
full time and attends classes at night,
I have encountered a problem thai I
Iilll SlIfe is common to miln)' and requi~e~ attention. Becau:ie a p0T1ion of
the tees I pay to SDSU each semester
g(>c~ toward studen: ~ervices, [ feel
that I ,lnl entitled to the same access
tll s~f\'ice~ as the day students, including Student Hl!alth Services.
Because Health Sef\'ices is open
the same hours many of us work (8
a.m. to 5 p.m.\. night stud~'nts arc
dcni~d access to this valued and
much-needed service. I feel that this
is discrimin:\lory. I propose that
He,llth Services n:main open at least
one night a week. To compensate for
staying open later, if necessary, the
center Ciln open later one morning.
I urge students, who value access
to Health Services as I do, Il) write to
President Day. as I will, to SlOp Ihls
discriminatory practice.
~!lwn
Dell' Angela
socia) work
Kradu~ie
student
6-
NOVEMBER 5, 1985 THE DAll,( AZTEC
Man held at
knifepoint il1
parking lot
LITTLE' ITALY
RES TAU R' A ·N T
ALL YOU CAN EAT SPECIAL
TUESDAY ONLY
by Jack Carter
Daify Aztec staff wriJer
Rigatoni with meat or
marinara sauce
S2.85 per person
EVERYDA Y SPECIAL
iTALIAN FEAST FOR TWO
Small Hot Pastrami
Served meat or vegetarian style
choice of soup or salad
cheese piLla
Lasagna. ~Ianicotti or Cannelloni
Spaghetti & Garlic Bread
58~ for two
extra person 53 75 each
.... ~...
4367 UNIVERSITY AVENUE
at FAIRMOUNT
T.....
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S-.I'lPSl
SAN DIEGO. CALIFORNIA 92105
~
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6455 El Cajon Blvd.
San Diego. Ca.
(Citicorp Savings Plaza)
229-0855
/0:30-9:00 Mon.-Sat. Sun. till 8
281-4949
~~~~_~~.!!.e~~.2~~
As a Marine Ofticer, you could be in charge of a
Mach 2 + FIA-18A, a vertical take-offHarrier or
one of our other jets or helicopters. And you could
do it by the time }QU're 23. But it takes a special
commitment on}OUf part We
a~ or sophomore, ask about our tmder-
graduate officer conunissioning programs. Ifyou're a
jWlior, chock out our gradliate programs. Starting
salaries are from $17,<XX> to $23,<XX>. And ~
r-------------_ you can count on ~
demand leaders at'aD 1eveJs.
We teach you to be one. Ifyou're
G.O.I.l6.LUI."~.
~~..J.~a."
•••
r.::~~a~.'S
___
~.. ~JW ~fjVUU~"
'-OQ#a-
"A47&&;~.
For more information call Capt Bowen at 294·2174.
A 22-year-old man said he was
threatened with an opened Buck
knife in G Lot last Tuesday night
following a quarrel during Comedy
Night at Monty'~ Dcn.
John J05cph Couv\cue (old investigators at the Public Safety Department that an Unidentified man held a
Buck knife to Couvrelle's throat ...\
he walked 10 his car at about /O:3u
p.m.
Police said Couvrelte walked into
Monty'!; Den Tuesday night about an
hour and a half after the comedy
show began. Couvrette saw a group
of friend<; at a table and went to join
them.
According to the police report.
Couvretle said he asked the suspect,
who was sitting at a table next to his
friends' table. if he could use a chair
the suspect was usir:g as a foot rest.
Couvrelte told police the man said he
could use the chair and gave it to
Couvrelle.
Before sitting down, Couvrelle
shook hands with his friend~, he said.
A man silting behind Couvrelle began moving the chair. Couvrelle told
police the man was irritated with the
chair's positioning. Couvrette later
learned the man was the suspect's
brother.
After the show. Couvrette said the
suspect shouted insults and tried to
pick a fight with him. The bar staff
broke up the quarrel and Couvrette
and his friends walked outside.
The suspect and his hrother alsl)
walked outside and south to the base
of the Aztec Center footbridge.
Couvrelle said the ~uspect yelled.
triilig 10 iniliate a tight. Couvrette
said that since he did not respond to
.he prodding, the suspect and his
brother left and waited in nearby G
lot.
When he entercu the parking 101 to
get his car. Couvrette said. the suspeC( cut off his path and pulled out a
Buck knife. threatening to assault
him. Couvrette said he ran behind a
pickup truck aftcr the suspect dropped the knife.
According to Couvrelte. the suspect rcgained the knife, grabbed
Couvreltc's shill. put the knife at
Couvrettc's chin and said. '''1 am
going to stick it into you so that you
feel it in your gut. ".
Couvretle told police he grabbed
the suspecl's arm and pushed the
knife away. Thc suspect's bwther
sl:!parated them. and the suspect put
the knife away. Couvretle went to his
car and drove away, police said.
At home, Couv~lte 'i-uiJ, he rca!ized what could have happeneu <lnd
called the San Diego Police Department. SDPD referred Couvrelle to
the Depanment of Public Safety, and
an incident repol1 was filed. Couvrctte told police he could identify the
suspect and the suspect's car.
Couvrelle described the suspect as
a while male in his early 20s, 6 fcc! 3
inches tall, 1M pounds. with brown
hair aud possibly brown i!yes. a
clean-sh:lVcn "baby facc" and a stud
earring on hi~ left car.
Couvrelle said the suspect got into
a late '70s faded blue Volkswagen
Kabbil with a bicYcle rack.
Detective Virgi-l H<lwkins said the
suspect might be an SDSU student
becausc Couvrclle spotted an SDSU
parking sticker on the suspect's left
rear bumper.
Po/ico: ~aid the suspect could be
charged with assault with a deadly
weapon.
Hawkins askcd for anyone with
information abuut the suspect ur thc
suspect's car to call the Depal1ll1cnt
of Public Safet}.
SPORTS
THE DAILY AZTEC
NOVEMBER 5. 1985 -
7
~New'
offense struggles
as kickers tie Toros, 0-0
by Mark Kragen
DaJJ, A:.uc lpt1rt. editor
Undc:r the circum~tance~, 5DSU
soccer coach Chuck Clegg could nol
be 100 unhappy after his team tied
Division /1/ Cal Slale Dominguez
HilI.~ 0·0 al AllCC Bow; ia~t night.
Clegg ~u~pended five Aztcc play·
er!> last week for "dj~ciplinary
reasons" and had to call some player!t who had been cuI or had quit the
team to be abk to field II plaYCf5
again~t (he Toro!t.
"There were just too many new
people in the game to get anything."
Clegg said.
The AZI(',c offense, with newcomers Jason Maral50s, Per Nor and Tom
Carney rotating at the two forward
spots, could not generate many !tcoring opportunities.
Defenders Ted Wacker and Paul
Stumpf also stepped up 10 the forward spot!>, but SDSU still didn't
generate the offense.
Afler p!l!ying the 90 miiiutes uf
regulation play, however, both t!le
AZlee and Toro offenses started gelting the shots off.
Aztec goalkeeper Garry Wilcox
had three game-saving saves in the
overtime period.
, 'I knew I had to play well because
the guys got suspended," Wilcox
said. "II was jusl a free-for-all those
lasl iO minutes, ..
Besides Wilcox's play in lhe net.
tbe Aztec defense aiso Slopped
numerous Toro surges toward the
SDSU goal.
WiJco~
Andervm played \(J/idly rhe whole
game. taking the ball away from
Toro (orwards and clearing the ball
from in fmfil "f the A1.t~ net.
In the overtime period, the Toros
aJ~(J needed 10 cleat a few ~hot~ from
in fmnt rt( Iheir net.
The AlIcc~' be\t fJpportunity came
with about five minute\ left in Ihe
20·mir.ute overlime when Luke
(Jbcrkir<;h· .... hot \lid ju.\t over the
cm~~ baL
With the tic. SDSU·,. record 1\
now 7-7-3.
joined Clegg in praising
Ihe play of defender Daron
Anderson.
Anderson, who played for Ihe
AZI~s as a sophomore in 1983, was
called by Clegg Friday 10 fill in one
of the holes in SDSU's lineup.
p"oto
HAVING A BALL-SOSU'! S!e-Je e.caidmaii {;Wit jor a baii against
USF ear!ler In thv S6i1aun. Lasi night, Boardman and four other
Aztecs sat out SDSU's 0-0 tie with Cal State Dominguez Hills after
befng suspended by Coach Chuck Clegg.
Streaks mark loss to Air Force
by Don Patterson
Dai(l' Aztec sportsll'riler
Several streaks, both good and bad, were either ended or extended during
SDSU's 31- JO loss to Air force Saturday. For the Aztecs there was nothing to
cheer about, however.
With Saturday's loss, the Aztecs extended their losing streak to four games
following previous losses to BYU, Utah and Oregon. And during the Air
Force game, Aztec plac~-kicl;.er Chris O'Brien's field goal strea" enrled at ~8
when he missed a 43-yard attempt in the first quarter.
Meanwhile, Air Force fans did have 50i\lcthing to <:heer aJ>out, as the
r(\lcoll~ extencd their winning 'lrC'I!.: .0 12 straight dating bad, Iu las! season.
Currently 9-0 ovcrall and 6-0 in the WAC. Air Force is tied with Bowling
Grccn for Ihe Halion's longest win streak.
But since enough ha~ t>c.!11 written about the WAC's top leam, let's relUm 10
the Aztecs.
.
0' Brien's 18 straight field goals set u new WAC record, breaking the
previous record of 13 straight. Saturday's miss came after O'Brien had hi! a
54-yarder early in the tirst quarter. On the second attempt of 43 yards,
however, a poor exchange between snapper Jim Dennis and holder Jim Plum
contributed to O'Brien's failure to put tne ball through the uprights.
"It was just a lew snap. and our timing was off," O'Brien said.
But despite being disappointed with the miss, O'Brien is somc;what relieved
the streak is over.
"It takes a lot of the pressure off, really," he said. "Your concentration
gets better after you miss."
Throughout the season. O'Brien said he has treated each field goal attempt
in the same manner in order to "void j1uuing extra pressun: on himself Juring
important kicks. H(' also concentrates on kickini! each !'i1l! the same WJ\' to
establish a consistent rhythm.
.
"I just try to get a good fed for the ball ... he said. "I don'l go out and look
at the yardage."
So with the streak over, O'Brien would like to start a new one for himselfin
order to help the Aztecs end an old one.
1'2_ sec rALCOSS on
Leadership could keep Aztecs
I was talking to a frielld the ether day
when the subject of the SDSU women's
volleyball team came up.
"How arc they doing this year?" he said.
"They're doing OK," I hesitantly said.
"Well, what are they ranked?" he said.
I said, "Seventeenth in the nation ...
He answer:.:d, "What's wrong'?"
I thought that comment was a reallribute
to the program Coach Rudy Suwara has
developed at SDSU.
For the last seven years. the learn has
finished in the top-10. Suwara, who is in his
10th season of coaching here. has a record
of 288· 118 at SDSLI and ha~ been named
coach of the year four timcs,
However. this season. one might gel the
ideuthat there is trouble in pamdise. Since
c('''lin~ It) MOIII~llilna Mesa four years ago,
: .'~,,·e -never seen hi~ h:im\missing frllm the
tllP' 20 pull. But hy Ihe emi of Ihe week,
Ihere is a gOlld IliJssioility Ihalthe (Camillo:),
Following the Aztecs' three·game loss to
Hawaii, Rudy Suwara. as always, was smil·
ing. Though this time it was kind of a ncr·
vous smile - you know, the kind you have
when you're meeting your boyfriend's or
girlfriend's parents for the first time.
"This school expects us to be in the top-
the game, and they were without J leader.
As of now. they are still without anyone
with the type of power that Rock displayed
out of the back row and still no one has taken
control of the floor when things go awry.
"I think one of our problems is that we
are a very young team. and 0(' one is takir.g
any charge," lone senior Maria McCallum
10," he said. "Nobody expel'ts the foot 0;1 II
or basketball team to be in the top· 10. hut
th.:y do cxpeet us to be there and so do w.:.
"So right now wc're feeling prelly oad."
Whcn Ihis s.:ason began. Suwara, for the
tirst time in a whi!.:. had good cause t\l
worry. The Azt.:cs wen: with',lIt Angela
Ro,:k, onc of th.: lIIost p<.lwerful plaYl'rs in
said. "Everyone on this team has such
different personalities, which makes it that
much harder for anyone to come out and
Illotivale the player~ ...
La~t year I could relllcmOer seller Kim
Tak;lcs. wh ... ther th ... Aztecs had \\,In a p<.lint
llf Ill~1 it. giVIng eWf)'lllll! "I'l\\, th-... s" and
running ahlulIlitalking III l'ach playa indio
be bumped out.
pajlt'
•
9.
In
-
CHRIS O'BRIEN
top 20
vidually in hopes of keeping them "up."
Waile I was watching the match against
the Rainbows Saturday, it was apparent that
the leam was struggling and no one was
there to pick up the pieces as Hawaii began
taking control of the match.
Tonight agaill~t No. 3·ranked Pacific
(according to last week's Tachikara coach's
pol/), the Aztecs begin the final stag~ of
their "most important two weeks of the
season." Three dayS later, No. ~·ranlced
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo comes to town.
So as (he Aztecs head into the final push
for an NCAA playoff berth. it is imperative
that somecne assume the rolc of Il'ader
They necd 5\.lmcUlle t>cginning tonighl to
start giving "high and low fives," and g.:1
tearnmate~ motivated
If nll(, it may be a I,lng lime before there
is IlO reas,'n to ask "what's '\flIng with the
Wl)m.:n·~ vulleyball r.:am" when I tell
someone Ih.:y're mnked 17th in the nati,lO
8-
NOVEMBER 5, 1985 THE OAllY AZTEC
THE PELIKAN PUB
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~
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~r:~9~~~e
a ••, · Win. • Good Times •
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Runners get
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Nov. 9th-Frank Banks ,. The Blues Busters
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Today, the SDSIJ
women'~ cro~~
,:ollnrry tCillTo ..:hangt::, from a group
,',r Iilild-rnann\!rcd runner~ inro tnter·
natIOnal 'lIar',
The team rrawls ehb morning Co
O~aka, Japan to ~'ompcre in the
EkicJen Relay'" and the cye~ of Japan
will he uplln them.
Owr on,: million Japane~e will
Natch the Nov. I () race on national
TV, while I()cal~ will fill the O~aka
,freel,'! 10 cheer for the ream~, Aztec
coach Jim Cerveny ~aicJ.
Dc~pitc
the opportunity Cit e"plore
a new land and culture, the mo~t important 3!1pect for the team ill- ~he
race.
Azrec Mona. Lopez will g(} on her
fir~t trip to Japan with the team thillyear. When ~he: heard veteran reammates talk. about the: trip. ~he thought
about the traveling. learning and
e~pecia"y the ~hopping .
~hc ~aw
the vu.lcotape from
fim Ekiden race two years
ago. in which SDSU took fiN. She
said the importance of thi,.. race [0 the
lapane~e amazed her,
"Now [ think more about the
race." she said.
Lo~'2 will run the final leg of the
si,,-Ieg road relay race. The legs vary
from three to 7 Ij~ kilomeler~.
Last sea.~on the Aztecs took fifth
behind four Japanese reams "who
trained all season to beat us." Cerveny said.
For Maureen Bradl~.y, the TV,
!!a~e" hype una ~iu;;;ds tilake: running the race "close to nerve·
wracking. "
"There's a TV camera on you the
whole time," she said.
Az!ee Kris Zdanowski, who will
run the 7 I/,·kilometer third leg, said
her biggest problcm is proper pacing,
"LOist year we were new on lhe
coursc, and [ didn'! know where (
wa., at. Thcre\ no splits, either."
Zdan\)w~ki ~aid. re!erring (0 the lack
of cour~e markers and time clocks.
Sut a runncr ccrt.linly wOlI't ~tray
nil' clJursc.
"It' ~ lined wirh people. ~() you
(:an't go wrong," Bradlcy said.
In trainmg, travcling and touring,
it's also hard 10 go wronjZ_ or _
I!ct los!.
"Everything is pianned out,"
Bradley s:!id. "There arc people for
SDSU'~
SAVE TiME-SAVE MONEY
From
It :.tet: fpnrt.fwrlrer
Then
TOWING
5625 EI C.fon Blvd.
EVE
GLASSES
SPORTS
~
~
-
n
-
E,TER1T TUESDAY IS
BIG MAC SAND"'IC H
DAY '
.
.
"
R
•
9 ¢
you
night ami said,
day.".. It's a linle (00
Zdanowski
stJucrured at first."
But the women occasionally sneak
away ftom Iheir guides to do addi,
lional shopping and sightseeing.
They may also find a sushi bar or two
nOI on the agenda, and this year may
visit a balhhouse.
But if the) feel too far from home,
they don'l have to worry. They can
always make a late·nighl run to tile
local McDonald's.
~ Sp~I1$"­
Slate·'· .
FOOTBALL: Wyuming, at Lara-
Special price good every Tuesday
through May, Good from I 1:00 A.M, to
closing. Special price only at:
Me Donald's\.R
5824 Montezuma Road
mie. Wyo, , Saturday, 12:30p.m.
(KSOO-AM1130).
SOCCER: USD, at Aztec Bowl,
tomorrow, 7:30 p.m.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL: Pacific, at Peterson Gym, today, 7:30
p.m.
CROSS COUNTRY: Men's: WAC
Championships, at Boise, Ida·
ho, Nov. 16, TBA. Women's:
Ekiden Invitational, at Osaka,
Japan, today, TBA.
THE DAILY AZTEC NOVEMBER 5, 1985 -
9
SPORTS
Women's soccer may still take league
hy "lom Schlegel
DaJly AVlefpnn.fwril",
~------
There i!! ~rill hppe for Illeague title
for the SDSU w()men'~ ,occer leam
afrer Ihe Al.lec~ ~plil a pllir of
weekend game~ at AZlec Bowl.
The team'~ record went til 7-2 wilh
a 2-1 overtime lo~~ 10 CuI Poly San
Lui!! Obi!lpo Saturday and a 3-0 victory win again~t Fre~nll St:lle Sunday. Cal Polv. which hent Ihe I\zrec:.
ea;'licrlhi~ ~~~!lon by a 2-' margin, i!l
rhl! only team that ha:{ heaten SDSU
Ihi!+ year.
The AlfCC~ are in ~ccond place in
Iheir ~even-rellm leugue, behind Cal
Poly und UCLA, whn arc Ijed for
lim with nne Ill!!!! each. The Aztec!!
hear UCLA at We~twood earlier thi~
~asol1 and UCLA beat Cal Poly.
With three gafl1e~ left and a~~um­
jllg that the three team!+ win their
nth" game!+, the AZfec!+ mU!lt beat
the Bruiiii; iii a NlJv. i 3 ~n(}wdown at
Aztec Bowl and hope UCLA dcfeat.~
Cal Poly which would give SDSU a
chance at capturing the league title. If
!la, there would be a three-way tic for
firllt place with the champion ro be
d=tcrmilio;d by a tiebreaker.
Team Captain Mary Anne Miller
!laid she thinks the team has a good
chance to beat UCLA; however. it's
the game~ against UC Riverside and
Loyola-Marymount that she'!; wor-
ried ahout
"We're a really gOlld team hut we
.Iii~i have to iearn 10 play .11 a c()n!!i~­
rent level and nnl ~Iack off againM' rhe
weaker ream~," Miller ~aid,
Junior cenfer halfhack Crisrina
Van Leeuwen lead!+ the ream wilh ~ill
gOIlI!! lind ~eni()r center forward Putty
Perkin~on ho!! ~corc(l live.
remalnln~
lime wllh
halve~.
Altec~'
t:h!!rnpjof!~hjp g:un:~ ..
Ihrl:l: with io·mllllll<!
ThL! ehanl!e affcctcJ th.!
.. tyle of play .
"In a .. horter game you really ha\le
to take ir 10 Ihem," Blumenlcld .. aid.
"We didn't a~ much a~ we ,hould
have. But Air Force had a loul!her
U~
Ihan rhey did
...
10
rhe
,
The men', and women', J'cnelng
team, defeated Oecidcntal and lo,t to
(';11 Srale /.onl! Beach rhl' weekend.
0'
The III" w a~ the t ir'l
fhe ,ea~on
fOi Hit: wOmeii'., (CUfll.
~kn·., fori ream .:aplalo Uere:k
COrlon eononucd fo fhe ream', mo,r
COIl!,I,tent fencer He went ,·1 oller
the weekend. r;mlng h" ,ea~on', re:·
cord III I (J.:!
.....
The SDSU rughy team tra\leled to
Ariz .• thi!+ weekend and
fini~hed third in a I (Heam tournument. behind Air Force ami Ariwna,
re~pccti\lely .
The team went 3- I including a 123 win over BYU. The only IIJ~~ was a
11-3 deci~ion to Air Force. Team
captain Greg Biumenfeld ~aid he be·
lieves SDSlJ wu!+ the be~t team in the
tourney, despite the third·place
finish.
"The main rea~on we lost to Air
Force was conditioning and mis~ed
opportunities." Blumenfeld said.
"We had the ball in their half of the
field but couldn't score.
"They were a good (cam and they
deserved to win. They were really
scrappy and played much more emotionally than we did."
Rugby matches arc usually divided into two 4O-minute halves, but
because the team!! were playing four
games in two days the first game was
played with 20-minutc halve .. and the
Tlil:~on,
fJ('fH{()W
Illltllily 11l,;lrut·li{)lI.t~"'I.'.. lltlJ.! 11\ I't
fil" ,"1;-,1 1.1 \" .. "r~ "rf'f'rf'I"'tll
/1oli,'y! ('la,-.~.- ... .In- nll,-n-t! fhrllHJ.!h ....;.111
"I-'!.!" 'Ll~" !' nl'.I'r!"",I", f ·:dlq.:".d f-:·. . r' nd, d
Sf IJdh·~. ( "allih I ~JI :.!f;; I·:d '-I~ ill' j,.... 1."\ I "'I .... ,.... ,... ~t ...10 I
'.OW t'flhL
"rF~S'1-'
;,HIt,1I1I1I III
1·."'·IJil":'11 fJ f.
~('r'\'I('(':-'
.. J'II! 11-.
(.Ir 111 f.,rlTl;lflllll
t., tilt· ',· ... 1'
Falcons---
B.
.A . K
E
R
Y
S
TOR. E
WEDNESDA Y NOVEMBER 6
NOON
EAST COMMONS
PRIZES, FREE SAMPLES. ENTERTAINMENT
Daily AV,," photo by Paul',onKwonh
BOOTIN' BOY-SDSU place-kicker Chris O'Brien gets set to nail a
kick out of the hold of Jim Plum, O'Brien missed his second flel!l
goal attempt against Air Force Saturday, ending his WAC record
for consecutive field 90al6 a! 1S.
C:unllnurd rrum paK« 7.
"I think if we can gct a win thi~ week (against Wyoming), we can win Ihe
of our games," he said.
And Ihis week the Aztecs will have the advantage of playing a second
consecutive game against a team that runs a wishbunc offense, something they
defcnsed solidlv Saturday.
"Our defens~ reallY ca;lle on in the sel'on~ half." Aztec cO:lch Doug Scovil
'ait.!. "Wc're gelling' heller (defensively) :J~. we gil along."
Still. linehaeker Todd Ril'hards Solid that although the AZlees turned in one
of their hest pcrfunnanc..:s against the "O,lnl''' Saturday, they gave up on~ ~lr
two hig plays whil'h r,l\1 tl1l.'111 dearly. Among Ihosl' pla~'s wcrl' run~_ 01 )1)
yards oy Falcon quarteroack Bart Weiss amI 50l yards hy lullbad: Pat Evalls.
But Wyoming ~huu(d not prove f(l havc as potent a wlshb.mc allaek a, the
F'lk-on,. Currentl\' 1-7 overall and 0-5 in the WAC, Ihl' Cowooys arc COIllIllj.!
uff a 59-0 shl'lIa~kinl! at thl' hands of BYlI.
To heat the CIlWOOVS, SDSlI will oncc ,IF,lin have I,) cllutend \\ ilh ih
sel'ond straight road g.;llle in .1 cold'\\'l'atlwr climate. ~a!urday, both SC\lvil
and A/tl'l' quarteroad, Todd Salllo' I1ll'nll\ln~d the wmd ha~ a detrimental
ciTed lin SD~ll' .. Il;t"inj.!. Thi" Sall.lrday, thmgs could he sllllllar
"AnYlhillj.! l'an hapl'l'n ill l.alalllil,," Scm'~1 said... .
.
For the Altees, tlHluj.!h, anythinj.! hut (osmg a hlth straight would k
lIcceptahle.
..
.
H)OTUAI.1. ,,'ACTS-A/tel' Ilankl'r Wd1ster Slauj.!hrl'r sullered a spnllned
ankle latl' in Salurday' S I!ame. Thl' A,tl'c senior left till' game after making
four reccptions, induding a tnul'hdo\\n.
re~t
AUNT MARY'S IS OPEN
MONDAY - THURSDAY 7:00am TO 9:00pm
FRIDA Y 7:00am TO 4:00pm
10- NOVEMBER 5, 1985 THE DAILY AZTEC
,r--------------------------------------------,,
888~888~~~8S~8'~~~~
i
~
~Sa-u
..-.cuma>....-.-.. _ _ _ _
...-yy
1,
6RAHD
OPEHIH6
:,
,:
:I
HELP US CELEBRATE
THE SUCCESS
OF OUR tiEW RESTAURANT
!
!
~
~~I!J ~<iI~~~_tjl"" rwljj~_'''<j)<j) <j)rw~ ~~.~
,.
presents
,
~
~
~
~
:~
The
:~ ,
Alpha-Omega
:
:
Players In
:
i .
:
:
:
OVER TWO AND ONE HALF YEARS ON
•••
•
••
wEdNESJ;Y~
i
~\
BY MURIEL RF:SNIK
a
!
f)
:
•I>
:
I
Thurs. Nov. 7
Montezuma Hall
6PM
SDSU Students $8.00
Genera! Public $10.00
I
I>
•••
I
a
•••
Tickets must be purchased today!!!
at Aztec Center Ticket Office
,..
:
f(~}A
........ NATIONAL TOURING COMPANY
~~~@~~~.~~~~
..
•
8ROADWAY~\i
'1 ~
PLUS
DINNER
II
1,
:,
,:
•••
:
I
Ribs • Chicken • Seafood
I
I
I
I
Salads • Desserts • Fountain
,,
I
I
I
,
I
I
I
Now Thru Nov. 31st. 1985. wIth thIs Coupon.
Buy One Entree and Get the
Second of Equal or Lesser Value Absolutely FREEl
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,
I
I
I
,
I
I
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I
I R E 5 TAU RAN T
I
&
B A
~
I
!
I
:
6011 EI Cajon Blvd. 582-4200
:
I
(off College next to foodba5ket)
I
II (
I
I
._---------------------------------------------
I~
I
Family Planning
Associates
Medical Group
:
£m1
••
:
• Pregnancy Termination • Birth Control
• Free Pregnancy Testing
• PAP Smears • Breast Exams
!
Student Health Insur./MediCal & Health Plans
•
San Diego
6495 Alvarado Road
:
••
•
I
••
•*
(619) 287-8226
:
:
:
~.~~.~~~.~~.
b\ Stacy l'inz
D~ily A:J;cstaff ...riter
~~-------
Unlike other classes at SDSU. Student Health Service>' GYN Program
is guaranteed student enrollment.
The GYN. or gynecology and
birch control. program educates
women students on birth control and
pelvic exam procedures. First-time
patients sceking birthq)nlml c;crvk.:s or a p"'lvic cxam arc rcquir.:d to
attend the hour-long cla~s before receiving medical attention.
According to Emma Pcllcttiri.
health educator at Health Services.
students have not been deterred from
seeking birth control at Health Services because of the class.
I
:
•I>
1
Program helps
teach women
health issues
1
"Students have found it very hclpfu I," Pellettiri said. "'n order to usc
birth control properly there's a lot to
know. There's been a lot of failure
(unwanted pregnancies) with birth
control in the past."
The class prepares women for their
first pelvic exam. According to Pellettiri. many students say the course
made them feel easier about getting a
pap smear test.
"We encourage male students to
also attend the li YN program." Pellettiri said. "We would like to ~tart a
course for men that would teach them
also about birth control. However.
we wouldn't go that much into pelvic
exams."
The cost for a pap smear and
chlamydia test at Student Health Services is $9.50 for students. And
according to Pellettiri, that is a bargain.
"The pap smear has saved hundreds of women's lives," Pelletiri
said. "The test can detect cancer before it has a chance to threaten the
patient. ..
Pellettiri said that the chlamydia
iesi is aiso very important because
the sexually transmitted disease can
cause sterility in a woman if not detected soon enough.
The course also tells female students how to be assertive about bil1h
control resp0nsibilities. She said
birth control is the responsibility of
both partners, but the woman must be
affirmati vc.
"You have to say. 'no birth control. no sex,'" Pellettiri said.
IDrunkl
Con.linue<l I~om page I.
.
t\~~Ullltllg
to Ilara.;:h, the dum
will illustrate how much alcohol a
person can conSIJme for his or her
individual body weigh! before
being considereJ legally drunk.
TUESDAY!
$1.89 PITCHERS
at
GWoonSTOCK'S
CPIZZA
(Coors & Henry's Dark)
The mirror will be available for
people to loo\( at themselves and
decide whether (lr not they've had
enough. A sign over the mirror
will state, "WOUld you drive
home with this person?"
SADD, now a nationwide
orgtmizaticlI, was founded in
J981 by Rober! Anastas in Massachusetts with the following
goals: to help eliminate the drunken driver and say/! lives; to conduct community alcohol awareness programs; to alert and inform
students on the dangers of drinking and driving; and In organize
peer counseling program. 10 help
students who may have concerns
ahout alcuhul and lIther drugs .
.. We need til get students in
6548 El Cajon Blvd.
(Corner of Rolando Ct.)
265-0999
(the organilation) to io:!!iale Ihese
;wlivilie~," Barach sai.1. "Thal'~
why we're h.. ving the reception."
Tunight's reception hegins .11
7:]0. Regular SAU[) meetings
arc Tuesday nights at 7:00 in Con·
ference Ruum D in Altec Center.
I
THE DAILY AZTEC
CLASSIFIEDS
FIGHT POLITICAL APATHY. Very rewarding
FOR SALE
WOlk. VoIcnteers 01 earn S. Call 488·5930.(14971 )
1972 Chevy Nova. a swell runnln carll Vory reI!·
able. 5650 ask lor Kenn 589·9625.
(11268)
HELP WANTED; Need Hashers. Please Phone
583·363510 ananga 101 I",e(\ll~w.
(14631)
Electric GUdAr. G'bsl,)n Sanex. blaCk w:lh Polytone.
100 wan amp. S4OO. Call 582·2714.
114641)
NEWSLETTER EOITOR"Olsabled Sludent Ser·
VlC9S. SOSU student. iunlOr or above. Colleglale
newSll<lP6r 01 6qUlvalenl wflhng exp.menee preler·
red. Salary aporox S2OO.mo. Apply at OSS. CLS
110-·265-6473. ApphcatlOO Deadline Nov. 8.
1985.
(10875)
!=ORD t TO lS77 . .; dWi. J,NWtH sleenng ana
brakes. air. crUISe. AM,FM slereo. 1000 m, on reo
engine. new tlfOS. now muNler•• very clean.
5195O! Call 582·3035.
(16041)
bu,"
WANTED; SMOKERS 18·24. Male & Female lor
Consumer Research Study. Cash co·op lor lhosa
. QualifIed. Call 9;00-5:00. 283-7336.
(11234)
MOPED; 1982 Honda SR Express. 3850 n,lIes.
good condrtion. $350. Call Kim 563·5957
eyes.
(11281)
CONDO; 4 bdrm. 2 'Iz balh. S8!>O mo. OR will renl
room by room to ,ndlvlduals. 4 mIlo SDSU. GR·8
to.:ala: U musl C' Available Now 589·9625.( 14979)
Sony MiCrocassene Recotder great 4 taping lec·
tures. like new. only 520. Call 465·2359. (19524)
EI ConqUlstador .. ·Room AvaIlable For Spring
Semester. If you are a lemal.. & have not subm!ned
an applICation. caJ1287·1492 for Bey or
Kathleen.
(16031)
1974 Toyota Cor Wag. Runs greal. needs a httle
wor1<. AMiFM star casso great for student! S800
abO. Leave mess 583-2724 Louis.
(17545)
F Roommale Needed own bedroom:bath S220, mo
plus 5150 deposit. Sludious but fun. 1 'Iz miles to
SOSU. 261·8817 leave message.
(19532)
Tomos t.\cpOO. !i.....1 """dilion. mus' sail. Sl/~'1
Call 286-0781.
(14980)
3254.
(17955)
WANTED; People who have lived in SOSU Resi·
dence Halls for a least 2 semeslers and are in·
terested in mOving into tho new residence haU. VIlla
Alvarado, in January as CLG members. For delalls
and application, you must anent ONE of the in·
formation sessions on Tuos .. Nov 12th a18;15 pm
or Wad., Noy 13th at 8;00 pm. in Aztec Center
Conf. Room D & E. Call 265·5742 for more
info.
(12234)
NURSES,. NURSE STUDENTS
Good money, 8)(C. benerrts.
4 wook's vacation aher
first year. worId·wide travel.
professional growth
ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEED CASH? We buy and SoIIi used LP's & casset·
tes. Rock, POP. New Wave.-etc. Trip West. EI Ca·
jon, 447·5052, CV 426·6138.
(11191)
Call Toll F,.. Mon.-Wed. 8IInHpm
J
HEY NOW!!
Is your p-oup laleralcd Ia
ICrftDOd
,,11ll
baviD& slalru silk·
YlMlr OWD IksI&D~
AspIrlaa >odaI·"or" graduate stud<nt .... c....p
nt.. and
wortur..msllJp.
noo
(15898)
FOR RATES, PLEASE CONTACT
Federal. Slale. and Civil Service lobs now available
ill your aroa. For inlo r.all (602) 837·34(11. Oepl.
372.
(18016'
ConUnued frill:] page 1.
According to Dennis Turner of
the San Diego Plf.nning Department. since the passage 01 the
Growth ManOlgcmcnt Plall, thc
citv council has voted on four exceptions • .-:ach being a couple of
hundred acres apiece.
Turner said the proposition
would affect \3.000 acres of
land. including the recent council
exception of the La 10lla Valley
I'I'<lject. He·said there is a lUIal of
about 50.000 acres in the urbanizing areas with most of it in the
jurisdiction of the San Diego Port
Commissior. and the U.S. Navy.
T\1e citizens of Imperial Beach
will have two propositions to vote
on. deciding whether they want to
allpv.' cardrooms in the city.
through Proposition G, and
whether they would like a redevelopment agency cstahlishcd to
revitalize the city and the beach·
front property through Proposition H.
Voters in Montgomery. iln ,111incorporated area ncar Chula Vista, will decide whether they w"nt
to become residents otThula Visla hy anllel(atillll, through Propositioll 1.... Thi~ wuuld mean Ihai
all servi~es would be provided for
by the city instead lll'the couOlY·
Polling pla~cs will he open
from 7 a.m. III 8 p.m.
• Intu·.") ...·
MARK KLEIN
ON THE .,OVE SCREEN PRI1JnNG
~83·gilliO (an)"lim~. l!\lCn af"!T 10 p tTl I
r---------i
I
I
I
I
•
I
I
•
• • TOYOTA
: • DATSUN
I s HONDA
I
I
II MAJOR TUNE-UP :
I Includes Valve Adjustment I
I
$50
I
lOlL & FILTER
II
I·
I
I
I
$15
'''Ul'" /',"
I-.d"~
lHn,ph."tnfl.II
fa"-t- .tth.,nt •• ",,· flf
Ih, .. ,""limA( ,.Ir('(,
""I"'rlulIIl~ '\0\\_
.. \I I 'HH \\ lUU.f
I1
I
I
I
II
h:Jrul
:-.1\
:0":' ~ c;"\~~r
TYPING TYPING' FAST FA$T' Ol[AP CHEAP'
LUANNE 563·6858.
(16086,
>':i.:!.." f~t"r C"Hat' -\\:: ~ Ei l 11·:-', hid
10"t0 OFF ANY SIX fTEMS
WtTHnUS AD
• f'L'ZZl~::,l;)J"l ITt~b •
TYPING Fast Accurate Worl< 1150 page. Near
SOSU Call 582·4214 anytl"'"
(~'258)
n'm .. "lInjl
~~
rt'qUlrl'l11\ nl .. '
f{, ,
1-100-121-1751
UIIIlISITl" ~
PIIOUAIIS ~ .,
~I"".
\t.u .. j>.
II,,, .... ,! .. \ . " " " .
•• .. "" .. ·•• " .. 1 ........... .
1'.,,10 .. • ...... 1 H.", •••• , ... "
RECOMMENDED BY
r
+ TYPiNG il:i:
Papers, Theses, etc...
Fast, Reasonable'
near SDSU, 287-3199
I
L=::======::I
STRUGGLING (& DISCRIMINATING,
STUDENTS EVERYWHERE
S10·S360 Weeki,,' Up MaIling Circulars' No Quotas t
·TYPING SERVICES.
barbara jeanne
r;:::;:A~~~·~~~=::::==-·-:;j·::;:::::==;jil :~ ~ DENTAL Health Pla~ 3",J SAVE " ..
x Rays .N,C. otllce "'5!15 ar.a ~
Wora ~'roce5sing
:~ oral oxam:; N C. rag claa.. ;:-.g ~
Sincereiv Interested rush self-addressed en·
velope S>=ess. P.O. Box 47OCEG. WoodstOCl<.
IL 60098.
/11175:
460-2333
~
~
~
$40
AIR COOLED ENGINES
MOST MODELS
$8
~
~
Wel!{'r1g D,stance of SDSU'
~,
DIAL ME FOR FUN lar,tasy holl,ne. Hear sen·
SUOus. erObC talk. 'or men ove~ 1B S2 ... ton. any
24 hour saMee. Cali AN EROT:C FANTASY
(6 1 9) 976-2040
pe287,
I'
00 YOu n~ an tJarty I'1l(')I"mng stlmulal"lt? PSFA
rr:=:::a::E:=:::::I[]C:::::=::::::IO:===:::::II~ College Counol rneets uvery Wads mom'ng a:
A NEED FOR A TYPIST? Reasonable.. spaedy.
Kathie 576·1277. 8;30 a.m.·9:00 p.m.
(10920)
a
• COllEGE UNLIMITED SERVICES.
oHers last & prolesslonal
Las~
WOlk
second eme 1 gef":c'i
TYPING. Dro~ Re~umes
come In or call now 265·8980
.
.NEAII SOSU I FiEE PARKINGI'
LA MESA
STOP WORRYING learn mora in less time wrth my
tim&-saving study guide send 52.50 to Siudy
Guide 1380 Garnel-260 SO 92109
(10810)
DIAMONDS. RUBIES. SAPHIAES
At .::ost pius 20"•. e'cel'er.! valu9s (EG '.., ct.
saohlfe .. S551 Grea14 X'mas' Call for appol11ment.
698·5802.
119469)
I'kaw _
CLASSlflEDS
00 PIl2e
San Diego
Tanning
Company
* I month membership '2000
pay oniy 12 50 per visit (unlimited)
during the month.
*Our ever-popular 8 visits for '25 00
SECRETARIAL
EMERGENCIES!
7 DAYS-24 HOURS
. Most Small Jobs Done
WHILE U WAIT!
. In Your Office Or Ours
(()\ mellgellcy. CPllo~e!!~iOIlQQ!:
!0fT(X)I'0fV
(16024)
Fee! And Look Great Anc
Healthy With A Tan From
American Legion Hall
MIW 4:45 & 5:45 ... 458-1292
Free Class With This Ad
New Students Only.
~)
7:00 am tn PSFA Am. 200.
7200 Parkway Dr. # 108 La Mesa
call 469-6119 for an appt.
Socrotooal 5eNtce
Expires
11·12·85
462-0187
1
·2-SHOW
COLOR PRINTS
2nd
set FREE!
OFFER GOOD UNTIL
11/9/85
BRING US YOUR
COLOR PRINT FILM AND
WE'LL GIVE YOU
A SECOND SET OF
STANDARD SIZE OR EXTRA LARGE
4" COLOR PRINTS
I
I
I.
JI
MISSION VALLEY
FOREIGN CAR SERVICE I
5839-F Mission Gorge Rd. I
I
2 miles from Campus
I
I _________ J
1280-3483·
~.
(2 per yr.). N C. & milch more'
Plus par1ICIpahng denllsl5 w ,r,
VOLKSWAGEN· :
MAJOR TUNE-UP I
• OIL CHANGE & LUBE
I
I
I
DICK. RUTH GREETING CARDS
1.. lu·ntld1
• l".."", .\
I.I\\'floo...·•
587-9246
•••••••••••••• e~
l.uumj,lp.. Mtr
hUli[l r,,:dul hun In
SO Stale Prof. wife. and 2 small dOgs want Jan·
May rental. Preler furnished home. Call 742-
HELP WANTED
Vote
."1
Learn now inexpensively
Call Tom - Flight Instructor
Typewflter Sales Se""ce & Aepalfs COLLEGE
TYPEWRITERS· FREE ESTIMATES· 5737 EI
Ciljon Blvd. 286·4034
(12792,
• J.llh"'Ul" \"ur
't.tll' Hf1Uih'rtH'nl .. In,
.., II'n""·..
11
Become A Pilot
TYPING I EXPERT·FAST·CLEAN PAPERS WITH
EDITING·NR SDSU··MS. COLLINS 286
2863.
113349)
Hl'~t:'
II .. HUt': luu,
l .. Ilt-j('l' l"rtdlh add.up
Mala roommate needed to share room in BIG 2
bedroom condo. ¥. mi. to SDSU. Pool. jacuzzi.
tennis crt. laundry. miCrowave. A Great Place To
Live. 2OO.mo. Call 463-9925.
(16408)
1978 VW Scirroco, 49,000 original miles. runs
graat! Great exterior/interior. Asking 52850 or best
offer. Call after 2pm ask for Joe phone 466·6091.
(15202)
Dance Inslructors Needad
Mon·Fri 6·1Oom. $5·$15 hr.
No experience necessary. Will train.
See job board or call 465·3411.
~
CAl1l1li
lEA
.
I REAl. ESiAit BROKIIiI
M:F. to share 2 bdnn apt. Avail immed. Own room.
5250 NICE' 440-3814 or 697-8344.
(15876)
1973 VW Bug For Sale. runs great. $1900 or best
offer. Katan 589-0792 (after 5)
(16309)
good advancement
career develOpment &
OO<ltinuing education
in tile Nevy NUIB& Corps.
BSN grads & Senior Studants
may apply now. A8pId promotion.
Mgml & Teaching positiollS.
I
i,
PROF. WORD PRQC TYPE ·Theses. PaP'lrs. reo
sumes. etc. LOITalne 421·9426-·BoOila 1127881
HOUSING
SNOW CHAlNS.. Custom Irt to your car. PriCe at>out 60% retail. Caf1427·4787 or 691·8190.(17560)
1-800 . 222 . 6289
AcademIC lypmg word processlOg. Theses. re.
sumes. oapers. Alc Sharon. 448·6826. (18015)
If!
TELEPHONE SALES working 101 disabled veter·
ans. Cash paid dally. Apply a13028 North Parkway
MornIOg and afternoon shIfts.
(10866)
FOR SALE 76 MG Midget. RebuIlt eng. Irans. new
clutch. 'IlnrtlOO. good condll,(m. SI600. Call 287·
(15000)
1709.
FOR SALE: 1980 Toyota Cebea LlftbaCk. good
condrtlOl1. sunrool. shade guard. 5 speed. 52500
abO. Call Larry eves 266-1255.
I 14IlQ:l)
NOVEMBER 5, 1985 -
Hours Mon·Thurs 8 OO ..m· 7 OOpm I Fn 800om·4 OOpm I Sot 10 00am·3 OOpm
12.
12 -
NOVEMBER 5, 1985 THE DAILY AZTEC
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TOO BUSY FOR LAUNDRY?
CLASSIFIEDS
('''nllnu~ (r"m paj(o II
Let Us Do Your Dirty Work!
Try the Fluff & fold Service
attha
SDSU STUDENTS 53.00 ANYTIME!
INSlGNlfICA!iCE'
~.•- . .. I
" ;,,;:_._~:.:;-. :
Back To The Future (PG)
100-315-530
745-1O.1(l-12:IO'
COLLEGE SOAP OPERA
I 20-3 :10·545
800-1010.1215'
COIN LAUNDRY
fi):
582-5349
Drop off laundry by 10aml pick up at 4pm
50e per pound (10 lb. minimum)
Emerald Forest (R)
FIRST FIVE POUNDS
FREE!
4:1N:1!>-12:00'
Compromising Position" (R)
1.4!Hi;()o'IO;lS·
With this ad only
In Aztec Square, Next To McDonald's
PERSONALS
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\U Plodqf:'. and Af.::'If:~
Ycu UAJI( MAA;'·~'JAlOU"l'" -"'l-t·
(147061
Pledqll!l
PSFA Coli,..,,, CAJune,I na~ two ~pen,ngs ava,Ia~I"
flY V P (J~ Frt1itncp. & V P r;( Pubf,c Relat","!]
'/ltLUA:9t£ F/Pf "'F'~C.F If 'f"'~ ..UI! ,"fo!f"~I~,
tlea~,,! r.flf1tN.! ~";'\'Nf\ SN,''''' a' fMP' PSFA ort'~.t! at
,5:2S
(11\029)
PI PMI G."e~C'f11 (c~ ~tlG!t1! 201:; ba.,n{n dO {eAve
"Itt WiYlfn (J'IIee£y butJofe1 mltf91O'lM ~iope u had a
blil.1t 'II~
Y~ <Aurt N L"
(t496-"
"' '\ SERP O'JO OEOE MAyeEN' U R a PARTY
NHMAL. let 5 qeftogetMr n 00 .om" DAMAGE'
lme ya. SAH4R ~ '\ : ~',
(I~5r.1I
---------- - - - -
::. \.
~ '\ ~HAA; n1~1lJrl'l Yet. re an aw~sc""(:
SERP B!JO' .... 011 fft Br,:; Brc:; and I Will ha,.f! ru
THMA~" '/0 .. " Lo_e P;,rfl
(19522,
3rd Annual
ALL YOU
CAN CARRY
BOOK SALE
::''' SUE REEVES r. LAURA WAGNER ~ '\ .. 2
Cool T~at Us 2 Got U 2" W~M A 4-Some 'liP. AI
Mai<e lt • Your Se,p 81J1!5 Pam and Sana!
(1%15,
GATS8Y .. (We' SO sorr( aooul d,nner lhe Olt·s'
"<gill ·tal.'r1<j ITlessage5 are roo s'/WoeLdo '/-ot.
bel,eve In 1M gret:n l.qhl".. 0' ",hat? ... we rrugrl t.e
aola to ~rran~e .omelnlng .. DAISY- YOU i\~li/W
(99999,
wno..
'''; \Ii FOOTBAlL TEAM AND COACHES' Con
gratulation. on your
VictOry I
Don·t stop us now.
we're on a ron! Eh.tt they coutdn t have 00116 It 'hIt'.
0tJI tnose wonderful ~\ coacnes' We lOve yOu'
GOOD LUCK THIS WEEK'
(14575\
If you hayO nad lOWing problems or over cnargp.d
10'
servlCe 3t SDSU. USD or UCSO p'eolS<l call
tn.,
Julie at 26506975
(10890)
K\1i MAGGIE; We heard rt tnrough!he Greek yme
!hat ~$ tna! speoaJ ~me ... 50 ... 181'5 M Ihalled hne'
HAPPY BIRTHDAY:' CHEERS' We Love U Tne·
ta :;; LISa & Cout! ,;
(14966)
LOST/FOUND
UoI(I 50umwesl Htgh Schoollln9.
1985. cOntact;
AJy,n at 423-6614 REWARD.
(16087)
LOST -·Near BETA .nn T.G. on FI~-Pair 01 PrescnplJon Sunglasses. Cazacal Frames. Call Keny
265-8653. REWARD.
(18245)
LOST LV Brown Wallel. LC'St last Tuesday near
$6 ON MONDAY
1 i :OOam - 5:00P111
Sludent Center. Substanc reward ,I returned. Cail
582-2537 an)1.me. Best time after
10:00pm.
(15895)
$5 ON TUESDAY 9:00am - 5:00pm
$4 ON WEDNESDAY
REWARD: Lost tupperwaro bOx fuU of very ;mpor·
tant keys. Phone 583-7:171.
(17957)
9:00am - 12:00am
__ Rules:
-
.
1. Purchase a ticket for admission (If you don't find enough to make it
worth your while. we will refund your admission charge or you may
purchase individual books at $1 each)
Prints and Slides
from the same roll
Kooa~ MP film
Eastman K()(jak'~
profess,ona' mOhon p,cturerMP, f.lm nOW
~dapted I~r 51,11 use In 35m"" cameras Oy
Seanle F,Im\'lorkS En,oy m,cro· f,ne gram
in one trip,
and rich C.::>lor saturation Snoot 10 low 0'
br,got i got Irom 200 AS'; up to 1200 ASA
Get me option 01 prlllts or s!ldes or OCIh.
Irom the same roll
~
____________________ J
INTRODUCTORY OFFER
Ci RUSH me Iwo 20 e.posure rolls of your
leaalng KOOAK MP "Im- KOdak 5247'
1200 ASA) Enclosed '5 S2 00 I'd like to Oe
aole 10 get color pnnts or Slides lor Ooln)
!rom the same rOll 01 th,s 'luali!, tolm
YOU CAN'T GO WRONG!
- - _..._-
Your Campus Shopping Centet
rECstlOPS
Hours: Mon-Thurs 8:00am-7:00pm I Fri 8:00am-4:00pm,' Sat 10:00am-3:00pm
iil5'DfiESs .
: CITY
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ZIP
Mad to Seattle FlimWorka
PO Bo.C·34056
Seattle. WA 98124
: '1981 5<atli. F,'_'s
lI""lof 2 rolls pet custorntf
L____________________ _
:
2112
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innovative garb available in San Diego.
Introducing the nc\\'
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In 'Ill VI )Llf IK'\\' l'IlIlta ...·( lL'n'...·, hI \ hit In ...·X.II11in:H1III)' ;!Ild It JIl' l\\ 'lIp I.':lre.
All at the low prke of • ""91 ItI ,
This package includes:
prufessional services
• Complete eye eA;unination (giauCOIl't1 tL'.~t ~md visual field.; also)
• Lens evaluation ~ml! fitting
• Set of soft daily-wear lenses for myopes (ne~lrsighted)
• Care kit
•.\il
• Full in..'itrLIcth )!1S and tr:!lning
• Personal \'hi\)I1 Report
• 'l\':tHlll Hlth care pn )gram and money back guar:iI1tee
• Plan membership ti.:es
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LaJolla Center
(:\ .... :11' [.( :~I
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Mi.o;sioll Gorge Center
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i.a Jolla. c,\ '),!I ;.)-
II HI I:; S;lIl I )i\.').~, I ~ I i ...... illil
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(6i9) 4S"1-JlHI
(619) 2H3-9201
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ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
DAILY AITEC FASHION '85 NOVEMBER 5, 1985 - 3
Canterbury of1 ".,
New Zealana',:
..
The AIl,American look is brought to you '.'.
by Canterbury of New Zealand. Rugged, .::
long lasting, good,luoking clothes Jrt
always a must for :lny coilege student.
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IDRY CLEANINGi
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¢
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PUMP AND PRESS
At Low, Low Prices
any gMment
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and pressed.
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6505 EI Cajon Blvd.--at the Areo station.
1 mi. from S.D.S.U.
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Present coupon with clothes
Watch for our weekly coupons
ill the Daily Aztec
................
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:\P\'ERTI~I~LJ ~L'PPLEME~T
4- NOVEMBER 5, 1985 DAILY AZTEC F:\SHl()~ 'S5
Sun of ABeach
Fl)r ;1frl'i fun in the sun, rhis cardigan ;~'!~~'~'.", ~
~\\'t'(mhirt gi\\\s rltH c;bu;'ll h)l)k i1 little
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Sun l)t A Beach hils cil)thing fl)[
summer and filiI.
-----~---~-~'
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LEE SHOE
Make Your Party
Preview at Prevue!
WAREHOUSE
Wholesale prices
to the public!
Featuring the largest
selection of Party
Dresses around.
Choose from:
TD4, New Leaf and
Jolie Madame
Also Featuring Sportswear from
~
Grossmont Center
(near new Cinema Tri-Plex)
(619) 589-2100
_____d
____
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off
~
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Dress, Casual, &. Athletic
• 0 0//0
5335 £1 Cljoll Blvd,
on top of our
everyday low prices!
28"-8573
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
....~.
'
DAILY AZTEC FASHION
'~1
NOVEMBER 5; 1985 - i
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Sun of ABeach
SUNGLASS TRADERIN
SPECTACULAR
Life's a Beach, but not when you're
Ill()king gllnd in casual c1uthing from Sun
of• t\A ')t)cac I1.
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Everyday is Students' Day i
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at Cascade Cleaners
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I ,Ica ncrs alld incoming order I
'We Do Shoe Repair & Alterations! I
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STUDENTS
1 0% OFF
Another 20% off San Diego's Guaranteed
Lowest Prices.uSave Up To 40%
Dry Cleaning & Alterations
'_ -" ..l<.--:
Your friendly quality cleaner, shoe repair,
and alterations at realistic prices.
Eligibility: You must tum In a ~unglass to re<.etve thIs
spedal discount. any sungla5s, whether scratched,
..m.uhed, broke~, melted or brand new wtll get you
another 10% off. From n.oo to nOO.oo Includes Ray
Ban, Carrera, Porsche Design, Bolle, Gargoyle, Bucd,
and every other name we carry. Includes all mens,
womens, f.\Snlon, sport sunglelsses elnd ski goggles.
•
6145 EI Cajon Blvd.
In the Campus Plaza Center
583~4883
I
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'(his otter is tor dry cleaning only. Does not
Include shoe repair, or laundry which is oHered
at regular prices and Is not good in
conjunction wltill any other oHer or coupon.
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with this
old rhru
11·10·85
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Sari Diego Sunglass Leaaer
;3 to ;300'
Dt ,Gf1loNJ'I"""" ~ne CeMeol " , . . ,1
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ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
6- NOVEMBER 5, 1985 DAllY AffiC FASHION '85
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DAILY AZTEC FASHION 'H5 NOVEMBER 5, 1985 - 7
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ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
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14 - NOVEMBER 5, 1985 DAILY AZTEC FASHION '85
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FAS'HION CENTER FOR GUYS AND GALS
Grodins
FREE
GUYS
Casual wool pants and
oversized sweater with
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the place for colorful,
contemporary menswear.
* Buy 2 dress pants
and get 1 free
* Buy 2 dress shirts
and get 1 free
* Buy 1 sweater
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* Buy 1 ladies belt
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Gift Certificate J
Name:
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1______ - - - - - - - - -
Special applies to selected
styles, free items to be of
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54th & El CAJON BLVD.
(Big Bear Shopping Cenler)
582-3177
1140 Broadway, Chula Vista
(In
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Price
Bazaar)422-6300
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
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Accessories give it that ail together look
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S'WEATSHIRT SALE!
(Look For These Items Modeled In Fashion Issue)
.•~', :,,".~-~""""r"~~~--~-:O
CAMPUS CLOSE
A Full Service Salon
Total European Skincare
Cardigan Sweatshirts
51495 each
Hooded Pullover
Sweatshirt
7115 NAVAJO ROAD, SAN DIEGO
464-3761
INCLUDES:
Acne Treatment
Hydrating Treatments
Intense Moisturizing
Biological Skin Peeling
Waxh,g (Legs, Bikini Lines, Brows)
Therapeutic Massage
Long Sleeve Crew Neck
Sweiltshirts
511 95 each
ALSO:
Make-up Analysis And Application
Featuring SebMtian® Cosmetics
Retailers of Imprinted Sportswear
957 Garnet Ave. Paciic Beach 272-2604
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FASHION '8;
November 5, 1985
Circulation: lS,Vl10
Advertising Director
BrJ(c Qt'DDc[
Asst Advertising Director
jl1.lnnc Kuhn
Chained To Your Glasses
Because Of AstigIl1atisIl1?
Production Supervisor
Gar\' 3utt:')n
Asst Production Supenisor
Gina Br;rt'll
Here's your key to freedom.
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Ken Fine
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Pete Mechalcs Mnniqllr TeSdle
Jack lalannes gof if all ror !Jou... inclutling pricel
• CO-ED FAC[UTIES • NAUTIlUS
• AEROBICS FOR MEN AND WOMEN
, STEAM· SAUNA· WHiRLFOOLS • NUTimiON
• FREE WEIGHTS' WORLD'S FINEST EQUIPMENT
• CHILD CARE CENTERS' JOGGING' RACQUETBALL
lat nominal charge I in key locations,
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66% off
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F,lShllln ~S
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Ilr
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IS an J,IWllising iurrlelllcnt
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Jack lalanne's European Health Spas
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. \\'ith rhe' ri~hr jt'\\'ek'!"\' ..
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up ;"ll)\' llurfit. H;H1hlc,~
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DAILY AZTEC fASHIO\ 'S) NOVEMBER 5.
b A Y(!II
r:v
II .tU.,}LL I
nnllll'~n
runen
Mark Nuovo v:ears the
wool oV2rslze,! pullover ($90) with
button·clown lonq sleeve
shirt ($3~,) Both Ironl J, G. Hook
VV~:cd blond striped pants
cOlllr!ete tl18 look ($52\
WIN A
WARDROBE
Be
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In IC:fll:';lol cllJrilh;
(1\, ;,j.),/ Jill!;
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AZTEC SPECIAL
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· Mens Ski Jackets
· Ladies ski Jackets
· Polar fieece Jackets ... S 29 98
· Down Vests ... ~2698 & up
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· Pullovers ... s16 98 & up
· Wind Pants ... s1798 & up
· Ski Gloves ... s39B & up
· Knit Hats
SHORTS
.
Pri~es
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~55
-High' Q'ua'iity .
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Garnet Avenue· Pacific Beach
(across lrolll Filippi's)
MOII·S~110-7 Sun 11-6
phone 274·2442
F'IJa gill KfilPPIll!} • M C VISA
Clotlrmg. J8Wtl/I}' ilnd Sh08s
lor AIBII and WOOIM
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6134 University Ave.
266 .. 8747
• Limited to stock on hand
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DAILY AZTEC fASHiON
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must discriminating
697·1031
husil1L'SSpl'rson wirh an~
2320 Fletcher P.:Jrkway, EI Cajon
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The Dail" Aztec
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The Leisure Connection
Cafe Vid
and
Sal and Leo
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mali.I'1I thi:; tillle'.
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. ~MonyMo~y's
6064 1/2 University Ave.
San Diego, CA 92115
229-0106
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SHIRT & TIE or
RI~()lY~E
& FLOPPY RO\V
Bid
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San Dicgo·s fint:"st
f~t~~h:un~,~
t hI: I(.(,k·s I:xpl:llsiw - thl: prin: is
!lOt.
as a Gift from Us!
·\\'lih
t'.h..-h rurcnd<\t:' of an\' nf our mt.'n'Ii/\\'Onll'n's ,uits
,'r 'rore coat and slack/skirr combination.
ALSO
Starting November 7
Every Thursday is
Ch"(,,c ,lnY ,hirr/blouse and rie. up III a 5;;,\.'\.' \'alut'.
from our nursrandinl-: Sl·ll·crion.
(;(ml'.\RE!
EI\l'\\hl'n:
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1,,\"·' \\"\ll'! 'uit""' So!id .. /P.lrh.'rn..
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\\"",.1 Wor'tl'd Suit,
1'1",«,"\ ir,H'!. F\ann~\ P,lt\h
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7S¢ glasses of wine
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"The abow offer runs through November 15th.
Sousa & Company, Orange & San Diego Counties leading
value priced men's and women's Traditional Clothing Warehouse Store.
Come Join tht~ Fun!
TUSTIN
LADIES NIGHT
SAN DIEGO
4i92 Clairelllont Mesa Blvd.
621 South B Strel't
Phone: 619/279·3300
Phone: i141i' 31·7151
Hour,: Mon.· Sat. 1l' to 6, ,Int! Sunda~' 12 to ;,
free roses for the first
200 ladies
8 p.m. to close
and a chance III win
an outfit courtesy or
j .).
l'Ak~~W
~~
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DAILY AZTEC FASHION 'KS \I0VEMBER 5, !')~5-- 2!
ADVERTISINU SUPPLEMENT
New (]othcs, New Shoes,
New Hairstyle, What's Missing'!
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TRIAL TAN SPECIAL
3 sessions $9
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287-7033
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Aztec Plaza
6372 EI Cajon Blvd.
3 Blocks East of College Ave.
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HIRTSALE
Choose one shirt from selected styles and get a second shirt of equal or lesser value
for just one dol/ar.
The DaiJy Azte('
would like to thank
the foUowin!! models for
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their contributions to
Fashion '85
Karen :\Jlrr
l~'ni'r :\lI1rs
f.lullkaton
~r~tt B.:utd
Illna &\lIing
Cavanagh
Llil·h
, Cllf~\',
ur~n Glasgal
1\1 C;re~n
Karen (jr~gor)'
Kilr~n jer1l1rs)
l;re~ K~nn~\
JII,h ~bhlcr
:\:ott ~kB.:e
Jill ~k~d
Faul,1 ~jl':111
We've selected a group of our most
popular and latest styles. From classic
solids to unique patterns and prints. From
luxurious chamois to lighter·weight
cottons. Limited quantities regularly priced
from $24 to $36. Now buy one and get a
second for S1.
A PARTIAL LIST OF SELECTED
~H!RTS FROM OUR CAT.I\LOG:
Camouflage Flannel .............. $24
Badlands Chamois. .
. $36
Via Venneto Tab·Coliar ............ $36
. $28
Kit Carson Pullover. . . . . . . . . . .
Big Sky Western ................. $32
IIMI
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TO OUAN TI TI[:; ON HAND
THE PUEBLO PRINT SHIRT
Warm, rich colors il1 a 100"'0 cottnl1.
button-down st~lrHl~~r Pllu:d
Kathl~~n Mlilir~
rIght (=it
[).m Ml\rri!l
Mark ~UUVI\
Ch, er\'llll\on
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Strw P(llbck
Anne PrlCl
C\'llJ~\' RanJ,dl
t'ilU! Ra\\ii!1~~
Kr!1Jl! Rl1uth
1M Sdl'l')tcr
rl·t~r Tegan
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SAN DIEGO' 2800 MIDWAY DRIVE· 619/226·8755' MON-FRI1O-9 • SAl 10-6' SUN 11-6
WEST HOLLYWOOD' 9000 SANTA MONICA BOULEVARD' 213/275-0285' tv10N-FRI1O-9· SAT 10-7' SUN Nl.lL'N t1
BOTH STORES OFFER AD,IACENT FREE PARKING AND ACCEPT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
~!2·~
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
ZZ - NOVEMBER;, 1985 DAllY Arne FASHION '85
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Pacific
Eyes
and T's
for Only $1
Featuring:
• Polaris Equipment
FITNESS
IfJtriI¥
Wear your sunglasses at
night! Vuarnets and Ra)'
· Bans make anyone look
coolon those sunny days
and steamy San Diego
nights. T~shirts are.
·ulways a safe het for any:
SDSU coed.
• Over 4, 000 Ibs. Free Weights
• Aerobic & Exercise Classes
• ~acuzzi and More ...
460·4560
8879 Campo Rd.
Spring VAIlev
o min. from state ~ off
r=
94)
Rs"designed blue jeans by
La'uren Cilch
InjeanouB challenges the
status quo of conventional
clothing by presenting a
new dimension to blue jeans.
Consider legs as slaeves, a
waistband transformed to a
collar and a fly you won't
think twice about leaving open
denirn that breathes new
life, , ,that's injeanous,
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,:,~~~ sunglasses from Pacific Eyes and Ts tc)r . ~~' ..
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COMPLETE DENTAL EXAM,
NECESSARY X-RAYS
AND CLEANING
New Patients Only
$25.00
Cusmetic Unnding
.\ \'uiinhle
All InSllrillH.'e Plans
Accepted
Imll1l.!diall.! AppllilltllWllb
A\'ailahk InL'ludillg
I:wl\in!!~ and Salurday~
Frederick \"'. Lindblolll n,D.S.
llENEfl/\L [1[NTIS mv
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A Healthy Smile
!/d:' L'
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UJUNCTION
Iii." ~,,'ti' ~
286-2280
tue.lled West ni I.:olleql: un [I ('.11\)11
RENT YOUR TUXEDOS FROl\1
TUXEDO JUNCTION
YOU WANT TO LOOK GOOD
AND WE WANT YOU TO LOOK GOOD
SDSU STUDENTS SPECIAL DISCOlfNT
LATEST STYLES
ALL TUXES ALTEKED Tl) FIT
TUXEDOS READY SEVERAL DAYS IN ADVANCE
5887 University Ave,
San Diego, CA 92105
287-386S
Next T,) t :ml'r.lfll.1 Thl'.ltrl·
Klttv Smith (Owner)
Alterations of All Kinds
\()\l~tBER 1, l~Si
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The ultimate in t\'ening wear t~)r that SreCi,ll nCCaSil)J1. His
'.: .;._" •... tr,ditilma! black Jnd \\'hite tllxtdu cumplemenrs her l11l)Jcm
'•.. .'
tllrllul)i~e sequined glHnl ttl l'~rl~ltilln.