SDSU professors` consider `our global future`

Transcription

SDSU professors` consider `our global future`
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eDail Aztec
WEDNESDAY, OCTOOER lS, 19.'l9
VOLUME 13 Nlh'18ER
:u
"
Five SDSU projects
await state funding
Preliminary budget process begins
By Kilth: Delnlnger
Dan" Mlec staff write..
.
The DaUy
.
.utcdJaJ
R*""
Homecomlna Queen LIn Bales and Homecom1na Kh. Robert Giallo $A1 the Grftk system baS taken a
bad rap, being labeled as eUUs..
. ,
California Sta'o Umvtiuhy,
SDSU and ~a'o ao~t Qffi.
aab mot in Alt«1 Center TUosday to
di~ tho finlllclal fatll uf' HY«al
wnpus projclc:ts.
Tho mectina wu pMt af an annual
o\'U\\ that holp' s'ato IOvcrnment
officiab t\e,onnmo which p1'Ojow
\hoy will ~ for fundlna to
Clov, OeQflo DIlukmajlan md tho
~ato ualslanu-o. said Jontan Man-tutO, dopartmant of n~ bud~t
Il\~,
Tho five oonslNCt«m POOP;lS
includo a $4.8 mmt~ tbemiatry.
Oc!olocy buUding addition and
d\lUad \ftter aystom Instal!atioo. a
By LesUe KeesUnl .
Glalio, a psycholOBY aonlor from Mmal, b
; $13.1mllUolutruclUfQtolOplal:Otho
ICltlvcly involved In tho Chock ay~cm.
.
c.mpus Lab ~lildlna, $of1O,OOO to
Dally Aatee staff writer.
Ho hll!t hcld tmn,Y posltloo:: in hi; tnt~'Y., Bola ' ..:.!I.!rtP!l\lU'.!.~ !l Love UbP-wy a,dfll,.
Tho word "royalty" toqjures lmaacs ofeUtists Uv· Thota Pi, Includlq one II pnlSidcntln spina' 1989.
,doft U¥! $420,000 to boaln plannlna
The $4.8 mUUQn ~\lC.$lod · for
ina In lu~ury bChlnd castlo walla. Many SDSU stu· He la also a former NSh/ICholmb.lp dil'Octor of ~
an&llrtOorina buUtllns mlovatlon. .thataddltlon .b v!t3l to tho limlplor
dents view members of tho GRick ayatcm tho umo Intomatemlty CouncU.
'
'. NodclCbi~ ' ~mldo about. . 60ft oftM ohlllo(t·WltClf projeclt mat.
way.
."
' . " . ~ "I'voloamodmoatol'myloadorshipaklllafmmmy.
:wh,iohpmjoolswmbo,~ whonfln\shod. will pmvldoairconBut HomccOmina KIna RobCrt'Oiillo.and Quoon .' :ttatom1ty,IIOlalloiald. "Iflhldtoc:J\ooM)OI\Olqank
for, I\mclln,; ' "
,
. ~ltlonlnarOl' many 1Mlp\la build·
Lin Batos IIrC Ilyina ,totoa,i'down ,'tIlOIO Walta; . : .lIlI<in that ~· thant ~1l¥)Il for w~at
l~ed., it '.. .uW~'IO.~ JO aot'l\Mlltim'l ",Fult~.aldlhomonoywmcoy-
Greek royalty sheds elitist' image
, .
199Q.91 edut:atltin e.aphal ootla)'
budaot, Mootantl al\id,
Tho bu~l wm ~mild~ publl~ In
Januaty 19~. nw.n IDo slate ual~.
lat~ will "Qto. 00 It in lheo ~pring,
acconlin~ ~o Mootaoo,
Approval for tho. pxql~1lI dtlpeJlUs
on JunQ':\ S9-millioo boolt iuu~
vuto. U appnwed, \00 mooo.)' will bo
divided be.t~ IDo CSU~ tmlwni·
ty afCIIUfOOlla and CallrooUaCl)Ill'
munhy Calloge systOmll, lIIItd Ton)'
fulton, SDSU Facllihl~ Phmnilll
aM Man~' dl~tQf.
lrtho bmd Issu~ ia nQ\ pwod, th~
pro,jo.tts U'O in tho ait, till :lllid.
Bven If tho bond laauo b
llpproved, tho aoVemor c:ould VOlt)
projeets from hia bud~t, De.ukmo.·
jlan did thllt laat YQv to tho
Chombtry.OQolollY Ilddhl(Vl, l'Ullon
nld.
.
rvo
.:I' '~,· .9=~liI\".&~~
c~~.~~=~~~.:w ...==-~~.; .~~.~~ ~~I,
'>. ~ ,' '~toP~I~==~!::' : ~~'!m~af~~=~=:: 'jOG~~~~lnthonra~~dol~:~~t~
. .~'many
Other atu~cntoraanil&l,lcna.
"All orlho cqanizatiOllll have been involvod with
have scrvod II building blocks," she sald. "Ijolncd Pi
Phi first. which got roo started with othor on-c:unpus
8I'Oups."
•
tnlnlna FoUnd fOr what.youd ca II. On In .Ufo.."
Glgllo aald fraterniUes arc orten mlscoUstruad u
elitist aroups, and he would IIko to IIOC that noalltivo
imqo abolished.
PIcUD lIIIe GREEK Oft PlIO It.
.. planntna .pbiao.. SDSU', MW PfO"
jeC!a uo tho IlbtwyOltonalon aOO tho
,Bnalnoerlna mlQVlltion.
Ptojoot l'OClonunondttiooa will be
made in Swamonto cIurlna Novcm,bar and Dooombor for tho Bovemor'a
tncnw
and OOMUUotlClJl dlmoultics
and fUndina qUe$tltm.'l from SilO'flft\mto. MontlIOO mUd. The pmlon
nov tho Open Air Th~tro la ~edulcd to ~ nnlahad in Januftl')', Put,
ton ~d,
SDSU professors ' consider 'our global future'
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~;llff~~:! s!«;;'C:~ter
' ~. ,: :;: :' f~:~i'; ;Fi" : '~ ': ),:!~u,Ren. 'Troxoll
,~, ' '. ,;. ; Population
Larry,Bennitt
John Hobbs
Pollutlon
Mary Clark
.•
Attitudes '
The ,wo,rld III alrolldy overpopu- ' . . The E.anh'a energy 1'OSounlOlI arc . To lIavo Iho ollvlnllUllent, people
Energy : 'r
.
Pollution Is cerllllllly ono of Iho
. ' , For mnny, ,lhe fUluro onlte e~vl- mosltOJ\¥lble envlronmontallssuCl '. Illed tuld nCl\rina Its clpllcity. ·
belna rftpldly,doplotod,and II no'j'l nood tu OhMSO their IIlIltudos 10
ronmcnt Is tho lIingle mosllmportlnt ·· todllY~ It CIIJl bo road about In thl:! paP-•.' Philosophy Prorolllior BUBone . CI1I;1f!y !!oon:o Will bon@OO~(l!oon~ . nwre t}f a "world view ,";;;Id biology ,
IsSue faeing Ihe world lodl1Y.
or, wllichod on TV nows IUld soon'ln' Trollel! said Iho ' globAl population thAn moat· people think.
PJof~~~or Mill)' Clftfk.
, Pollullon, overpopu!fttion, energy our walertuld /l~ts.
• 'doublcdbctween 1950 and 1987, '
Chomlslry ProrO$llor Larry BenClftrk outlined her vlewli of the
resourcos IUld attitudes IIbout the
Political science Profe/lsor John roIIChlng ..5 bllll~ Another bllllonnou 811d thlt 011 and pelroleum
f\IIurc in har latest book, "Ariadne's
'environmcntal arc jUlitsomo of the Hobbs, hoy/ever, sees talllc, mia- wlll probably be Added before Ihe 'duCIa In tho Urilted Stfttcli wll bo 1'hrClld: The SOINh for New Modes
.',',,",
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topics being 'pursued by llcadcrili· live tuld thennrll pollution aa Ihe YCllr 2000.
'
'
. . " oxhluslcd by llhe YCllr 2020 if we of ThlnldIl8."
','
clans in Ihe field.
.
most damaaing pollutllll18 ta the · UnhcdNlltions exports projcctoontlnueat our pnlSCnt rlW •
•: -Like tho ncrvCl.'! in one'~ body, . cnvironmonL or thOlle; thermal pol,,; .. Iha~ ' the populatlon' In 202.S will
"Wo've boon aolnS DIIlIl8 think·
Thouah tho environmenlill S\tUII..•••.•.~~arAle .cnvironmcmal isallca ,11'0 lutlqn and ill.Impact on th~9rcon., .., ex.coed 8.2 blllion I!,d lhat 90 per- ina ·the Barth :~. ,oUJ.I to do .(with) tlon III muilifacoled,lt Is Clark's cam,'
.: , ;-,. Plterc0nnectcd.MIIJlY probloma and house Moet ·la most Important, he . ~ntorth~t arowth Mil be In deve- whatover wo. want," JRnneU aalel. tentlon thin :a ohl'"8e In lhinldna Is
. " ": ~.ucl that may se~loc.al incVl~ly said. "
.' ' i' :
lopinanatlOl1l. •
';'"elliwo'ro on OW way downhill." . the fil'litlllcp towmhavlng tho Bluth
' . affccllhe world cnvli'onmcnL"As Ions a we don's expand · . "Thoro arc 1I~1I that 11'0 solna to "
tuld its onvlronmcrll.
. AtSDSU, several profolaOrJ have nuc~ar power too much, radiative ClOrno into play," Troxell IIld. .
oUio problem I, tha'roaour"Wo've hlld Il very mliitarlsilo
madeeducltingsludcrilSononvlron- (pollution) .wlll probllbly. bo falrly '~We'ro alroady overpopul.ted, tuld COl havo ,bocnIOO;·OUYto .~oss, attllude lowlrd the environment for
'. mental concerns a lop priority. Tho manageable," Hobbssald;'
. ala 1!7 porconl aMualsrowth rato, ».cnncttl!lld.Tho.r~l'OSO~espfOo tho put 200 ycars,"lIhe Raid. "By
'jQlcrdlsclpllnuycourso"OurOlobal . " H()~bI •.ald thoro .1I'O) lboul 360~d~blin8 tlmo will ~ 4Oycars." , ~~Qd by Barth'havoforoC!d humans undcrilDndln'a the hl~tory, wo bogln
Future" discu~. many of those klp... nuclear power planll ~al ihouJd be
Trollell aald thali' thO populaUon 10.i bocomo totally doJlCfldcmt un IQ undOl'lltand OurseIVOIl,II
, .lc~ and · ~ laUa~' bY, I~llec~ , ., doconunllaloncd ,wlthln ·th~ noxt ~~ , BoN ', Upii apoolo.,:" y~adOn 'loca ,; IhDI,n., ....•. . . : :; : /, ': " ..
CIDrkllllldthlltrelil~ll1Bthoe1\tenl
.' ,lr9m' ,varlou. ll dop~r~onl' on _ ycm, 'Jbo probl,aR', la, 'ho aald,.llo .' cJow~,·':Thd·' .~P~y ,bn'l ~Ih ·. ·<Jfl.now vltalto .lociIc
othor ofourdal11ll80 til Iho environmont hi
' ." . 9,IDlPua.: .. ' ,. . • : <':' . , ' " . · «:-lmoW~ .how to dll It. . ':, :' ," i;.I'OC1IRon~1O ~~, Ita cna-ODCqy, altcinattvoa•. ' , , ': '
tho
stop,
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lit ~GY 'OlI ·PII'''' ' '......... · A'ITITUDE UIIt PII.... ,
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' O,CrOBER: 25" 1989
'7,rief power outage affects SOUle campuS' 'structures
Power went out from about 9:30,
Tuesd'lY along the
south and west sides of campus after
a private tree trimmer accidentally!
do,weed a power line on Toyon
Road, said SDG&B,spokesmanFred
a.m.. to, 10; a.m.
~aughn.
Toy'on&oadison then~sideof
Montezuma. Road, across from Coil.,y,ood ,B,oulevard.
The area in the outage ran from
54th Street and Chollas Parkway
north to, Interstate 8. More than
4,~OO customers were affected. by
the blackout, Vaughn said.
We.'>t Commons was, hit by the
blackout" but its. manager, Mike
Phillips, said that business continued
as, usual.
"Luckily it wasn't when clallSCS
broke,:"Phillips said. "It wasn't real
b.~" Th~e was. no. big crowd."
Enrollment dropping
Enrollment at SDS,U decreased
fol;' tlle,second year in a row" accordIn& to.a press release from the Office
ot Communications.
Official enrollment here was
35,582 for the fall, 239 fewer than
fall 1988, and 363 fewer than fall
1987.
Orientation jobs open
Student Otientation Leade[ positions for the summer are available.
The deadline to, apply, is, Monday.
The job. pays $340, for leading
groups of new,students,during eight
Academic Information Days.
To,be eligible, students,mUst have
attended SDSU for at least one full
semestCl;' and have an o~erall OPA of
2.5.
There is a mandatory, one-hour
meeting at 12:30, p.ID. Tu~day in
Scripps COltage for prospective
leaders.
For more information call
594-5221.
Faculty urged to give
SD.SU kicked off its 1989 United
WaylCHAD campaign Tuesday.
w~th a molllint coffee in the Pres~
butions distributed by United Wayl
CHAO.
Campus
Notes
idential Suite at Aztec Center.
This year's goal is to increase
faculty contributions to the United
Way and CHAD (Combined Health
Agency Drive). by 10 percent over
last y~'s total of $70,6~3.
"We've been, emb,arr~ in the
past that participation wasn't what it
should be," President Thomas Day
.
s.ai(!.
As,an ~~ incentive to,make this.
>;cu's, campaign s~cessfu1,. DaY,;
s~ that i£th.e. goal i.s.m,et" all SDS.U!
contrib.utors,wil,l receive free tickets
to, the SI>S,U-:atigh,am, Y0UD8 football gamo, Nov. 2~.
Jamie, Tucker, e~cc:~ti;,'e directoz;
of thtc C~ said that one ~t of
every thxee.San Pieg~ Count)' residents receive ~e bcnents of contri~
Acco(ding to Allen Bay top,
senior campaign divisi9l1 dilector
for the United w.ay, mpst of tho
money raised at SDSU; is through
payroll d~uctions. With the deduction plan, employees designate an
amount of money that they wish to
contribute each pay period; and that
amount is automatically subtr8,cted,
from their paycheck..'I,
The campaign, will co~ until
.Nov. 13. /
compe,nsate for 'the inconvcnien(;e
by· making: ~ study space aVllilable on other floors.
. "Throughout the process, displaced lib.ruy materials will rem,ain
accessible. to t/)e public on interim
shelving loc.ated in the northwest
comer of the fUth floor. Signs will
indicate which materials are,temporarily, 'r;elocated and wl)ere," Paisson
wd.
Mis..~
Coed America
~ Miss.COed AmcricaJ,>togram
is seu:ching for the ideal; young
wOman between the ages of 18 and
L<N.e Library, is, cpgrading its. 24 to, repxesent college \yomen
fifth-floor bookshelves to, meet the cvery,'Yher.e.
state's seismic co.de. The Project . State and ~-large winners. Will
beg~ Oct. 1t and, \Yill; be completed, me.et, f<l( the national pageant in
by the middl.e of December.
Febiuar.y ~. Los Angeles. ~ winAcco(ding, to. Gerald D; Pdl.~on" n~ of th4t competition will represent
associate ~ve~tY, Ubra.n.an fos: the United Stlltes in the Miss World.
Adminislrativo Serviced" there wiu Coed cor;lI.est in the spring of 1991.· '
be increa.~ r..')Lso anA {ewer l:cader
. ForD,l.O[e information, write to the
stations on the fifth floor during the Miss Coed ~ca Program" 8833,
project.
Coventty Ct., 'ac~~Vlllo, Fla.
Paulson said thelihrary w,.illtty to. 32251; or call' (904). 448-6927.
BO,oksbelf' renovation
HOW TO Gn;INIO
THE LAW ORMRASCHOOL
OF YOUR CHOICE. '
\
W~.I)NESDAY OCTQBER ·25
6~3..Q P "M,. 1'Q Q~OQ, P~M.
SAN ·DlEGQFABULO,U.SINN
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THE DAILY AZTEC -
OCTOBER 25, 1989
Perfect for students
•
Renter's Insurance a must
By Kimberly Ray
Dally. Aztec starr wrIter
You return home after an evening out, only
to fmd the door slightly ajar. As you peek into
the living room, you see the television and
VCR arc missing.
Your personal computer, ste!"co and favorite
leather jacket are gone too. You've been
robbed, and after the initial shock is over
there's one question to be answered: Who will
pay to replace your belongings?
You will - if you live in an apartment,
rented house or residence hall and don't have
renter's in"urancc.
With renter's insurance, the insurance company will replace hcms up to a set limit, after
the deductiblc has been meL
"Your landlord will cover the structure, but
whatever you own inside is your problem,"
said Ruth Williams of AlexaJlder Axel Williams Insuranc::, part of the Farmers Insurance
Group. "If you don't have coverage for anything inside your house, you won't be able to
recover the replacement costs unless they fmd
out it's the landlord's fault, and then you'll
have to fight for it."
Most insurance policies cover damage from
fires, thefts ('I' vandalism as part of their basic
coverages. Also included are medical
expenses for someone injured at the property,
and payment for hotel bills if the property
becomes uninhabitablc. For an additional fee,
most policies can cover losses caused by
everything from earthquakes to leaking
waterbeds.
"The contents, medical insurance and
replacement costs are provided on 99 percent
of renter's policies," said Stacy Jenks of Allstatc Insurance in La Mesa.
Renter's insurance usually provides liability
for accidents occurring in or out of the insured
propeny.
"If you're in the grocery store and you accidentally trip someone and they sue, renter's
wouid cover it," Jenk.'1 said.
A policy pwchased from a major insurer
typically has premiums of about $200 a yClil
with a $250 or $500 deductible for $25,000
coverage.
National Student Services offers the less
ex.,ensive Student Personal Property Plan,
which provides fire and theft insurance to sludents enrolled in at least one unit per semester.
Premiums range from $22 a year for $2,000
covernge with a $100 deductible to$160a year
for $10,000 coverage with a $25 deductibl~
Please see RENTERS on page 6.
3
Welcome
Wacky Wednesdays
Once Again
ttyou Call It"
$1.00 Drinks
c
l
u
B
.And Thursdays
It's
,-
Bring school ID and receive
$1.00 Drinks
CELEBRATE
Both Nights
Sp.m. - IVlidnight
SEASON
Earn extra dollars this Holiday Season
Watch for live bands in November!!
THE
at Mervyn's
Employment applications being accepted now!
Competitive Wages • Flexible Schedules • Discount 011 Purchases
Positions available in our sales & stock areas
Slop by our sto.re office, at the following location wld fill out '1Il
application for employment. If you haven't worked recently
don't let that stop you from applying!
3345 Sports Arena Blvd., San Diego
MERVYN·S
an equal QpporlWlity emploYl%
Corner of Rosecrans and Sports Arena
in Point Lorna
225·9090
must be 21 with proper identification
It's always aparty at Club Caliente
OCTOBER 25, 1989
4 -- THE DAILY AZTEC
Future Pollute People
Continued from page 1.
The class was designed not only to
educate students about problems
facing the world, but also to promote
action.
Environmental problems will not
go away on their own, and it is the
hope of the professors that students
will do their part to remedy the dire
situation.
The Daily Aztec interviewed philosophy Professor Eugene Troxell,
chemistry Professor Larry Bemen,
biology Professor Mary Clark and
political science Professor John
Hobbs about the condition and
future of the environment
Though the range of environmental topics is vast, the professors were
a:;ked to focus on how their disciplines pertain to enviromnental
issues.
Contlnuoo from page 1.
Some of tho radiative material
could take as many as 200,000
years to decompose, causing
more problems. In the meantime,
fmding a place to store the materials has caused further complications, he said.
Toxic pollution, because it is
more tangible, is one area that
Hobbs feels humans will be able
to control.
But he emphasized that the
pollution problem is commensurate with a growing population
and a rising standard of living in
the Western World.
Placing checks on society and
technology is an important factor
in limiting pollution, he said, but
tho .popUlation factor is most
vital.
Continued from page 1.
tures if tltey continue to increase at
the present rate, which would make
increased species extinctions inevitable, he said.
Such countries as Mexico, where
more than 50 perr.ent of the inhabitmts are less than 15 years old, will
have to begin facing the inunediacy
of overpopulation, Troxell said.
"What this means is that either
man or nature will have to start taking some steps in dealing with over,population," he said. "Ifnature takes
those steps, they are going to be very
grim."
Troxell said that at the present
population growth rate, starvation
and disease in developing nations
will be more prevalent than it
already is.
Covenant Funding Corp.
of La Jolla
Attention: Graduates
Our full-service mortgage corporation
will be choosing a select group
of high caliber students
for an A+ career opportunity.
Sign up NOW with
Counseling Service and Placement
for on-campus interviews
to be held
October 27th and November 17th.
ALL MAJORS CONSIDERED
COVENANT FUNDING CORPORATION
OF LA JOLLA
For more information, call
594-4376
Energy ~!~!~de
Continued from page 1.
Solar power is the most logical
source to tum to, Bennett said. It
is the cleanest form of power and
exists in endless abunliance. The
problem is learning how to harness its power on an economicaliy feasible scale.
Nuclear-powered fission and
fusion are also energy alternatives, but technology for their
usage is likewir'tddwn the road,
he said.
Conservation is the most
viable short-tClrn alternative, and
will become necessary as present
energy resources run dry.
"We are at the point of
exhausting our resources completely," Bennett said.
Tho next step is acting in a way to
change our ways.
A broader knowledge is needed
by everyone, she Mid. The "Renajssance person," who is not specialized in one field but adept in all
areas, will be the type of person
needed to save the environment, she
said.
"The very things that we're doing
as individuals are tearing us apart as
a society," she said. "We need a
sense of community with each other
and the environment."
In order to change our handling of
resources, overpopulation and pollution must be eliminated frrst, she
said.
"The fu:st step is for people to do
something themselves and not wait
for other people," she said.
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The Daily Aztec
Editor In Ode!
Production Supervisor
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_lon.
TIM D!JJ1y Azltc Is publlalled MondlythlOllSh Frtdlywhlle ochootla In
SIjp1ed commenlarl.. and cartoonarepment
only t~ IUthol1l and aJllJls nll:".:d. Unslsned editorials reprtsentthe D!JJ1y Azltc editorial board. Direct com"pondenceto:
'l7tI DRily AlIce, San DIej>;o Stale Unlv...lly. San DIego, CA 92182.
Ineptitude comes under fire
The UC system's controversy over how to deal with inepi: tenured teachers is growing. While many UC schools support the firing of the inept, others within the system
favor a less caustic attitude toward the issue.
Supporters of professor temtination claim the apathetic attitude which allows inept
professors to remain in the UC system is deplorable. Many are calling for the resignation of profe.!lsors who fail in either of the areac; of classroom instruction or research.
Biological chemistry Professor Sidney Roberts of UCLA is one professor who
opposes the firing of professors viewed as inept. Roberts said, "Take someone in literature: He might be working on a book for 10 years and would appear to accomplish
nothing in the interim. He might not have been doing as good ajob teaching as he might.
But 10 year3later he may win the Nobel Prize." Such thinking has caused many to ask
whether research is as important as instruction. Many believe the two are inseparable.
The University of California at Berke~ey has proposed a plan which seems to cover
all points. The plan ensures that aprofessor will not be fired for poor perfomtance unless
the professor has proven incompetent in both of the aforementione~ areas.
Supp<Jrters of the pian claim that the plan is strong because it safeguards older professors who often slacken in their research interests. Despite the aversion to research, the
older professors are often excellent lecturers, according to supporters~
Obviously, what the educational system (and not only the UC) needs is an objective
means of measuring the perfomtance of professors. Until we have a better idea, the UC
Berkeley plan seems to be the answer.
The car of THE 90.
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Letters to·.. the Editor·
.,
n
'Genetic soup' is
not a proven fact
Editor:
Mr. Simpson's claim that "evolution is a fact ... (it) has become so
well supported by experimentation"
reveals your r"sponse (TM Daily
Aztec, Oct. 19) to Bill Armentrout's
Oct. 11 column to be hogwash.
There is no concrete evidence to
support the idea that life as we know
it, complex and intricate as it is,
arose from a primordial "genetic
soup" .eons ago. Carl Sagan states
that the .synthesis of life in laboratories has been achieved by zapping a
genytlc soup' with electric current
and/or ultraviolet light (conditiON
that may have existed when the earth
was first fonned). But logic kills the
notion that this ultra-simple life
resulted in our existence, regardless
of the amount of time that has passed
since tlw earth.was formedl There
are at lel'st three things Ican mention
[1.
to discredit evolution and certainly
to disqualify the theory as fact.
The second law of thermodynam. ics states that entropy - disorder increases with time. Things break
down; they do not get more organized. Although this may seem lik" a
simple argument that a creationist
might use against the supposedly
intellectually superior evolutionist,
it makes its point. A minor point to
discredit evolution as fact is the fact
that leading researchers in evolution
in recent years, having devoted their
lives to the futile task of proving
evolution, eventually claimed that
"no doubt the possibility that evolution, if it 1id occur, came about without divine power."
Th" evolutionist starts with the
premise that God does not exist,
which leads naturally to the conclusion that the creation theory could
not possibly be true. With this then
as a premise, it is understanqable
that the evolutionist thinks evoluu1>n
Death penalty is violation
of man's most basic right
I am writing on the behalf of the members of
the San. Diego State University Chllpter of
Anmesty International who oppose the death
penalty and feel that it is the ultimate cruel,
inhuman and degrading punishment that violates the most basic right - the right to life.
This letter is in response to the editorial run on
Sept. 27.
The first issue mentioned is that an act of
murder deserves the death penalty - there is
no question thnt Richard Rlimirez deserves to
be punished I'fterhis conviction, but you
would have the state take the role of the murderer itself and, as you put it. when someone
murders "it is the god-role." To cany out a
death sentence the state carries out the very act
- killing - which soc;:iety condemns. The
state shows murder is wrong by committing an
lict of murder. Does that make sense? We feel
the best alternative to the death penalty would
be life imprisonment without the chance for
parole.
Yeu state that the rights of an individual
should be "rendered null when he commits
murder."1f the rights of the individunl are !o'USpended because he or she is suspected of mur. der, then what type of justice are you proposing - a lynch-mob mentality of the police
state? Should the state have the right to shoot
someone on the spot? You seem to think that
the rights of an individual in this country
should be suspended because he or she has
been accused of a crime. There are countries in
this world that so suspend people's rights and
privileges. These countries are obscenely
.; abusing their power of life or death over their
'.. citi1.ens; ..
Another argument you cite is "the possibility of an innocent man being executed is nonexistent." This is patently false. There is no way
to ensure that the death penalty will never be
used against the innocenL A recent study
(1985) conducted by Tufts University and the
University of Florida produced evidence of
349 U.S. cases in which innocent people were
wrongly convicted of crimes punishable by
death. Of these, 23 were executed. The death
penalty is irreversible - there is no room for
mistakes.
An important part of the process for the
death penalty in the United States is that the
prisoners executed are not necessarily the prisoners who commit the most heinous crimes.
There are many unbalanced and unjust factOI'll
in thejudicial process for a capital-punishment
crime, which makes the process more like a
lottery than anything else. You have to commit
the crime in a location that has the death penalty. Depending upon the counsel you could
afford or their competence, you mig~ not even
is facL But the evolutionists seem to
be the ones with the closed minds. I
have to laugh when scientists find a
two-inch piece of bone, construct a
model of the being using only that
one piece and then claim they have
found the missing link! I certainly
agree that believing in creation takes
faith, but with this Idnd of support
claimed as scientific, it seems it
would take more faith to believe the
flaccid theory of evolution. Evolution is not fact!
Davld Hughes
aerospace eng. Junior
'Public torture' is
ignored by ACLU
Editor:
Over the past several months in
San Diego, and Southern California
in gener"l, we have been witnessing
an almost frantic amount of activity
by vociferous anti-abortion groups.
These groups, who group under the
heading of "Operation Rescue,"
illegally blockade public property
and trespass on the private property
of abortion clinics. For this, their
members are then duly arrested. I
be charged with the type of murder that calls
for the death penalty - so, if you get. en
incompetent lawyer, you are more likely to
die.
There are dozens of Ilther factors involved
in the judicial process that make it unfair, but
your opinion failed to mention any of them.
But one that sticks out as the most unjust is the
effect of racial prejudice on the jUdicial system, where blacks and other minorities face a
greatly increased likelihood of execution over
whites similarly charged. Since 1930, 90 percent (405) of the men executed for rape were
black. 1Tl Texas, blacks who kill whites are six
times more likely to receive the death sentence
than those with blapk victims. Ir.Florida, black
offenders who murder whites are 40 times
more likely than whites who kill blacks to end
up on death row. An all-white jury convicted
Robert Williams, a black man, of murder and
armed robbery in Louisiana; his court
appointed-lawyer was reported to have spent a
total of eight hours preparing the case. He was
electrocuted in 1983. Is this justice being carried out?
Amnesty International is not the only organization that is against the death penalty as a
form of punishment for any crime; we are
joined by a long list of religious groups, countries and their supporters. This list includes the
United Nations, which has been against the
death penalty since the signing of the Universal Declaration of HumanRigilXS in 1948, all
Western industrialized nations, thn American
Jewish Committee, the Episcopal Church, the
General Association of Baptists, the Lutheran
Church in America,the Presbyterian Church
USA, the United Methodist Church, the U.S.
Catholic Conference and several other religious organizations. Coretta Scott King, who
lost her husband and mother-in·law at the
hands of murderers, says, "I stand fumly and
unequivocally opposed to the deathpenalty for
those convicted of capital offenses. An evil
deed is not redeemed by an evil deed ofretaliation. Justice is never advanced in the taking of
a human life. Morality i" never upheld by legalized murder."
The United States, however, remains listed
with Iran, Iraq, Nigeria and South Africa as a
country that has the ability to murder its own
citizens. We at Amnesty International, a nonpartisan human rights organization, are working to abolish the death penalty around the
world as well as working on behalf of people
imprisoned for non-violent political beliefs,
their ethnic origin, religion or sex; we desire
fair and prompt trials for all and the end of .
tOrtlU"e.
have no complaint with any of the
above. If these people feel so strongly' that abortion is wrong, then
indeed they should be protesting. If
they violate the law in the ~ourse of
their protest, then they should also
be arrested and punished for this
violation.
The problem arises, it would
secm, in the manner in which they
are arrested, specifically in the use
by the police of pain compliance
holds. It is very Oifficult to see the
ncccssity of publicly torturing people whose only crime is trespass; it
brings to mind scenes of Alabama in
the 1960s, when attack dogs were let
loo~ on civil-ri~hts demonstrators.
Vile though this policy of pain
compliance it., it is unfortunately not
very surprising given the past record
of the San Diego Police Department.
What is surprising, and not a little
disheartening, is the position taken
. by the local chapter of the American
Civil Liberties Union, or better said,
the absence of such a position. The
ACLU has raised not one peep of
protest over the maltreatment of
abortion protesters; indeed, some
individual members of that augU!lt
oody have even spoken out in support of the police. This is nothing
short of shameful. The ACLU is a
strong defeuder of a woman's right
to an abortion, so it is not to be
expected that they will have much
use for Operation Rescue's
viewpoint. However, the ACLU has
always (up until now, anyway) stood
up for people whose rights were
being violated, regardless of how
unpleasant they found these people
personally; it wasn't the people
involved, it was the constitutional
principle. Now the local ACLU has
changed course and will not stand up
to defend the rights of people with
whom they disagrce.
I never much cared for most of the
people the ACLU defended in the
past, but I always respected the organization for its unyielding fight
against civil-rights violations in gener~l and police brutality in particular. Now, in this era of the war on
drugs and its ensuing threat to our
personal freedom, it would appear
t,hat we can no longer count or. the
ACLU. Wltat a terrible shame.
Jerry Bourbon
IiIstory senior
6-
OCTOBER 25, 1939
THE DAILY AZTEC
Commitmellts increase stress
•
Crisis time IS here for many SDSU students
By Grace Limbag
Dally Aztec staff writer
October and November are the
crisis months for many college
students.
Increased demands for study time
because of the midterms held and
term papers due in these months,
compounded with family obligations and job responsibilities, make
coping with personal problems a
challenge.
Last year's annual report by
Counseling and Psychological Services showed thatof the 822 students
seen on a crisis basis, 237 students
were seen in October and November. This does not include another
148 students placed on waiting lists.
"COpinlt is clearly a wide rangf! of
responses," psychology Professor
Rod Plotnik said. "The major ingredient is using your energy to deal
with some situation or thought."
There are several ways students
cope with problems.
"One way of coping is you're very
emotional about the si.uation and
you tell everybody how much it
bothers you," Plotnik said. "Another
kind of coping is finding a solution
to the thought that bothers you. Most
of us pick the emotional aspect
because it's easier.
"You can use your energy to worry, complain or fret about the problem, and none of that goes toward
solving the problem. For eltample,
you drive into school and there's no
place to park, and you say 'Oh my
gosh, parking is terrible, it's awful. 1
paid $72,' and go on and on. Does
that solve the problem? No, and you
wasted all this energ~ by
complaining."
Most students cope by talking or
complaining about their problems
with family and friends. But they
don't always st;'p there-they try to
cope by taking drugs or alcohol, too.
Plotnik said some people come
home after a hard day or a hard class
and complain in order to cope.
"And some turn to various kinds
of drugs," he said. "It's when you
use a larger dose of the drug and do it
more often that it becomes a way of
coping."
Statistics lend credence to the suspicion thar there is a substance-abuse
problem on campus.
Tne SDSU Campus Committee
on Substance Abuse conducted a
poll of 300 randomly selected SDSU
students by telephone in October
Health
1987. It found that 74.1 pereent of
freshman said they used alcohol as a
coping mechanism, compared with
73.3 percent of juniors, 68.9 percent
of seniors and 64.3 percent ~f recent
graduates.
The committee also conducted a
"Key Informant Survey" of 34 student leaders in Octobe.1986. Sorority and fraternity presidents, Residence Hall Association members
and Associated Students Council
members were intp.rvicwed. The
results indicated that student leaders
do perceive a problem with excessive use of alcohol and drugs on
campus, and 85 percent of these
leaders reported direct observation
of problem behavior related to alcohol or drugs.
The participant said members of
their organizations use the following
substances: alcohol, 97 percent;
marijuana, 74 percent; and cocaine,
65 percent.
"Love at
First Bite"
583-4000
(Corner Of College Ave.
and University) [J
•
Continued from page 3.
The insurance does not include
what are standard features on other
insurance policies, such as liability
coverage.
"We only have one policy, and it's
just for insu.;ng personal property
against fire and theft loss," said
Sheila Hansen, office manager for
the insurance division of National
S~udent Services.
Although most companies allow
individual roommates to purchase
policies, it is often difficult to obtain
Rn insurance carrier if there are more
than two people sharing a home or
apartment. National Student Services does not have these
restrictions.
"A lot of preferred companies
don't like to see more than two
roommates living together, because
then there are people moving in and .
out all the time and there are added
risks," Williams said.
Off-campus housing adviser
Martha Vickers said students should
make sure they are not covered by
their parents' insurance before buying a policy. Some homeowner's
policies .cover full-time students
even if they are not living in their
parent's house.
"We do urge students to get renter's insura..,ee," Vickers said.
•
6109 University Ave.II"'C~'1I.."~
c
"I think it's important to focus on
our school," said Annette Padilla,
executive chairwoml.lD for SDSU's
Red Ribbon Week. "There is a large
drug problem on campus."
Padilla said she hopes Red Ribbon
Week will increase awareness of the
drug problem. She also hopes students will choose alternative
methods of copinp instead of using
drugs.
Exercise is one alteranative.
"We want to make people aware
of the difference between turning to
drugs in a social conteltt and turning
to drugs to cope," Plotnik said. "If
you use drugs or alcohol to cope,
what you want to do is to change that
coping pauern. You would want to
learn some other form of relaltation
technique, such as muscle reialtation, yoga, deep breathing or
meditation."
There are some ways to recognize
someone is using drugs or alcohol as
a coping mechanism.
"Missing classes, getting in trouble with drinking and driving, experiencing blackouts and not remembering what happened (are some
signs)," said Annette Smith, director
of SDSU's Center on Substance
Abuse.
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THE DAILY AZTEC -
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•
Burns' team lacks Size, depth
New coach preparing for '89
By Mike Sullivan
Dally Aztet sportswriter
Jeff Calden
The World Series continues Friday. Amid the death and deStruction
that last Tuesday's earthquake
caused, the Giants and the A's wiiI
take the field and resurrect a series
that has been dOllIlant for 10 days.
Everybody has an opinion on
what should have been done about
playing a baseb'lll game, even one as
big as the World Seri'.:s, in the face of
such a tragedy. Commissioner Fay
Vincent has decided that baseball
will continue in 1989, that it will
continue in the Bay Area, and that it
will continue now.
it is fue right decision.
Some say that out of respeet 1Ur
the dead wid tIle injured, the Series
should be canceled. Some say that
it's not appropriate to have fans
cheering and yelling for a Will Clark
base hit when thcr-e are still people
trapped in the Nimitz overpass.
It is a terrible fact that tragedy
will, in some way, affect the lives of
all people. Death is something that
the living must deal with and
overcome.
Grief hurts. It brings a dark cloud
over yo1W-:life that can put things in
brutally clear perspective: But while
the hurt l1everreally goes away, life
goes on and there are certain joys
that can let the llUIl peek through that
cloud.
Different people have different
sources of sunlight. And for some,
the fantasy world of sports can provide the spark to memories of better
times and hopes of a brighter future.
Trading has continued on the
stock exchange. No one questioned
if the world of business should go
on, but when was the last time a corporate merger or a hostile takeover
brought a smile to your face? Unless
you're a heartless yuppie scum, the
answer is never.
Bllt how many grade school kids
in the Bay Area have been thrown
into a frenzy over a Mark McGwire
home run or a Dennis Eckersly fastball'l How many adults have been
relieved from the pressures and hassles of day-to-day life by a trip to the
ballpark, the serenity and simplicity
of the baseball diamond?
Baseball can become a part of the
healing process that the Bay Area
will have to go through. Sports are a .
slice of the American cuiture, a piece
in our national puzzle. The foct that
they can bring so much happiness to
people of all· ages is an indication
that perhaps a good ballgame is what
the citizens up north need to take
their minds off their troubles.
I speak from experience. My
mother died in February. Nothing
can ever take her place in my life or .
make me feel the way she could, but
I now realize that life is what you
make it. If I can be half the person
that she was, then I'll be proud of
myself.
.My brother once told me ttUlt if I
evCJl' felt guilty about having a good
time because Mom wasn't around,
. that I should stop and ask myself
how she would want me to live my
life.
The answer is simple.. Vou live
your life the best you can, getting the
very m.ost out of every damn
moment you get.
PllIase see CALDEN on page 9.
The Dally Aztec/file photo
The SDSU women's basketball team, under first-year coach Beth
Burns, will certainly mls.'J All-American center Chana Perry during
Its quest for the 1989 Big West Conference crown.
'
San Diego State's new women's basketball coach, Beth Burns, isn't used
to coming up short. When she held her initial practice as a NCAA head coach
on Oct. IS, Burns, who is over six feet tall, quickly found out she was taller
than most of her players.
"On Oct. 14, the one thing I knew before I had seen anybody play, I knew
we were short," Bums said. "And on the 15th, we were still short."
Size and depth are the Aztecs' biggest needs as Lhey prepare for the
upcoming season, which begins with an exhibition game Nov. 18 at Peterson
Gym against the Spanish National TI".arI1.
SDSU went 25-9 last season, losing to Oregon in the championship game
of !he National Invitation Tournament. The Aztecs finished in a fourth-place
tie, in the Big West Conference with a 12-6 mark.
Bums takes over a team that lost its top three rcboundcrs of a year ago.
Kodak All-American center Chana Perry, four-year letterwinner Brooke
Meadows and forward Angelica Jackson are all ineligible.
Also gone are forward Stefanie Massie and guard Monica Glass.
"I hav~ no idea what happened to Stef~e," Burns said. "I offered her the
opportunity to go to summer school and she went to summer school for about'a week and then she disappeared. All attempts to find her have come up nil.
"Monica Glass had to reapply to e.nter the school. She was academically
ineligible and needed to do a whole lot of things to get herself reinstated. I
don't know that she felt it was worth doing that."
Another player who won't be in uniform is fonner Point Lorna High AllAmerican Terri Mann, who underwent knee surgery in April. Mann, who
was suspended for the season recently for not meeting Burns' academic standards, may never suit. up for SDSU.
"That's up to Terri Mann," Burns said. "Right now, Terri knows she's got
to get her life in order. She knows it starts with going to school. Thai's our
first rule ... If Terri makes progress and is a responsible student, we'll take it
from there."
Burns is more concerned with those who are here. SDSU's main strength
this season will be its backcourt.
Both starters, Julie Evans and Crystal Lee, rerum. Evans was second on the
team in scoring (14.4) last season. Lee averaged 7.7 points and a conferenceleading 5.0 assists and was named Big West Conference Freshman of the
Year.
"Julie was a lead~r.during conditioning and she's a leader now that we've
started," Bums said. "She's a veteran and she knows how to play the game.
"Crystal Lee will have a big adjustment to make because she has to be an
extension of me. She has tremendous athletic ability and as soon as we channel that in the right direction, she'll be able to help us."
SDSU has a very capable third guard in junior Dee Dec Davis.
"Dee Dee Davis hasn't gotten the minutes in the past that she's going to get
this year," Burns said. "I expect her to have a very good year."
Up front, Bums has been impressed with 6-foot junior Melanie Usher.
Please see AZTECS OIl page 9.
Sophomore Jones
big plus for team
Blocker providing extra offense
By Mike Margy
Dally Aztec sportswriter
As the old saying goes, numbers
don't lie.
In this case, though, the numbers
just might be lying. To look at the
San Diego State women's volleyball
team's statistic sheet, one would
asswne that 'Amy Erben, Angela
Martin and Jennifer Miller are the
only ones supplying any offensive
output for SDSU head coach Rudy
Suwara.
BUI according to Suwara, sophomore Dena Jones might be one of the
biggest pluses for the Aztecs this
season.
"When she blocks over the net,
she's very strong as a blocker,"
Suwara said. "(SDSU assistant
coach) Sue (Hegerle) and I are so
pleased to have Dena at SDSU. She
could be all-league."
. The Aztecs (14-12,4-6 Big West)
haven't played up to their expcct&tions this year. After making it to the
NCAA Regionals last year, the seasonhasn't gone the way Jones or any
of the other Aztecs had envisioned
after last year's success.
"We were (disappointed) at rrrst,
but now after beating UOP and San
Jose, we're on a roll," Jones said.
"We're fifth in thl} conference and
~oving up to make the playoffs.
And once you get to the plllyoffs ..."
For now, though, Jones is looking
at the rest of this year a building
experience heading into the playoffs
and next year.
"Defense is my weakness, but I
like playing (back row)," Jones, who
is ('ue of only three middle blockers
on this year's squad, said. "My main
goal is to become a more consistent
hitter. Hopefully I'll do well and
improve so I can be a primary passer
and play back row as well. If we get a
big stud coming in at middle blocker
next year, I'm going to have to fight
it out with Jennifer and that's going
to be tough."
The Dally Aztec/Jay Roberts
"I was in a real slump for a while, SDSU sophomore middle blocker Dena Jones (9) has been a force at tbe
but now I'm coming out of it," Jones net for the Aztecs this year.
said. "I'm becoming more consistent. (But) backrow is my
"'DIat was great beating them," attended John Reagan High in Ausweakness."
Jones, who lost her Texas drawl after tin, where she played seller.
"She needs to be more aggres"We had a really bad team," Jones
coming to SDSU, said. "I knew all
sive," Suwara said. "That will help
the players and one of the coaches said. "I used to hit and block, 100. I
her become more consistent. She
from high school. My whole family played (middle blocker) a lot<ip the
also has to learn to get up and hit
md all my friends were there rooting club team and that's where I really
quicker."
.
for us to wil\. Then (the whole tearn) learned volleyball. I spent most of
Jones' consistency, though, can . went to my house for dinner. It was the time with the club team, so I was
be shoWn in the fact that her name is
used to the hard workout." and tough
great."
mentioned twice in the Big West
But no matter how great home competition."
individual stat sheet this year. She
This year, the 19-year-old is fifth'
was, once Jones visited SDSU, she
has the second highest hitting perknew exactly where she wanted tQt on the team with 2.02 kills per game.
centage for one match (,722 against
But according to Jones, offense bn'l
pursue her volleyball career.
Fresno State) and she is tied with
"When I took my recruiting trip her strong suit, which is evidenced
four other players with the most solo here, I liked the coaches and the by her 16 solo blocks and 0.88
blocks for one match with four players," the 6-foot Jones said, blocks~per-game average. Jones also
against defending national champ- "(but) I didn't know a soul."
had a career-high 17 kills against
ion Texas in her home state.
. Before coming to SDSU, Jones
. Please see JOl\'ES OIl page 8.,
as
.'
8 - THE DAILY AZTEC
OCTOBER
2S~
1989
DON'T LET YOUR Jones-----CAR FAIL!!!
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Continued from page 7.
top-ranked Hawaii earlier in the season.
"I don't get many sets," she said. "I block
more balls than I hit. That's my favorite partblocking."
"Her role was to be a middle blocker and
middle hitter and she filled that as soon as she
got here," Suwara said.
Jones' play can be compared to that of her
counterpart on the SDSU men's volleyball
team, Mark Winkler.
"Mark and I are both decoys," said Jones,
alluding to the fact that ooth of their jobs brin~
a blocker over to them and set up an opening
for another hitter.
"It's hard, intense, physical labor playing
middle blocker," said Suwara. "Only one of
three times that you jump do you get the set."
Jones switched from her original pro-dental
major because the "chemistry was too tough."
.' . ..
Now a busines.'l major, Jones was curiously
pushed into volleyball in jW1ior high"school.
"My mom made me try out for the team in
seventh grade," Jones said. "They just taught
us how to play and then we went to volleyball
camps in high school. But I never played
basketball. I hated basketball."
After college, Jones admits that will be the
end to her volleyball career. .
"I could tell you that I have ambiti~ns to
make the national team and things like' that,"
she said.
"She's a real team player," Suwara said.
"She has a great attitude and is a super person.
It's a pleasure to work with her. She has a
bright future, just like our team does."
But for now I Jones' attitude is solely teamoriente~.
"You don't play for yourseU,' me said.
"You play for the team."
..
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•
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THE DAILY AZTEC -
OCTOBER 25, 1989
9
•
SDSU's ski club preparing Calden--to challenge best in winter
:6y DeRon Simon
Dally Aztec: sport.·mrlter
It's a rush. Some say it's the most
awesome feeling they've ever felt.
Some even say the experience of flying down a mountain faster than you
drive your car on a deserted freeway
is like a drug - you shoot by trees,
the wind slapping your face with
cool clean shots of instant
exhi1l1lation.
At San Diego State, there's a club
that makes the fantastic feeling that
accompanies snow skiing a regular
event.
Led by top senior skiers Dion
Agee and Rob Dill, this year's
SDSU men's team has a solid shot at
winning its first national championship and bringing a liltlegold to the
SDSU coffers.
"I really feel like our chances are
good," club president Cameronn
Evans said. "We have a lot of guys
who are seniors, so this is their last
chance to win and put up some good
numbers."
Besides being president of the
club, Evans is also one of the top
candidates lo ski for the cluh's 'A'
teanl. Being the only Sou them California native on the team has its
drawbacks, though.
"Most of these guys were born
with ski boots on," Evans said. "I
was born in a low snow area, so I've
had to work twice as hard to keep up
with these guys. But 1 feci 1 have a
solid chance to make the •A' team."
This year's competition stands to
be tougher than in the past. In addition to Lake Tahoe native Rob
Giglio, another probable •A' teanler,
the remaining four of the seven spots
are up for grabs. Two top freshmen
from Los Angeles, Shawn McCrossan and Brad Holstrom, will be
tough to keep off the team and
should add depth and youth to nux
with the seniors.
This year's women stand to be
much tougher than in the past. AlliSOil Grobe, Holly Duncan and Missy
White look to be the top women this
year.
"We're really surprised with the
energy and effort that this season's
women's team has shown," Evans
said. "In the past we haven't becn
able. to ccmpete for the overall combined team title. With this year's
women's team we have a good
chance to win the overall."
This year's team has also seen the
licparlure o~ one coach and the addi-
tion of another. Last season's coach
and past Aztec skier Derek Agee has
left for a new job as president of the
Pacific Collegiate Ski Association.
His boots will be filled by Dr. Bob
Duggan, a professional skier, podiatrist and Aztec sports medicine specialist. Besides being a member of
the National Ski Patrol for several
years, Duggan also skied in the Eastern Collegiate Association during
college.
"The ski team is really lucky to
have Dr. Duggan as its new coach,"
Club Sports Coordinator Darcy
Carlson said.
Last year's team made the naU'>nals but was disqualitied for an eligibility problem. This year, that isn't
likely t') happen.
"We're a lot more organized this
season," Evans said. "We just seem
to be a lot more focused."
This year's first competition
begins Dec. 7.7. The only possible
problems for the team could arise
from funding for the team. Evans
says the club is doing its best to get
enough support to have a successful
season.
"If we can come up with enough
money, we should have a great season," Evans said.
Continued from page 7.
It took 100 years of baseball to
get a Bay Area World Series. The
cities have suffered through 27
years of Gian~' cl.tokes and last
year's humiliating loss by the A's
to the Dodgers. The people of
Oakland and San Francisco
deserve to get every moment of
happiness out of this series that
they can.
No maller how dark the cloud
this tragic earthquake has cast
over Northern California, the
people deserve their moment in
the sun. It is a time to moum,put
it is also a time to restore thc;':l1fe
that was, and get 011 with the'lire
that will be. Let the sun shine
through. Play ball.
f\ztecs----------Continued from page 7.
"Melanie Usher was more than a
pleasant surprise," Burns said. "I
hadn't been able to see her on film
because she got very few minutes in
the past. She's very talented athletically. She's extremly quick, can leap
and take a ball off the rim."
Two freshmen are expected to
Slep right in and contribme. ~..oli
Lollis, a 6-foot-l forward from Spokane, was Washington's Phyer of
the Year last season. The other is
6-foot-3 Kristin Mann from Springfield, Mo.
"Lori Lollis is going to be an
impact player in the program,"
Burns said. "Sh~ hal) tremendous
shooting range as well as strength.
To come in here in l\ transition year
and have a freslunan 01 ,Itat caliber is
a big plus.
"I expect Kristin to be able to
come in and help us. She comes to
practice with the right approach. She
gets better every day."
Liza Carrillo, a walk-on from
MiraCosta Community College, and
senior Carolyn Pelers are expected
to contriiJute some muscle. Peters,
who throws the shot put and disCus
for lJk; SDSU track team, was di3covered by Burns on accident.
"She was our strength coach,"
Burns said. "She did such a greatjob,
was so mature and well-versed in the
things she did in the weight roorre·
that I thought she was a graduate student. When I found out she was a
senior, she didn t t have a prayer. She
was my first recruit."
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This public service message
is brought to you by
Project Accept and
Associated Students/SDSU.
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l&I'Nprodl,i'loftr.oC4.u,Col.&~
STEADY, C::rARF'lELP, THERE MO~1
BE A GOOD RE.A50N WHY 'HE
.'
OCTOBER
10,- THE DAILY AZTEC
25.,
1989
Greek----..;....----=------------Continued trom page 1.
"There is a house for everyone,"
he said.
Active involvement in Ihe Greek
system is nol Ihe only aspect Ihat
Bates and Giglio share.
They are both members of Associated Students.
.'a'ates has been an A.S. College of
Sciences representative since fall
1988. She has St:rved as chairperson
of the HOl\Sing Advisory Board
since spring 1989 and is A.S. pI"Cl:ident pro-tem.
"A.S. has taught me how the university operates and has made it
easier for me to get along at SDSU,"
she said. "It has given me the experience to express myself, and I have
benefited through that when working with other organizations."
Giglio was an A.S. College of Sci-
ences representative in spring 1989
and is now A.S. Cabinet
Administrator.
Giglio said A.S. teaches him to be
persistent in pursuing tho things he
thinks are valuable.
"It is imponantto me to keep trying and not give up because of certain adversities," he said. "Through
A.S. I have learned that other people
are important. When people are
young and their ideas have.n't
matured, they think they're the center of the hallgame. I used to overlook other people's roles in the big
picture, but A.S. has taught me not to
do that."
Bates thinks school spirit is
importalll. She was a member of the
flag corps of the Marching Aztecs.
"wt-en I was on the field then, I
was representing SDSU and it felt
good to be thr:re," she said. "I'';/e
always been into school spirit You
get this really cool feeling when
you're out there trying to help the
school. Homecoming reminded me
of when I used to be a part of the
Marching Aztecs - out on the field
for SDSU. I am honored to be a part
of the Homecoming tradition.
"I just wanted to make the court,
and that night I was sure I dido't win.
1bere were so many other qualified
people who deserved it too."
Giglio didn't give a typical
response about what it's like to be
named Homecoming King - he
said he felt humble.
"I walked off the field, and my
mom and dad were there," he said.
"Everyone was congratulating me,
and I felt really humble. It wa~ overwhelming, and I feel so fortunate
that it happened to me. It made me
realize how great it is to win."
Bates and Giglio, as well as the
other Homecoming candidates, were
intervi\?wed by a panel of five, wrote
essays about what they would
change at SDSU lind submitted
resumes which included their grade
point averages, organizations and
achievements.
Giglio's essay dealt with· the
importance of community service.
Giglio said he wants SDSU to
build a better commun9Y by offering
a community service class.
"I want to see SOOU be a forerunner and have classes on philanthropy, altruism and pro-social
behavit'r," Giglio said. "By teaching
about community service, we could
give students an opportunity to use it
in the real world. We neglect how to
Armour Se~urity and Sound Says:
DENTISTRY
Keep Your
CAR ON' A LEASH
SDSU Students
& Staff Welcome
4546 College Ave.
San Diego, CA 92115
CA·RALARM
$150 Installed!
Orthodontist (braces)
Vivian Ong DDS
General Dentists
Robert S. Cheung DDS
Esther J. Ong DDS
help others and that is a big flaw. For
it to work, we all must give and not
always take."
.
Bates. who has a 3.59 grade point
average. said her essay was more
abstract.
"Before I would change anything, '
I'd survey student needs, because
it's important to learn what students
want before telIing them what they
need," she Jaid.
Bates and Giglio both stressed the
qualifications of the rest of the
Homecoming court.
The court consisted ·of Lloyd
Cato, Stephanie Cox, Pamela
George, Anissa Heard-Johnson,
Jamie Hom, Gina Lugo. Michael
Minjares, Terri Morrill, Shern
Oesch, John Robitz, Kevin Ros~n­
berg. Jorge Selva, JOil Stamatopoulos and Christie Worthington.
EXAM, CONSULTATION
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Prices Beat The Big Boys!!
Cl\\J\J234-KEYS.
Insurance Accepted For Additional Tl'CIltment
Also: ke s -locks - stereos • s eakers
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES &
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Non-Student Rates:
Line Ad ltiformation:
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.$1.30
2. Three or more days per line per day
.$2.20
santee condo- 2bI & 1 112ba, anached glUlllJo.
encloead pallo & pool. $99,ll()(). for salll. 562-7264.
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11m Volvo- 24:1lL·18K. 4-epeed, exc:et run & body,
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75 VW CONV
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caee, new tirOl,
SCOOTER FOR SAlE: 87 SUZUKI
$325 OBO. 207·2556.
GAS STATION ATTENDANT NEEDED. Flexble
houri. Wli ~ around your ecIloolechedule. Apply
III 1110 bubble mactl!ne. 54lh & EI cajon Blvd.
582.e621 or Jackson & ClInter Dr., La Moea
402-7300.
(3869)
(3171)
SEIZED CARS, lrucke. 4wheelerl, TV's, slerOOll
fumlturlt, co/l1lUtora by OEA, FBI. IRS and US
cuatOITlll, Avall&ble In your area now.
Call 1-1105-662·7555 ExL 0.1205.
(004733)
SNOW CHAINS. WILL TEACH USE.
CAlL JAY AT 891·0100
(28)
good cond., rebt eng, AMlFM
~an you buy Jl3Ojl8, Cal. & 4X4'leolzod In drug raldI
lor under $100.001 Call for lactl today.
805-844·9533. Dept. 709.
(14141)
CilIIl>ge Condo- perfoct for studenVInvealor. MUlII
1GIl.C lldwell banker- Joe. 462·56".
(17130)
Doska $50 & $70. Drossor $50. T~mtablo 580,
Enlortalnmenl center $200. 583·8749
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Hailowoen coatumee. old hall & wigs, old IIyIe
c1Clhlng create your own unique COIlume. American
Thrill Store, 9935 CIlfTPO Road, Casa Door.
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II II true.... Jeape 101 $44 through lhe Governlllllnl?
Call for lactal 1·312··/.c2·1142 Ext. 6257
(93522)
____________
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MAC 512K Wi400K external, a mouse, and an
lmaoe WIker II prlntet. all for $700 DBO, call
Ray at 483-6465
(15784)
"'lIIIllClerTl8n1 podlon earn 2 K 10 3.5 K per month
part lime no 8Jl!) neceaury wiD Irllln CllJ. Sl_ I!!
78;'5111 or 788-1551
(3780)
----------Wanled PART TIME I'll<llIPtlonlevacerelary.· Cal
5BO-5252 for eppolnlment. Flexble hoUri.
(2094)
p!ealant lurroundlngs In S.D. IInOlt hol811
Call Orend. 233·1109 7·3 M·F lome expor. PlllIer.
(73Nl)
Marketing aulatants lor lop kkchen corrpany, rrlJat
be aggree8lve, alrong In PR, corrOlpondenco, mark·
eIlng pianl, phonOl, Plll'l-llme. Salary & bonus. Call
1 Ig 2br/lba apt nu palnyClIfIle\ prlv )'lIId 1 flat mlto
SDSU, aU B1udenla grlld IlIdenl prel
neodDd
avail Nov f5 $Of 011110 $3150 d~ Gary 562-6548
mor
222..c235
(6266)
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(28416)
Airline t1dwt I·WIlY Iv S.D. to DaJlu Fort Worth DIa
15 at 5:55p 436-8557 ITlIlg
(28416)
•
Classifieds may be placed using your Visa or MasterCard
by calling (619) 594-4199. or in person with cash or check
at the Aztec Center Ticket Office.
Ads must be placed three days prior to the publication date
before 3:00p.m.
Hotel gl/1 lhop cktrk PIT FIT poelUonl avall
$3000 OBO 436-8557 ITlIlg
B2H<lnda C:BOOOH (bought brand new 85). Low mi••
ehow rm cond., Wi&aJrlng, Intercom. 2 helmetll,
COYtlr, 1odI, ladtel. 51500. 278·3802. Ilenz
.
(3114)
.1,).
~FORMATION
PREVUE II looking lor highly ITIltlvated, hllld
working fashion orlontud saioe people. pII and lit
AIRLINES NOW HIRING.
Travel Agentl. Flight Attendanls, Machznlcs,
etc. Entry level and Up. BaJarlee 1o $105K.
Call 1·805-602·7555 Ext A·1062.
(004733)
CHILI'S Now hillng FIT '" PIT c:ook& aaJatylanue
$5.!iO-$7.15O Include: paid vacatlona, tuition anla..
1<Ince, llexbla achedullll, & rrlle mealll. Apply
/A·F 10-5 Sal 10-2 5000 Luak Blvd Mira Meta
(115910)
houri. Hourly A COI1tnIaelon apply at PREVUE In
Groeall1llll ClInt.
(97936)
REPORTER Weekly O!lW\IpapDr In Eaal County wUI
Ilaln 443-5701
2 bdrl1 bth apt r.ew pain' & carpell. laundry, .maB
yard, 1 mile 10 SDSU, $53()1mo 453.0263
(68074)
2 bloclll from SDSU Bllldenle only large house
Wienc:loied pe.llo 4brd,2 bt~, 'rpl,beautlful new
carpel. e«amIc tilo flooll, new paint, eto. 51300
0'411l11 mlWlng avallablo 12/1 Call 265-11309
(52852)
(.c21)
3br 6 :Iba houll8 Widen. dr, Ig ydldock, .tv & trig.
Culel & near SDSU, lhope " bue. $000. 288-8001.
(10l11l0)
fIoa.raliun Program ABeletanl
Croallvll liiondly people to work with
mlUtary. 20 hour wool<. Evenlnge and
~enda. Call Jo, 232·1133, exL 206
Armod 80rm YMCA
3br & 2ba holl.. Widen. dr, fg ydIdock, atv Ii trig.
Quiet & near SDSI). ahope " bUll. $000. 286-8001
(f9860)
(3804)
CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING
-'or apong. Ctvlstma.s and next
summar breaks. Many po6klona.
Call 1·805-682·7555 Ext. S·1040.
(004733)
CRUI5ESHIPS Naw hklng all poekona. Loth
IlUIod and tJrlakllkxl. For Info tal (615)
n9-5&17 EXT H162
("'0)
THIS JOB IS NOT FOR EVERYONE.
You'lI have 10 be OUlGolng. enthUllMtlc, and
/8IjlOIl$ible. Tho PaeKIe Group Ia hltlng people
to work. III our Mlellon Valle-, 1oca11oo. We 01181
good pay, IlexbJe houra, paid training, and
valua:>le markellng and COITVTlUnlcallona
experience. Cd 663·2000 for more Inlormallon.
(123)
PRO CHOICE ACTIVISTS
WANTED: Part·tlme IIIe cleIk, Sel your own hours
Wit at8 ioclkIng '0' poqllo who are concerned abouI . _C,~ 560-8230 lor Infotrllallon
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(6320)
CAlI 495-ll605
(36307)
T-...urveyell·no HIlng; ~t aall Ihot1 queatione
PT ~Ionl£l· aetwe La Jolla R.E. oIf~ p/Iont
eklJlprolMllonaIem nee. 1/2 day· 2dAye/fiIl. Flex
454·7fl4G. A1li1l:WMary.
. (3103)
'IQIIdlng OMIUII* habla .ueh &I mlWiIII - .
PQIltlI;J. w:. Perf•• BlUdenI joIrvetY IIllllIl*l hw".
E~" WI8ll.enda SUfwllr. Many poeltlona
.v~KNrny ..... lIN .95-0708
(53788)
5bdI2 ba fam room, apple, 2 frpl, fned yd. 2 CIII
gar., xtra prklng. 1 rr/ 10 SDSU $13150 272-0029
(967356)
5 bedroom. 2 bath, hUll8 backyard. privacy, bke 10
carJ1lUS. $1375. 562·071a
(3879)
AFFORDABLE EXECUTIVE SUITES AVAILI
FULL AMENENITIES A/'lD SERVICES. SHORT OR
LONG TEAM l£ASES. 10 PACKAGES AlSO
AVAILABLE. CAll SUE AI 456-1400.
(1148)
uar••
BRAND NEW 18 IInla 3ldo'2bIh 2 car
fpIc,
~ InWtiot 0jl8Il 11-5 8llcepl Wed. from
$105,000. AQt. 28HlI30. eo65 E;i18l4l(3.mI SOSU).
(55126)
Pleue lee CLASSIFJEDS
OIl
pap 11.
OCTOBER 25, 1989
THE DAILY AZTEC-ll
Cootlnued from page 10.
Fomale roommato noodod: avallablo Nov. lsI.
4 bodrcolTV2 balh condo on beach sldo In Soulh
Mission. S250-$3oo. call Now 499-5200.
(3012)
Female roornmale needed A.~AP 10 share msltbdnm
WJbaIh In twnhs In PACIFIC BEACH wshr/dryr, Irplc,
plkg, noar bay. $308 ronl 5300 dopesll. Call
27()'Q9S6
(3025)
Female roonmate wantod LG Private nm In condo
112 mI from SOSU $300'mo & sec. dop. Call
698-3891, ask 101 Jim or Lisa
(3873)
ROOMU"TE WANTED: 2 bd duplex. Sl00'mo.
sh*rId lOOll1. CLOSE TO SDSU. 316-763-4.
(S013)
A+ lYPINGIWORD PRO· NO JOB TOO BIG OR
SMALl. 10% DISCOUNT WITH NJ. CAlL JOAN
291-3199.
(3321)
Room 4 ren1. pool, oIr, 112 UlI, tum. S275 near 0 & 94
La Mesa 6611-0058
(3814)
BANDS
'FREE DEMO RECORDING'
Enter to win aI SOUND·mAX. ~.. lhe boIsl
& leasl expensive roheaIllaJ spot In townl
AIr CXlIldI1lonedhllorago.'latge rooms
come chock us 0011 SOUNO·TfW( 2S>5000
(3255)
Room male wantod S3251mo. KlIIlIIlngton
caD 284~166
(3842)
Slressed 0U1 by roommates1 Como seo IhIll privato
atudlo llO\1a{/OIw.lll<llllJ dWMOa 10 SDSUI LillO
k1let.elVSludy ama. AaIlss 10 a ~ge yard wlprivalo
baslloIbaIl COUll & sun porch. Por1oct lor \he singlo
ll1udont. ONLY S4OO1mo. 583-2n7. Ask fOl Debblo
(950646)
La Mesa prlvato room- pooUjaaJZ1l. MUllI be IOllpOnslblo fomale. S2751monlh. 468-9145.
(3904)
Mlsalon Boach 1 II 2 bedroom llptI. For ront 1 blodI
to boach. CaD 468-9249 01 485-7319.
Bargain Malh TUlorl $4Ihr. In roy home (noar Colloge
Ave & Unlwrslly) 287-3430. Low rale:lOl bocauaaol
inexperience 01 lack eI quaQflca1lon. I just don' have
a car. BUll wi. have one In al.wl montha and YOU'
chanOll wi. be gonlI
(3889)
Acaclomic lYPINGIWORD PP.OCESSING, thosos,
resumes, p3pllf1l. otc. Sharon, ~
(1684)
Nood 2 responslblo roomma19l110 sham 4 bedroom
houso In Mission Beach. 2 rooms avaWllo now.
$375. JacuZZi. WMioOl/dryor, millro. Call Leah 01
Androa 488·7420. Leave mesaago.
(3717)
SPEEDY RESEARCH Ovor 50,000 loplca and
c1~gB, ma1oria1s lor r880lllch ass1stanco use
onlyl Reports: S41pg. Cal loday (213) 463·1251
(llOO292)
II you'ro IoBlng hair, pleaso caJ11 We havolnformall.m
on 100 Ihroo ITIlClI olfOClIvo produ~1S in the ent~o
\WIld. Tha Inlolmallon Is Free. Can 463-6371
(3063)
Iloach Roorrmalo wantod: Own room. paJ1<.Ing avail. S3OO1mo. call 2734604
(3883)
REPOSSESSED VA & HUD HOMES
available lrom gcyommanl lrom 51 wl1hOU1 cred~
chock. You ropaIr. Also lax dollnquonl lorociosUfOS.
call 1-1105-682-1555 EXl H·l449
lor rope list your area.
(004733)
Slart Ihe wookond early wlh AITnosly Inl' as lhey
prosonl a benefit conOllrt loalurlng M IftJ8k: from
BAD RADIO and THIS REALITY. thin. Oct 26,
11Xl p.m. SDSU Badldoor. 55.00 donallon.
(3885)
TYPINGI FASTI CHEAPll0 years experience wl1h
SOSU sludenls. call Luanno 583-6858.
(16320)
lYPING TYPING ALL KINDS FAST EXPERT NR
SDSU FREE EDIT MS. COLLINS 2B6-2B83
(7301)
RESERVOIR DRIVE
FEMALE NON SMOKER-own room in 4 bdrm'3 blh
XTRA nice condo-lirapl:1O wash/dlY'lr big garagepool, spa. tonnls $325 & 1/4 utll. & deposlt·no leasol
463·5136
(37M)
*'ff**
*
***
**
WORD PROCESSING
1 daya. 8am~m.
NEAR SDSU.
Emergency Profll8lllonals 4B4-0B84.
(20410)
Loam to moditalo, yoga & rolaxa1lon In a 3 wook
class which slaltll 10130 Monday 7pm 2874565.
(0206)
RENT·TO-OWN TC's & MAC'll
ANGl:L COMPUTER
al6-8OOO
Slevo l. I'd • to tako U oul 4 your ~
I nevel oat to say thanks 4 the elll:ellent
dinooml Call Moll
CO
~)
TKE
Word prcoeealng: professionaJ rosumes, lerm
papers, &Ie. by apllt Tam 464·1155
(71822)
TUTOR: MATHMATICS, PHYSICS. STATISTICS.
AlL LEVELS 287·9070. LEAVE MESSAGE.
(0132)
~
Tarel
Candlel
Cryslals
*
.~.
.
~
•
,
..
'
'. '
LOSTI BROWN LOP-EARRED BUNNY.
5100. REWARD can 286-5816. Please
lasl soon al CoINvood Meadowa condos
(3966)
IIlg Bro Jefl
In illw or what has Iransphl'd
I ::un lOtllod I.> rwad my prevo mosaage
LsdkIG I1lO In wailing no h9llitaling
LR Bro McBax
1 WAY TICKET TO NY OR PITTSBURGH, LEAVE
H
0
NOV 22. 1TlJ61 sell call Joll at 532·2196
(JB86)
(61017)
---------BAHAlo4AS CRUISEiMEXICO:; days/4 nlghls each.
Crew wantod lor 56' moIor sainng yacht on
weekends, call Milo R. aI 943·7008 or Jinl R. at
266-0620
(9911)
Meals, bar Included (Mexico). 2lrlps, 2 pooplo, 5298.
Dotails e'l2-;!~1 (24hr).
(~199)
PREGNANT? WANT LOVING. SUPPORTIVE
AlTERNATIVE7 "ALL ADOPTION CTA. 279-3811
(3071)
Second·chanco Sporta Boy/seli used sporting
goods: surfboards, wetsu~B, scuba, boogies. Ilns,
booties, ~Ishlng, blcydoe, skiing, lennls, exercise,
gol, bead1 and oxorclso apparal, call 581-9111.
(136841
VaCa1lons 10 Acapolco, PUOl1a VaDarla 01
ManzanlQo, Maxlco. 5148 por person. 5 days
& 4 nights aI 1110 Coco Cllb Holois. Includes
meals, domosllc drinks and 19C1oolionaJ
activilies. call Marks Travel Packages lor
brochures and dolails at 462·6136.
•
To lhe Oil.: 1110 name Is
IoI'B
Tcdd Glonekl Gal 11 rlghlll
IoI'B
F,rom Sajak
IoI'P.
(3802)
IoI'B
(9999)
4643 College Ave.
(in Home Federal Center)
286·3325
- COUPON- ..
"'Ii - -
Full Set:
$25 (reg. $35) I
~~
Order your college ring NOW DATE:
TIME:
JOSTENS
•
••
~
• , • I
., ....
PLACE:
DEPOSIT:
FREE
6 cassettes. get 1 free CO- ($9.99 or less)
8 cassettes. get 1 free CD- ($9.99 and up)
2 used CDs. get 1 free CD-
...............................................
7841 Balboa Ave. Stet 215, SD 92111
No limit .. *On approval. Hottest hltsl
Thousands of CDs and cassettesl
MUSIC TRADER
•
(reg. $20)
Volunteers will be paid up to
$150 for complete participation
CALL TODAY 436-3988
Asthma and Allergy Treatmont and Research Association
MORE CASH PAID FOR CDs, TAPES & VIDEOS
Fan Time!
On Time
Day Time
HIght TIme
Good Time
Yoar Time
Fast Tiline
Any Time
(f~s~~r)''tCOIN WASH
Uppernowcr bulconies.
Ncar SDSU & Grosllmonl
Ccnter.$900/$450 deposit.
WE'VE GOT TIME FOR YOU!
464-5557
Corner 01 Grand & LamonI,
Pacific Beach;
~
Closed Sundays unlil midnight
MISTER BOFFO
by J08 ""arlin
~
;::--=:.:
(formerly Disc & Dai)
5728 EI Cajon Blvd.
~
(6 blocks west of College) ~
CDs: 265-2274 TAPES: 265-2287
L
Expires 11-6-89
Pedicure
$15
• Children or Adults
• Age 12 & Older
·5 Visits
• Over 3 Weeks
• Free Allergy & Blood Testing
For free cassetles, trade In:
2 cassettes. get 1 free cassette-
CALL 279-5955
D'Agnessa Ins. Agency
I
If you have Hayfever (sneezing, stuffy/running
nose or itchylwatery eyes) you
can help evaluate a new nasal spray and
BE PAID FOR YOUR PARTICIPATION II
For free CDs, trade In:
for qualified students!!
r - -COUPON - : Manicure
&
I
ALLERGiES?
CDs AND
CASSETTES!
We have XLNT auto ins. rates
Fill
$12
I
I
FULL-TIME STUDENTS!!
COUPON- -
Free French:
(reg. $15)
:
Manicure by
Airbrush
"Ieati. Pl'OlIent CoupoA
. (619) 477·5260
}'rce gym membership.
"
~.
~
-
IVAIL DESIGN
... , • , , .
Basic cable TV included.
orr llircet pllrking. Mini
blinds. Fencell yard.
....~ < • -
,
STUDENT SPECIALS
2306 Highland Avo., National CIIy
3 bedrooml2 full b~lh.
New appliances. Pool.
;'
(3234)
Jewelry
APARTMENTS 4RENT
W/~IANY XmASn
""
, 1 ..
/t:E.li. FOOTBALL TEAM
YOI' !aJlos aro XI BESTII
Good luck againel xn
• ..
{.<
,~
'(
(265)
'I,'
Horbl
Inconso
Spoclally II11flll
•
~~,
~9pm-KalhIo-576-12n.
The Magic
Bookstore
Oils
,.
.',. ". i:.OSr.iEOUND,
.
A NEED FOR A lYPIST? R8lIllllIlabIll-spoody-
----- .. -----.-1
Melaphyllcd. SplJllual, Poslllve
Thinking 6 OCwl Bodo.
Psychic Fairs 6 QOIIeS,
TOM PARI(ER & MIKE MOORE
TKE
Wo • oor big bro'1l you IPY8 S18 lho best.
Lool<ing forward 10 Iols of good I"..,.,
V ya lots yoor II sis's TRACY & COl.EEN
(3827)
Word procosalrvtYPlng academe papers thea:S
1ell0000, ole Cal Lynn's Word Processing 462·0093
(28104)
IBM EXPERIENCED TYPIST·TERM PAPERS,
BOOKS 51.5':l(ds) RESUMES 283-2999 B8!!y
(1195S)
(3BOO)
Pl~lic
VISA OR MASTERCARDI
Even I bankrupt Of bad Qoditl We guaranloo
~ a card Of DOUBLE your money back.
Cal 1-805-682-1555 EXl. 104-1058.
(004133)
REPOSSESSED VA
&HUD HOMES
Available from government
from $1, you repair. No
credit check, Also drug
seizures and IRS foreclosures
sold for back faxes, Call
(805) 564·4415 for
direcfory in your area. $30.
·;~~;D~"'·
287-8460
6082 Unlverolty
(1/2 block we.l of College)
PEDlCUUE
~
-.l"l_~~.<
p',,'~:F;Yr
'"
Explreo Ocl,
~
112
TIP w/ACRYLIC $22
SILKWRAP
MANICURE
$25
$7
FILL
$13
:n, Value wi coupon.
...••.....•....•....•
FLEXIBLE HOUSING
For a day, week, or
longer term!
No deposit. Fully furnished.
Utilities paid, Kitchens.
Phones wi free local cails,
\- 'ree cable TV w/ HBO.
laundry, air conditioning,
pool. Clean. Friendlyll
Close to SDSUI!
Imperial Motel, 66n
Montezuma
463·9245
r
.J .'
12.-THE DAILY AZTEC
OCTOBER 25, 1989
JUS,. FOR FUN•..
,.AKE A CLASS
FaD 1989
LEISURE CLASS SCHEDULE
[ ;~, 1
A ~r.
~ ~-~
[1.y~ ]
~
Non-Credil
'(\
CLASS
[4-1 [ I .
• • •1
DAY
TIME
COST
#WKS
SESS. II
ARTS & CRAFTS
Ceramics
Ceramics
Art of Clowning(Bcg.)
Art of Clowning(Adv.)
Jewelry Making
Photography{Bcg. I)
Tapestry Weaving
Woodworking
54
10/28
10/30
S
M
10-1
6-9
T/Th
7·9
7-9
30
6-8
6-9
30
45
6-9
6-9
35
54
20
6
10/30
S
6-7
6-7
9-10am
36
18
6
5
10/30
10/28
W.
7-9
5
T
W
W
7-9
5
6-8
3
7-9
7-9
6
6
11/1
10/31
11/1
11/1
11/2
\'\'
M
M
T
M
54
30
6
6
5
5
5
5
5
6
10/31
11/1
10/~O
10/30
10/31
10/30
FITNESS
Body Building for Women
Jazz Dance
Weight Training
·M
T/Th
FOOD & BEVERAGE
Bartending
Bartending
Ethnic Foods
Wine Appreciation
Wines of Europe
Th
GENERAL INTERESTS
Backpacking Basics
Guitar
Mace Certification
Ski Tuning Workshop
11\
M
7-9
$18
36
3
11/2
30
12
6
1
2
10/30
11/11
10/28
11/18
S
5-6
10-12
Th
5-7
S
9-5
9-4
$13
1
30
1
6:30-9:30
12-1
6-7
7-8
7-8
45
27
27
36
36
5
5
5
6
6
10/30
2-5
1
11/2
9:30-10:45
11-12:15
$55
65
65
65
65
7-9
44
7-8:30
59
T/Th
3-4
Sun
M/W
3-5
5-6
5-6
30
35
35
11/2
HEALTH & RELAXATION
C.P.R.
First Aid
Massage (Swedish)
Tai Chi (Beg.)
Tai Chi (Beg.)
Tai-ehi(Adv.)
Yoga-Hatha
S'
M
W
W
W
T/Th
11/1
11/1
11/1
10/31
SPORTS
Firearm Safety
Horseback Riding (West)
Horseback Riding (West)
Horseback Riding (Eng.)
Horseback Riding (Inl.)
Ice Skating
Karate (TaeKwondo)....
Racquetball (Beg.)
Tennis (Beg.)
Tennis (Beg.)
Tennis (Adv Beg)
Tennis (inn
Tennis (Adv)
Th
F
S
S
S
Th
M/W
T/Th
3-4:15
8-9:15
35
T/Th
6-7
35
S
9-11
35
,6
-6
11/3
10/28
10/28
6
6
6
6
5
5
5
5
5
5
10/L8
11/2
10/30
10/31
10/29
10/30
10/31
10/31
10/28
"Must be at least 21 years of age; additional fee payable to instructor at first class meeting.
THE LEISURE CONNECTION
5828 Hardy Aven~e
SDSU
594-6994
~/~
CAY'UI "leIlIA'ION
r
OCT. 25,
1989
INSIOr:. THE
PIXIES • MACBETH • ON CAMPUS ART
BOYS FROM SYRACUSE • VINYL REVIEWS
I
~i
2-
OCTO~ER
THE DAILY AZTEC
Artist's abstractions more
than black and white issue
25, 1989
'I'
Loo I
STANZA EDITOR
ART: Marjorie Mogge, M.F.A. thesis exhibition. SDSU Masters Gallery (579·2962),
through Oct. 26, noon to 4 p.m.
STANZA ART DIRECTOR
ASST.STANZA EDITORS
Kevin Bortfeld
Bill McCullen
John J.Cataldo
By Nell Kendricks
David R. Stampone
Stanza staff writer
J
Picasso once said that "all art
is abstract." An artist can never
reproduce an object exactly as it
is in life. Marjorie Mogge uses this
perspective in her Master of Fine
Arts thesis exhibition at SDSU's
Masters Gallery.
She remembers the tremendous impact of seeing Picasso's
"Guernica" at The Museum of
Modem Art many years ago; all
those sharp contrasts - grays
clashing with deep blacks - setting off the charged subject matter of Picasso's masterpiece in
cubist painting.
Mogge's own work is completely non-figurative. Her two
STANZA WRITERS
•
Ted Bliss Kelly Francis Neil Kendricks Jeremy Lewis
VISUAL LANGUAGJ: - Marjorie
Mogge's "Shapes of Time Ii:'
major series ("The Fragments"
and "Shapes of Time") deal with
the flmdamentals of abstraction
through.a figure gr<:Jund reversal,
the push/pull of positive/negative
shapes and forms working
against each other. Her Iinocuts
are filled with black and white
shards on a monochromatic
mindscaps. These fragmented
lines intersect creating a field of
Please aee ARTIST on page 8.
Anything goes with those
wacky Boys from Syracuse
THEATER REVIEW: The Boys from Syra-
The Boys From Syracus9 will
leave you laughing. From ballet
antics to slapstick one-liners,
director Robert Eaton. brings
ancient Greece like the SDSU
Experimental Theat~e has never
seen before.
By Kelly Francis
. Based on Shakespeare's The
Stanza staff writer
Com.edy of Erroro, the j:)iay was
Whether or no~ you're a fan of origlna,lIy produced on Broadway
musicals, the froUcsome comedy
~~a.o a.. PLAV
page 8.
cuse.
Music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by
lorenz Hart, book by George Abbott. Based
on Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors. At
SDSU Experimental Theatre through Oct. 28
at 8 p.m., Oct. 28 and 29 matinees at 2 p.m.
on
David Moya Tamara Tuttle
WHAT IT IS
Before the. and of 1989, Tower Records will
change its name. One bright day, you'll cross the
threshold of the newly (and apt.ly) re-christenad
"Tower."
QUietly, over the course of the past few years,
Wherehouse Records and Tapes has been drop·
ping the "records and tapes" bit from its name. Welcomq to ''The Wherehouse."
And so it goes virtually everywhere. Back East,
the Peaches Records stores are now "Peaches."
And mall-chain music outlets like Musicland, Sam
Goody's and Spec's have all been phasing out the
the dreaded "R" word from their titles.
The raptura has begun. You now have to wade
through stacks and stacks of compact discs, videos
and cassingles to even findan LP. Vinyl is dying a
swilt ;:.nd humiliating death. Some labels don't even
make records at all anymore. CatCllog material is no
longer ooing pressed. 45s are dust. And you are
responsible for it, you voracious consumers of CHR
pablum.
In the '50s, rock 'n' roll was born on the vinyl
saven-inch 45. In the '60s, the album as an art form
claimed the birthright given to it by the 45. In the
. '70s, album-rock stations spawned an entire generation of listeners hungry for something more than
thrEle-minute singles.
More than just an aural experience, buying a
record was a tactile and intsllectual bounty. There it
. was in your llands - 12 inches of cover ~rt, liner
notes, photos, jacket an,lyrics and enough space to
thank the whole world, and you didn't even l1ave to
squint to read it all. Gatefold!l were even better.
More, more, more. At home, the simple spatial
delight of all your records lined up on the shelves,
strewn about your room, on your turntable or melting in the sunlight was a sightto behold: It was beautiful. Vinyl even had a smell. Petroleum was never
put to better use.
The legacy of the 19aOs will be written in the epitaph of the vinyl al",um. "As part of the quest for
things smaller, faster, better and easier to consume,
the cassette and compact disc put an end to a whole
way of looking at ancllistening to music. And put an
end to a way of life for many.
Vinyl's demise is more than the transition of consuming trends from one medium to another, though.
It represents something much more insidious. You
are beginning to believe the hype that says cassettes are easier, CDs sound better and music is a
mere comestible.
Granted, there are more cassette players th~n
there are turntables - cars were made for 'em. But
turntables still outnumber CD players two to one,
and CDs still cost twice as much as LPs, a fact that
isn't likely to change anytime soon.
Vinyl is dead. Long live vinyl.
-J.J.C.
:~:i.~l.~.i[!.L_..~.i
. •.II:..:r.i.:I.I.:~.:::~..':~~I~I\!I'I\I'I~
.•.:.:.L.Ii·.t.; .:~} ".'.:.:.;ill.\.'
:::~:I:·&11EI" ~'I':'\::::::::~~::
. •.
j
,
:~ifJ~~1~~)!~~~~11~l~[\j;]j:~~~~~1~~~i~j~~@?:::::'}:.~. "-.
lI~1:i!~~
'" .
Sunday C .
Seri s
College Ave, at.
On Campus
•
East Commons
Cafeteria
•
Monlezuma
FREE DELIVERY
~VAR.I PAN. .~83.~616
P IZZA CO'IIII
IIII;..._-:-'.
. WaDon'tCutCornsre
Limited Delivery Area
and Hours
$5.00 Minimum
7 p.m.
ytle, Piano
?
JJ5/SDStJ
·""",,""'''W~'''''''~'''''I'''~
"
..
OCTOBER
as,
THE DAILY AZTEC - 3
1989
MUSIC. '..
,
.... :
.~
.'
.......
.~.
,....' •
.
'.
.'.
'
..
.
'.'-,' ,
'
..
Massachusetts' .
Pixies, from
left, Dave Lov~
ering, Joey
Santiago, Black
Francis· and
Kim Deal,
maintain
they're 0n ly a
rock band,"
but fans of
their eccentrically sublime
crunch-guitar
rock know
better.
MUSIC: Pixies.
Tonight, 8
p.m., at the
Price Center
Ballroom,
UCSD campus,
La Jolla
(534-4559).
With Bob
Mould.
1I
,.: .
.
. By
~~vl~R.,Starn.pone,
wl\h acllm.actlc reading of the 12"
B-slde "Into The White" as an
encore.
It's not mod.esty, fa,lse or otherYet there before the gig, shoot·
wise. Bla,ck francis, lead singer, Ing the shit out behind the
rhyt"m guitarist and prhnary Clalremont Mesa Boulevard
s Q rt g w r I. t e r
for
the shopping mlnl-mall where the
MassachuseUs-bC\sed Pixies, Is nightclub Is located, the songwrlgenuinely uncertain why his band. ter, whose non-performing name
has gotten so popular with Ihe crl· happens to be Charles Michael
tlcsa'nd the crowds In their little Kltrldge Thompson IV, did not
more than three years tagethe'r. r~veal any secrets of tuneOh, he's got deffnlte Ideas ~n the crafting alchemy. As with all great
s\ibJect, a,~dhe's not one to tClke bands, powerful, riveting songs
away trom the group's accom- are the PIl(les' cornerstone of
pllshments Just because he ~Iso e><cellence, but Black had a
in,~lntalns thel~ "only a rock matter-of-fact explanation and
br.nd," !Jut stili ...
, ~ OfaPrlen.Ion on the variegated Pixies•
_
"It's embarrassing to get so
"All our tunes. sound like plElnty
m~ch press,~ said the l:im1ab\e of other tunes bl,Jt they're Just far
fyontman In Cl felaxed IntefVlew ClWay enough that they're our
jLlst befo~e the PI><!es' Safl'Rlego own. I guess that's what yock
dE!~ut a s~l1t, three months ago. music Is kind of about - every"' dunno what It Is; mClybe It's one keeps stealing ·from each
bepa\JS9 we're' a g~ltar band and· o.ther. We're Just thinking about
there weren't that manY9\lllar the tUne; we know we have to
b~{\qs for a while. But t~en,1 think ~me upwith a tune, and somewe're fairly pop-orle~ted too times we might say 'Oh, that's a
catchY, lIke'la~la~la'slng~alpng,
Pixies' thing we're kind of d,olng'
and people 9Qt Into that, y'know, I ... ,and the lyrics-, they're done' at
get Into thai. We're not 'so dense the last minute." '
anqsubtle; I meCln, there's
And so what are these tunes
nothing wrong with that, but about? Jl,Jst more songs about
Y'know, we're corny as hell, what builcllngs and food? Hardly, 'but
~n ! say? I like the corny stuff then, there isthat one about Bathand I think a lot of ~:Jole do. If It's sheba needing a, "good shed" (the
done cool, I thlnkcofnY st\Jff!s the' ' biblically ·"hemed track "Dead") ,
best rock music there 1s t you and, of cO\Jrse, the Pixies' publ<npw what' mean?"
!Ishlng company name, Rice 'n'
, ,Within' two ~oUyS, Blael< ClOd Beans Music.
ban.d would be c;omrnandlng the
"Oh yeah, my favorite meal,"
Bacchanal stage, treallng_ the said Francis. "I had It twice today,
throllbing, -sold-out, hOl,Jse to breakfast and dinner, 'cause you
some of the best rock theye Is, can't get good rice and beans
shpWlng whattheY mean In a splr- around Boston unless you go to a
,Ited 24-song barrage drawn frpm 'Puerto Rican place where you get
their 1Wo~~lblJmlone EPc~talog, It Puerto Rican style. But It's 'lot
pU~hlngthe:g!ltlwrE!Q a lIt.tle farth~ . Mexican, Which I actually prefer,
. er 'out into the d(j~p space of becaUse Puerto Rlpan Isn't spicy
spect"tor~r!1l?t!-lrl:l ("Jl,.!st P!ltst, the enpugh and they put all tn"t fuckqUilsart ~"nl:l t:>a!j~ls!l<lm,Dl:lal)lngpotte~ me"tprodupt In!t '''"c
asst,. Stal1Za edlt~f
Black Francis can speak from
authority, having lived In Puerto
Hlco for a spell while pursuing a
Spanish degree, before dropping
out to pursue rocking out. In fact,
this fact has arguably had more to
do than any other one thing In
establishing the Pixies' unique
lyrical appeal, with songs like "Oh
My Golly," "Vamos" and "Isla De
Encanta" cleverly 'spiked with
Spanish, Puerto Rican style.
Andaluclal
"I mean, for me, that was the
whole point of the movie anyway,
Just this 'fuck everything' kind of
atlitude, so they're sort of m.eanIngless lyrics with some Images
of the movie In them. It's kind of
pretentious a little bit, I think, to
sing about an arty movie like that,
but what the heck, y'know?"
Indeed, especially when a
group rocks as massively as the
band does on this song, hooking
" ... We're co,rny as
the listener Immediately with the
opening melodic guitar' riff anci
hell, what call I say?
gaffing he/she for good once the
I like the corny stuff
driving tempo kicks In, David Lovand I thOInk a lot of
erlng's drums flexing the museu·
lay beat as bassist Kim Deal,
people do. If it's
rhythm guitarist Francis, and lead
done cool, I thoink
guitar whiz Joey Santiago comblne fol' a hard, shiny soum~ that
corny stuff is the
Inspires fist-pumping enttll~slqsm
best 'rock music
without arena-rock's pompous
trappjngs. And Just when' the
there iSo" - Black
song appears to be peaking, with
Francis
all systems at full-throttle, guitars
marching In melodic double-time,
Black also has an approclation Santiago punches through to a,
for Latino culture, registering stili higher plane for a few'
admiration (or the landml:lrk sur- moments, leap-fragging an Irre·
realist film Un Chle(l Andalou by slstlble riff with an even more IrreSpaniards Luis Bunuel and Sal- slstlble riff.
vadorDalithrough"Debaser,"the
Even more so live than on
lead-off track on the Pixies'latest record, on!'! Is struck by how
LP (and first on a major label, smoothlY the Pixies cap,:.:$pift
Elektra), Doolittle,
musical gears, frOm the mesmer~
"Yeah, you have to give the I~ing, nursery-rhYme-out-ofFrench credit (the film was rn~de control sound of "River' EupIn France)," said FranCIS. "It was hrates," where Francis' and
Fren?h-Spanlsh, but it souflds Deal~s vocals combine in a dizzyreal dumb to sing, 'I am un chien lng land,em, to "Tame," where the
andalouf It's too' French, 'vocalists Interlock in an echosounding, not very rock' n 'roll, enhanced, a cappella bridge of
so I added the extra syllat:lles to IUSULlI" contrapuntal panting
ma,ke It 'Andalu-cl"a' (the .actual before Black suddenly rpars out
Sp~nlsh name· for Southern the ,title in C\n Incongruous voice
Spa!n)": Got me a movie, I want that can taka paint off walls, to
you to know/ SlIcln' up eyeballs, I "There Goes MY Gun," wh~re the
w~nt you to know/ Girl, It's so strong-vo!Ce'd bassist charms
groovy, I wantyou to know/Dof/'f 'with· her . ~ulrl<Y, girlish Vocal
knowaboutY<'!J,butlamun.chien phrasing.
)1,
./
:;.
,
','
I~
And then there's those
Spanish-language numbers,far
too busy being cool rock songs to .
be self-conscious linguistic exercises. They also speak of Black
Francis' fascination with the
Island of Puerto Rico - its
speech, state of affairs, style and
the lingering pull It exerts on him.
You could hear it In the Interview
last July and you can hear It in the
song "Isla De Encanta," where
he's telling us, between spasms
of high-powered rock, to come on
along, to where there Is no sufferIng - the Isle of Enchantment (he's going ...)
, Hermanita, ven conmigo.
"I lived In Puerto Rico for six
months and that's where I picked
up a lot of Spanish. I love Puerto
Rican Spanish - stuff like 'goofear, lookear, haga su layaway'.
But for two months after I gOl
there, it meant nothing, I couldn't
penetrate It, couldn't understand
II, nolhlng. Then, after two
months, I began to pick It up
through certain situations I'd get
Into, like buying bread, openlng'l:i
bank account."
Donde no hay sufrlmlentq.
"I dunno, but to me, Puerto
Rico seems pretty fuckfild up, like
it's a giant welfare state, 100 by
30 miles of welfare, yet thare're
so many cars; I think it goes back
to when the fI(Iafia used to route
stolen cars through there out of
New York. And tlia place has a
serIous identity problem stilI."
Isla De Encanta
"But I think it's bull when people say 'Oh, they're losing their
language and their culture:
That'sJhe way the world Is, If people lose one language they get
another. And nobody does Hlike
the Puerto RICans, y'k'now, 'que
c:ute, que nice..' I golla go baCk
there, I really miss iV.'
Me voy, me voy, me voy. •
'. >~\;:;)i:~':- THE DAILY AZTEC
OCTOb~ 25,
THEATER' ..
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La Jolla Playhouse can't measure up to Macbeth
THEATER REVIEW: Macbeth, by William Shakespeare.
Dlr~ted by Des McAnuH. At the La Jolla Playhouse,
Mandell Weiss Cenle~, UCSD campus, La Jolla
(534-3960). Through November 19, Tuesday through
Sunday evenings at 8:00 p.m. saturday and Sunday
matinees at 2:00 p,m.
The second interpretation, as rare in mod- throne, and is more than successful until
ern theater as the first is common, is one he ends up losing his own head to the venwhich achieves a commendable balance geful Macduff (Macbeth had killed his wife
between interpretation and display.
and children). Hence, the play ends Regrettably, the La Jolla Playhouse's after two hours of riotous bloodshed production of Macbeth plunges deeply into rather disappointingly. with a restoration of
the former category.
order as the considerably less zestful MalMacbeth, Shakespeare's shortest colm (Duncan's son) tak.es the throne.
By Jeremy Lewis
tragedy. is driven by electrified mental and
More than any other ~Iemetlt in a Mac- BACK OFF, YOU BIG BRUTEI- John Vickery,
Stanza staff writer
physical energy. an energy controlled
beth production, it is the ce,ntral female lell, Is Macbeth ood Ranine Mellis Macdulf In
Contemporary Shakespear3an produc- throughout by supern'ltural overtones.' It character of Lady Macbeth that must con- the La Jolla Playhouse producUon of Shakestions usually fall into two categories. First, revolves around Macbeth's murder (much .. vince in performance. She is the "fiend-like peare's Macbeth.
the over-elaborate, over-exaggerated inspired by the frantic rantlngs of his wife) queen" who will go to any lengths (unsexroute, going to any lengths to display the of Scotland's King Duncan. Thir:Jgs for the
lng herself. ripping an imaginary baby from which the performances fail to convey the
(supposed) depth of Its interpretation - a Macbeths, Duncan's heirs~ all the other
her breast ~s he feeds) to drive her hus- . text's strength. John Vickery's Macbeth is
surface assurance of its own merit. contra- characters and Elven the whole country get band 'Into killing the sair:Jtly King Duncan. inconsistent, failing to retain the strength of
dicted bl!. the vacuous and regressive decidedly out of hand. Macbeth does his
Femme fatales,icons of the film noirworld, his soliloquies in' the sames with other
natu~~ of the performances underneath it.
best to bump up off all possible rivals to his " obviously learned. a lot from Macbeth.
characters. It appears, at times, 1'\9 is swalBut th~' La Jolla Playhouse, and espe- lowed up by all the space di.rector. Des
cially Ba,rbara Williams (lady Macbeth), McAnuff allows him on stage.· Space is
didn't. For a prOcluctiof! that Is already something the La Jolla Playnovse's prooverly s\",owy and ponderous when 1he ducllon usas to endless degrees In its.
exact opposite is required, a Lady Mac- Interpretation, and it's this space that does
beth more fitted for a mid-afternoon soap the most to alienate the viewer.
opera is hardly. apprqpriate. .
The company seems to have made all
For a company with reported financial
the wrong choices in characterization and problems, their Macbeth will only add to
-production, The play screams for an their complications. The money they C()uld
Masks • WI,css • Beards
Intense claustrophobia (especiallY In the have SiWed On a far more provocative,
Ma\<e-up • Capes' Fangs
scenes when the Macbeths are alone), but minimalist tragedy has been wasted for the
instead delivers an inflated elaboration in sake of self-satls:-th1g excess. •
Swords' Hats' Tlghts ,
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OCTOB~R
THE DAllY AZTEC -
25, 1989
Donny
Contlnue.i 'rom page 1.
To Osmond's desperately-seeking-a-hit
ears, the. irritatingly commercial "Soldier of
love" was not only a sure-fire dance-chart
hit, it was a personal statement of what he
had to prove to the world. Ultracommercial
comeback or not, Osmond sincerely relates
to the lyrics in "Soldier." especially the second verse, whore he proudly declares, "I'm
going to win this battle in the end.'
"You've got to keep in mind that I recorded
that when Donny Osmond wasn't very cool
and the name was very unhip," Osmond said
of his worldwide No.1 smash. "So, sing (that
lino) with a lot of conviction.
"When it hit, and I did win the battle, and
people started respecting me as a musician,
not as a former teeny-bopper - that's what
made all the difference in the world."
Th'l [lhenomenal success of "Soldier,~ its
top 1S follow-up "Sacred Emotion' and the
chart-climbi,;g "Secret Touch,' have all bean
a prelude to Osmond's first-ever solo tour.
S&Gking to turn heads with this tour, he
hopes the current tunes will be sufficient
enough bait for the fans, although he has
slipped in Iha occasional oldie.
At a recent concert, Osmond and his band
experimented with a hip-hop arrangement 01
"One Bad Apple" to see if he could updah:l his
weeny-bopper fOotS. The response sur-
EXACTAMENTE COMO VQ.VO - Ayoung Don·
ny, from the Osmond family heydays In 1971.
prised him.
"We got going, the band was cooking, the
audience was 'Yeah, this is a new song from
his album I' and I go, (leaps Into supple falsetto) 'I can tell you been hurt.... •Everyone recognized it and they went crazy,· Osmond
said, slightly bewildered that seme peopie
still want to hear those tunes.
Receiving such intense adulation at the
perky age of 12 made Osmond admittedly "a
little cocky there for a while because everything came so eClslly: Looking back philosophically at the lean years, Osmond feels the
struggle helped him in the long run.
"Maybe it was good for me to go through
the past 10 years to get back to this point,
because I really reali~ed how hard it really is."
During that 10-year career stall, a lowerprofile Osmond kept busy by doing TV's
"love BoaUFantasy Island' ~ircuit, performing updated oldies at corporate convenlions,
selling stock in hlm~elf in th3 early '80s and
appearinti in a humiliating "60 Minutes' interview that made him appear as if he would do
anything for a buck. He al.ro appeared in a
Broadway revival of George M. Cohan's
Little Johnny Jones thai closed opening
night.
At one point, he seriously considered
changing his name, a grab for artistic credibility indicative of his confusion of and contempt for his past. Realizing that it might only
bring an even bigger mocking backlash, he
decided to just come out "as plain, sim~:e
Donny Osmond.·
In away, Osmond can't be blamed for
wanting to seize the brass ring again. From
tho age of 5, when he first appeared on the
Andy Williams Show, show business (as the
cliche goes) has been his life. Tremendously
sell-confidant of his abilities, he's the first to
admit talent alone didn't make Ihe Osmonds
the phenomenon Ihey were.
"Heyl I worked my butt off back then,'
Osmond said. "But everything was perfect.
The chemislry of Ihe band, Ihe timing, the
look, the sound,lhe music. Things c1icked'-
just like New Kids on the Block are clicking
right now."
Although he enjoyed the massive popularity and junior sex-god status when he had it,
Osmond, still a practicing Mormon, is
bummed he didn't get to bask in it when he
had the chance.
"I never had enough lime in one area to
really enjoy the adulation: he said. ,,' was
jumping around all over the place: In fact.
the Top 15 hit "Secret Touch' is based on the
days when Osmond's love life was so
restricted for religious and career reasons
thai he had to meet his fulure wile on the sly.
Osmond wants people \0 realize he has
grown up and Ihat his new music, no mailer
how pop-oriented, reflects thl) concerns of
someone entering middle age.
"I'm an adult, and I don't want to talk about
silly things,' said Osmond, who has testified
in Congress against both record labeling and
the Parents Music Resource Center.
As a longtime veteran of the music industry, Osmond, wha pertormed with Marie at
President Reagan's 1980 inaguration, takes
issue with musicians who take part in global
matters, but only if Entertainment Tonight or
People magazine is watching.
"It has always bothered me how people
jump on a bandwagon to save the world,"
Donny admitted. "I'm very cynical about this.
It looks like everybody's jumping on a bandwagon because they see a publicity offer.'
The mention of the mid-'80s hunger
anthem "We Are the World' gets Osmond's
blood boiling.
'''We Are The World' was a great marketing opportunity - it workedl- sold a ton of
records,· he said. "But where did it go? Did It
really go to where il was pledged? II bugs me
because ii's a reflection on my industry on
how stupid we really can be, thinking wa can
manipulate people. (The public's) gelling
wise to il."
Ironically, considering the seemingly testmarketed sound of his latest lP, Osmond's
biggest music-industry complaint is toward
its concentration on marketing great sounds
rather than great songs.
"It's frustrating,'. Osmond complained,
'1rom a musician's point of view to be recording when they see artists - and they will
remain nameless; we all know who they ara
- make it because of marketing.'
"You really wonder how much of that is
due to their marketing - the people around
them, management, the company - and
how much to the actual talent of the performer." Osmond said without irony.
When it's suggested to Osmond thai Top
40 radio has always sucked, Osmond
replies, "Well, are we going to have a generation in future years that are going 10 be saying
the same things about what's going on now
(that were said about the disco era)? There
are great melodies in Paula Abdul (bursting
Into falsetto) - 'She's a ~oldhearted snakeI'
Maybe they mighl be saying things about
that. You never really know."
Despite his white-bread image, Osmond
has managed to gain respect from artists all
over the musical spectrum. Here's what ho
had to say about a few of his buddies:
Guns 'N'Roses lead singer Axl Rose: "For
Christmas, he wanted an autographed Donny Osmond album. He Was one of those people who wasn't afraid to admit he used to like
Donny Osmond."
Boy George: "I hope he can turn it around
like I did. I saw hln} the other night. We almost
wrote together, but il never worked out."
Petal Gabriel (who, when Osmond was
without a record company or recording deal,
lent him both his studio and producer George
Acogny): "A very inspiring man. like Andy
(Williams) gave me my first break on television, (Gabriel) Is the one who turned everybody's heads and gave me legitimacy:
fhe always charmingly hone.sl Osmond
admits his new music -like his old - is calculatedly commercial. BUI now thai he's
rogpinod drawing powor, he's hoping a mom
experimental second album will blow peopio's minds. Perfectly willing to shock lisleners, Osmond wants 10 take chances a;")d be
artislically vindicated, because '1hat will
make me a musician in tho ayes of people
and show the real talent, nol just the
package." •
Osmond, who 'addishly poses on his
album cover wearing black leather, fadod
jeans and razor stubble reminiscent of
George Michael, may never get Michael's
artistic acclaim, but the comeback has given
Donny a new chance at "VIndication, something he's salivatQd over for more than a
decad£"People ask me 'Why are you working so
hard to make a comeback? You got lois of
money, yOl) can retire ..: Wall, if you were in
my shoes and had the image Donny Osmond
had - which was completely opposite of
what he really is in actuality - Ihen they
would know why I'm working so hard. I'm
delermined." •.
•
•
•
• •
t
II
~
Fall
.~
~
~
~
l~lnventory ~
,
~BI
0
t
~
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ow·u~·
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•
•
·October 24·26
-Montezuma Hall
-9am to 5pm
All You Can Carry Books
A flat fee gets you all the
books you can carry out!
Tuesday: $6
Wednesday: $5
Thursday: $4
Please, no trucks, apes
or wheelbarrows I
'Once A Year Inventory
Clearance
-Men & women's name brand
clothing
-SDSU clothing and gifts
-Electronics
-Cards and gifts
-And much, much more!
-Savings of up to 78% off!
Shop Early for the Best Selection!
Your Campus Store
AZrECSHOPS
HOllrs: Mon·lllurs tl.OOam·].oopm I FriO OOaIO-400prn I Sal 10 OOam:j OOpm
5
6-
THE OAtLY AZTEC
OCTOBER 25, 1989
Animal Logic
Animal Logic
I.R.S.
It you heard any of the material
on Animal Logic casually - say.
while you were flipping around
the car stereo dial looking for
some non-threatenina Adult Contemporary music --- you might
ac:tl.lally like it. You most probably
wouldn't hit the next preset button
- Animal Logic aren't obtrusive
or even oxciting enough to generate any such feeling (either
positive or negative).
If you are a fan of Stewart
Copeland (founder and drummer
of the Police, noted solo artist and
fjlm-seen> composer) or Stanley
Clarke (a former member of
Return To Forever and Jeff
Beck's band, and considered by
some to be the best bass player
alive) and you heard Animal logie, just as casually, you might
actually hate them.
Copeland and Clarke have collaborated, along with singersongwriter Deborah Holland, to
create an lP of monumental
inconsequence here - coagulating a soon-to-be-patented hybrid
of light rock, jazz, Afro-infh.. .Elnced
pop and "grown-upw lyrical concerns into a salable but artistically
unsatisfying mass.
Rather than being a showcase
for Clarks's and Copeland's
impressive chops - which could
have admittedly become an
esoteric mutual masturbation
session if it were taken to
ext..emes - relative newcomer
Holland wrote the words and
music for all the songs, and then
seemingly just set Copeland and
Clarke loose with the arrangements. What results is not
restraint, or resplendence. but
rather tag-team, bottom-end anti('.$ with lyrics. Nothing logical
about that.
-
John J. cataldo
music: "I ... I don't know what it is
... Alii know is that I have this big,
empty space in my heart ... that
nseds to be filled with
rock 'n' roll.
W
The Alarm
Change
I.R.S.
It is fast becoming .clear that
the real Spinal Tap of the '80s are
The Alarm. Witness whispery
Welsh guitarist Dave Sharp, in a
Stanza interview last year, musing soberly (as sober young musers will do) about why he plays
A typically bosom-clenching
sound bite from a band whose
sound really bites. The big one,
that is. With Change, these
U2-Jr.s haven't. They still suck.
They always will suck. As long as
U2 tak9s a new direction. the
Alarm are sure to be scooping up
their poop (notice the sudden
bluesy back-to-basics approach
on Change a la Rattle and Hum).
The posturing, self-weary
Alarm don't need Change. They
need a big pia in the face.
-. Kevin Bortfdld
' Doesn't every Pre·med deserve achoice?!
Tom C-arcia, M.D. (VAG 75)
Cardiologist
Houston, Texas
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DOWNTOWN
Guild, 3827 5th Ave., Hillcrest
(295-2000). The LitUe Thiel 7:00,
9:15; weekend matinees at 2:30,
4:45.
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Baker Boys, 11 :45, 2:15, 4:45, 7:20,
10:00; Sea of Love, 12:00, 2:30,
5:00, 7:40, 10:10; Breaking In,
12:00,2:15,4:30, 7:00, 9:30; Uncle
BUCk, 1;00, 5:15, 9:45; Parenthood,
2:45, 7:15;. Johnny Hancsome,
12:45,5:15,9:45; The Abyss, 2:45,
7:15.
Starting Friday: Call theater for
information.
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THE OAllY AZTEC -
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10:00: Cookie, 1:50, 5: 10, 8:30; mid·
night weekends, with Johnny HandsomQ, 12:10,3:30,6:50,10:15; The
Abyss, 3:15, 7:40; midnight
weekends, with War Party, 1:30,
5:50, 10:10; Honey, I Shrunk the
Kids, 12:10,3:45, with Turner and
Hooch, 2:00; Mu,'mur 01 the Heart,
5:30, 7:40, 9:50; midnight weekends.
Starting Friday:
Uncle Buck, 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00,
Park, 3812 Park Blvd., Hillcrest
The COve, 7730 Girard Ave., La JolI~
10:00; A Chorus 01 Disapproval,
(294·9264). Romero, 7:00, 9:20;
(459-5404). The Music Teacher,
weekend matineas at 2:20, 4:40.
7:00,9:00; weekend and Wednesday
matinees at 2:30, 4:30.
MISSION VALLEY
Mann Cinema 21, 1440 Hotel Circle
North (291-2121). Old Gringo, 4:15,
7:00, 9:45; weekend matinees at
1:30.
Starting Friday:
Immediate Family, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00,
9:30; weekend matinees at 11 :30.
12:00, 1:50, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45, 9:45;
midnight Fri, and Sat.; Girl in a
Swing, 12:15,2:30,5:00,7:15,9:30;
midnight Friday and Saturday; Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, 1:10, 4:40,
8:20; midnight Friday and Saturday,
with Turner and Hooch, 3:00, 6:30,
10:10.
UA tlorton Plaza, 475 Horton Plaza
Center (234-8602).
Black Rain, 10:30,1:25,4:20, 7:20,
10:20; Se3 01 Love, 10:00, 12:20,
2:50,5:25,8:00,10:35; When Harry
Met Sally, 10:30, 12:45, 3:05, 5:30,
8:00, 10:20; Look Who'. Talking,
10:15,12:35,2:50,5:15,7:40.10:10;
The Fabulous Baker Boys, 11 :00,
1:40, 4:20, 7:10, 10:00; Johnny
Handsome, 11 :25, 1:35, 3:35, 6:00,
8:15; Crimes and Misdemeanors,
10:45, 1:40, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50.
Starting Friday: Cali theater for
information.
BEACHES
Mann Sports Arena 6, 3350 Sports
Arena Blvd. (223-5333).
Fat Man and Little Boy, 12:45,4:00.
7:00, 10:00; Next 01 Kin, 1:15,4:30,
7:30,10:15; Black Rain, 1:00, 4:30,
7:15,10:00; An Innocent Man, 1:00,
4:15, 7:15, 10:15; Halloween 5,
12:45,2:45,5:00,7:30,9:45; Wh3n
Harry Met Sally, 12:30,2:30,4:45,
7:00,9:30.
Starting Friday:
Old Gringo, 12:45,4:00,7:00,9:45;
Fat Man and Little Bo.y, 12:45,4:00,
7:00, 10:00; Next 01 Kin, 1:15, 4:30,
7:30, 10:15; Black Rain, 1:00,4:30,
7:15,10:00;AnlnnocontMan,l:oo,
4:15,7:30,10:15; HalloweenS, 9:45;
When Harry Met Sally, 12:30, 2:30,
4:45, 7:15.
UA Glasshouse 6, Glasshouse
Square, Pt. lama (223-2456).
Look Who's Talking, 12:30, 2:45,
5:00, 7:30, 10:00; The Fabulous
7
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century Twin, 54th al".d EI Cajon
(582-7690). call theate. for shows
and times.
Fashion Valley 4, 110 Fashion ValKen, 4061 Adams Ave. (283-5909).
ley Rd. (291-4404).
Look Who's Talking, 2:40, 5:15, A FhJme/n My Heart, Today through
7:45, 10:20; weekend matinees at Saturday, 5:00, 7:20, 9:40; weekend
noon; Breaking In, 5:30,8:00, 10:30; maiineas at 12:20, 2:40; Citizon
weekend matinees at 3:00; Sea 01 Kans, 7:30; Sunday matinee at 3:30,
Love, 2:00, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45; with The Magnificent Ambersons.
weekend matinees at 11 :30; tlext 01 5:45, 9:55; Sunday matinee at 1 :45;
Kin, 2:20, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00: The Rocky florror Pk:~Jre Show,
weekend matinees at 11 :45; The midnight Friday and Saturday.
Adventures 01 Milo and Otis, 3:00;
Cinerama 6, 5831 University Ave.
weekend matinees at noon.
(287-8900).
Starting Friday:
Look Who's Talking, 2:40, 5:15, Look Who's Talking, 12:55, 3:10,
7:45, 10:20; weekend matinees at . 5:25, 7:40, 9:55; GrOlss Anatomy,
1:00, 3:20, 5:40, 9:05, 10:25; An
11 :45; Next of Kin, 2:20, 5:00, 7:30,
10:00; weekend matinees at 11 :30; Innocent Man, 1:05, 3:30, 5:55,
Shocker, 3:00. 5:30, 8:00, 10:30; 8:20, 10:40; Halloween 5, 12:50,
weekend matinees at noon; Dad, 2;50,4:50,6:51),8:50, 10:45; Sea 01
2:00,4:45,7:15,9:45; weekilnd mati- Love, 12:30, 2:45,5:15, 7:25, 9:35;
Black Rain, 1:10, 3:35, 6:05, 8:35,
nees at 11 :15.
11:00.
Mann Valley Circle, Mission Valley Star1ing Friday:
Leok Who's 'falkina. 12:55, 3:10,
Center West (297-3931).
Gross Anatomy, 2:30, 4:45, 7:30, 5:25, 7:40, 9:55; Gross Anatomy,
10:00; weekend matinees at 12;Op. 1:00, 3:20, 5:40, 8:05, 10:25; Innocent Msn, 1:05, 3:30, 5:55, 8:20,
10:40; Hal/oween 5, 12:50, 2:50,
COLLEGE AREA
College 4, 6303 EI Cajon Blvd. 4:50,6:50,8:50,10:45; Sea 01 Love,
12:30, 2:45, 5:15, 7:25, 9:35; Black
(286-1455).
Uncle Buck, 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, Rain, 1:10, 3:35, 6:05, 8:35, 11 :00.
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Center Ballroom, UCSD campus, La
Jolla (534-4559), Donny Osmond
and Waterfront, 1122 Fourth Ave.,
downtown (278-TiXS). Tonlnho
Horta, the Bacchanal, 8022 Clairem·
ant Mesa Blvd., Kearny Mesa
(560·8022 or 278-TIXS). The Dynatones, Belly Up Tavern, 143 S. Ced·
ros Ave.• Solana Beach (481·9022).
Adrenaline 00, Spirit, 1130 Buenos
Ave., Bay Park (276-3993). Joe Henderson with the Bob Hamilton Trio,
featuring Bob Magnusson and Jim
Plank, Elario's through Sunday, Oct.
29, Summer House Inn, 7955 LaJolla
Shores Orive, La Jolla (459-0261).
The Grove, 3450 College Ave.
Fat Man and UtUe Boy, 1 :00, 4:00,
7:00, 10:00; The Fabulous Baker
Boys, 12:30, 2:45, 5:15, 7:45,10:15;
Next 01 Kin, 12:30,2:45,5:00,7:30,
10:00; Breaking In, 12:30, 2:45,
5:00.7:30, 10:00; Shirley Valentine,
12:30,2:45,5:15,7:45,10:15; The
Adventures of lAiio and Otis, 1 :15,
3:15, 5:15; Parenthood, 1 :30, 4:15,
7:00,9:45; sax, lies and videotape,
12:30,2:45,5:00,7:15,9:45; When
Harry Mat Sally, 12:45,3:00,5:15,
7:30, 9:45; Lethal Weapon 2, 7:00,
9:30.
Starting Friday:
Worth Winning. 12:15, 2:30. 4:45,
9:45; Dad, 12:15, 2:45,5:15,
10:15; The Bear, 12:15,2:30,
7:00, 9:15; Shocker, 12:00,
5'00, 7:30, 10:00; Immedilfte
FamilJ', 12:20,2:45,5:00, 7:i 5, 9:30;
Fat Man and Utt!9 Boy, 1 :00, 4;00,
7:00, 10:00; The rabulOU!1 Bakor
BOy9, 12:15,2:45,5:15,7:45,10:15;
Next 01 Kin, 12:30,2:45,5:00,7:30,
10:00; Parenthood. 1:30, 4:15, 7:00,
Thursday, Oct. 26:
Jaki Byard, UCSO's Erickson Hall
(Mandeville Center), UCSD campus,
La Jolla (459·0261). Melissa lee,
Bacchanal. Peler Case and Walking
Wounded, Belly Up Tavern. Concrete Blonde, Iguana's, Pueblo Ami·
go Shopping Center, Tijuana, Baja
California (230-TJTJ or 278-TIXS).
Vladimir Kuzmin and Dinamik, La
Jolla Museum of ContampOf&ry Art's
Sherwood AUditorium, 700 Prospect
St., La Jolla (278-TIXS).
7:15,
7:45,
4:45,
2:30,
9:45.
lA MESA
Grossmont Cinema, 5500 Grossmont Center Dr. (465-7100). Black
Rain, 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 8:10, 10:40.
Starting Friday:
The Bear, 12:30, 2:45, 5:15, 7:45,
10:00.
Friday. ~t. 27:
Obo Addy and Kukrudu, Mandeville
Auditorium, UCSO campus, La Jolla
(534-4090). Top Jimmy and t~
Rhythm Pigs, Casbah, 2812 Kettner
Boulevard, downtown (294-9033).
Grossmont Mall Theatres, Grossmont Shopping Center (465-3040).
saturday, OCl 28:
Jaki Byard, UCSO Facl.''ty Club
(near Mandeville Auditorium), UCSD
campus, La Jolla (534-4830 or
534-3229). Little Women, Win·
stan's, 1921 BCl('-O\1 St., Ocean Beach
(222-6822). Jimmy Cliff, Belly Up
Tavern. The Aeroes, MiOlstrel and
E.R.P., Spirit. A Rock of SeagUlls,
Bacchanal.
Crimes and Misdemeanors, 12:35,
2:50, 5:05, 7:30, 9:45; Fat Man and
UtUe B~y, 12:40, 3:05, 5:35, 8:00,
10:30; Sea 01 Love, 1:10, 3:40, 6:05,
8:20, 10:40.
Starting Friday:
Crimes and Misdemeanors, 12:35,
2:50, 5:05, 7:30, 9:45; Black Rain,
12:30, 3:00. 5:30, 8:00, 10:35; Fat
Man and UlUe Boy, 12:50, 3:15,
5:50, 8:15, 10:40. .
Sunday, Oct. 29:
Deborah Harry, Bacchanal.
Monday, oct. 30:
Texas and Indio, Mandeville Auditorium, UCSD. Bad English.
Bacchanal.
Wedneaday, Oct. 25:
The Pixies and Bob Mould, Pric-e
- Siskellifberr
'10MATOES SMASH MUSIC SWELLS AND LOVERS LOVE..,JON AMIEL LIFTS
'QUEEN OF HEARTS'ABOVE ORDINARY FAMILYTALES...DELICIOUSLY FUNNY,"
- Caryn lames, THf NfW YORK 1I.\,f5
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. .~~~ "A BEGUILING
':~ PANORAMA OF
ROMANCE AND
REVENGE...
AND THE NIFTIEST TALKING
PIG SINCE PORKY ...
CRIMINAllY ENJOYABLE:'
- Rid/aId (Or/iiI. mil
"FANCIFUL, WARM
ANn FUNNY. 'QUEEN
OF HEARTS' IS COMIC
OPERA
FOR THE EYES."
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STARTI» FRIDAY,
3812 PARK lH.\'1l • 294-9264
Pr"ullld I. DOLBY STEREO
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8 - THE DAILY AZTEC
OCTOBER 25, 1989
Play
cal of Syracusds zany crossing of
dialects) accidentally brings one set of
twins face to face does utter chaos break
out, each twin suspecting" he's lost his
Continued· from page 2.
mind.
,
.
.
and Jon W. Haddorff) and their respective tension as different planes splinter in variservants, the Cromio brothers (Patrick ous directions.
-It really isn't formali$m," Mogge says
Lathrop and Brody Graves), look amazingly sinlilar for not actually being twins. We .-It's purely an abstract way of expressing
begin to feel as confused as the players an Idea and metaphors for birth and conover who's really who. But it's the wacky ception; living and dying in very generalclowning of the Cromlo brothers and their ized terms of stress and tension, and resolmutual wife, a demanding and overanxi- ution of conflict."
A Iinocut is a relief process done on linoous '40s housewife ~Rachel Lynn) that
keeps the laughs roiling. The trio is like leum. The arti~t carves into the sUrface,
something cut of an I Love Lucy spleode, cutting away what she wants to appear
overflowing with animated facial express- white in the final print. After the design is
completed, the image is transfered in ink
ions and romping· dance sequences.
on ~r through the use of a hydraulic
The rousing musical score Includes press. Mogge works on a series for as long
such Rodgers and Hart hits as -Falling In as It's -comfortable."
Love with Love," USing For Your Supper·
and -This Can't Be Love;" perfonood in the
fa::hlon of stumbltng ballet, waltzes and
large, full-cast routines. •
Artist
Continued from pafl!t 2-
In 1938 to a JOVial Rogers and Hart score.
Much of the music and dancing of the era is
preserved In this production, giving older
folks In the audience more of a kick than
anyone under age 30. S11I1, what worked
for audlencas then works today.
The Boys From Syracuse is an Irreverent story of two sets of lost twins In an
ancient Grecian city. When thair paths
cross, mistaken identity throws the entire
city into an uproar. Each unaware of the
other, a game of musical husband-, wifeand servant-swapping ta1<es place until
angry with· everyone else.
everyone
Even the town courtesans, merchants and
police get in on the act.
Is
But It's not until the local sorcerer [fhomas Rudolph), a cigar-smoking, plckpocketing shyster with a New York accent (typi-
VIt.leoCorxepIs kI1OlfIloJ
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LET'S DO
LUNCH!
,
0:
Give a hoot.
Don't Ilute.
~I
YOUR PATH
TOSUCCESS
STARTS
HERE!
-I feel a series is done when I've said alii
can say In a particular groupofwork,"comments Magge. "!f I find myself repeating
myself, a series is done."
After 21 years In the service, specializing in political and military affairs, this
rotired Navy captain decided to pursue an
art degree. Through the G.1. Bill, Mogge
came to SDSU in 1983, drawn to the arts
neither for fam~ nor money, but for the
simple lure of extracting pure enjoyment
from the artmaking process.
Mogge feels the most in;Jportant element of abstraction is "looking at life and
Ideas in a metaphoric vocabulary, rather
than as a door, a flower or a landscape.
-It's a different way of looking and presenting what we live with ... Art Is a language - a visual language as opposed to
poetry." •
a book
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~ome on down 0 Woodstock's and
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