Chico riot cancels festival - SDSU Library Digital Collections

Transcription

Chico riot cancels festival - SDSU Library Digital Collections
WEATHER: Low clouds and
moming drizzles will give way to
clearer skies this aftemoon with a
high ncar 65 degrcs. The surf is
three to four feet at l4-second intervals with a water temperature
ncar 63 degrees .
'The Sun and Moon' is at
Hepner Hall
Men netters ousted in semis
of WAC
see STANZA, page 7
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
VOLUME 70 NUMBER 131
._ I'
44IIIIlIIIIIiM • •_
-
see SPORTS, page 11
APRIL 29, 1987
F
Chico riot cancels festival
by Robert WiUiams
Daily Az/I'c staff writer
-----------------
Daily Az/ec graphic by Daren Bader
CHICO RIOT-Campus officials at Chico State
University canceled their "Pioneer Days" spring
fiesta event after people rioted near their campus
April 24 and 25. People there believe MTV's planned presence to film the event may have caused
the riots.
California State Univ<:rsity at Chico and
SDSU were ranked the nation's number one
and three' 'party schools, " respectively, in
Playboy's Dccember 1986 issue.
The comparison doesn't end there.
Music Television, better known as MTV.
planned to film and broadcast the second
weekend of Chico State's "Pioneer Days,"
a spring festival, May I and 2. Filming WtlS
cancelled after Chico Siate officials stopped
the ongoing event, due to riots that broke
out ncar Chico State's fratemity row.
Some people at SDSU arc concerned
similar incidents may occur here during
Spring Fiesta, which MTV plans to film and
broadcast.
Regarding Chico Statc' s decision, MTV
spokesperson Doug Hertzog called its administration "highly irresponsible ... Contrary
Speaker blames
media's agendas
by Rene Kaprielian
Daily Aztec staff writer
"The media, because of its coverage of the AIDS epidemic, has contributed
mightily to the AIDS epidemic," is the message Accuracy in Media speaker
Charles Wiley brought to SDSU Monday .
Wiley, a former journalist, told a crowd of 30 people in Aztec Center's
Council Chambers that "the media has tremendous power to set the public
agenda," and is doing just that with regard to AIDS.
While the media is widely considered to be the nation's watchdog of
political and social issues, it is Accuracy in Media that watches and critiques
the media.
, For the last five years, Wiley said he has taken a special interest in how the
media is covering the AIDS crisis.
Wiley said if the media had reponed the story of AIDS accurately when the
first reports of it surfaced, the disease would be under control today.
"The media has chosen to make the priority in the AIDS story ... civil
rights," Wiley said. "The public health problem received little attention.
"Even now, after all this coverage, we have very little understanding of
what AIDS is all about. The reason is because of the priority of the coverage.
Anything which would go against the (media's) agenda simply got buried ...
Wiley said statements by numerous exper:s on AIDS warning about the
severity of the disease have attracted little or no coverage, while the issue of
civil rights has gained front-page exposure.
Wiley said AIDS is different from other epidemic diseases because it is
surrounded by politics. He said without all the talk of civil rights, AIDS would
be treated the same way tuberculosis a.nd other diseases were.
Wiley took the Los Angeles Times to task for its coverage on AIDS . He
displayed several copies of the Times, showing where stories and "important" quotes in the stories were placed.,
"Here is a typical Los Angeles Times story," Wiley said. "(It's a) front.
page number one story, 'AIDS Ruled No Basifo for Firing,' a big story about
AIDS and civil rights.
"A couple days earlier in the L.A. Times there was a story on page 27 .
They didn't think this one was imponant like the one 011 civil rights.
"It's a repon on a speech by the leading health authority in America, the
Health and Human Services Secretary. He said, 'The AIDS epidemic will
dwarf all previous epidemics in mankind's history. AIDS will make the others
look pale.'"
Wiley said AIDS is one of the issues that the media sets to its own agenda,
and is the result of a change he said occurred in the 196Os.
"A number of reponers decided to take a different approach to journalism," Wiley said. "(It became) advocacy journalism. It was to find whatever
'flaws they sec and bring it to tlle reader."
Wiley said this style differs greatly from that of his reporting days. He was
taught objectivity while stuclyingjournalism at New York Univen;ity , he said.
Wiley said one of the problems in making the media accountable for what it
prints is that "people read and listen to news with half an ear and only skim
it. "
Wiley said people must be reminded that the media has Il~ own agenda and
biases and should be watched and read with a critical eye.
to what onicials there reported , MTV was
not responsible for Chico State's riot, he
said.
"MTV ran a story on Chico State's
'Pioneer Days' this past Friday (April 24), "
Hertzog said. "The lead of the story mentioned Chico State as the party capital
school of America. We did not put on the air
(any) maps of how to get to Chico State, and
we did not print up train schedules of how to
get to Chico.
"The whole thing is absurd, and the people who arc saying this are totally out of
line . The only reason we mentioned them as
a pany school is because of Playboy."
Hertzog saicl MTV covered Spring Break
events at Daytona Beach, Fla .• the past two
years and did not have any problems.
"It seems to me that the students at Chico
just don', know how to act in a responsible
manner," he said.
Chico State President Robin Wilson,
reached Monday aftemoon, said "Pioneer
Days" has been "cancelled forever."
"This is happening because of outsiders;
first Playboy ranking us as the number one
party school and now MTV is trying to
exploit us.
. "We Olre here to serve the students, not
Playboy or MTV," Wilson said. "The students were well-behaved. They're not responsible for the cancellation of 'Pioneer
Days,' They understand why it's been cancelled and support my decision."
Bruce Kluger, Playboy 's editor in New
York, said blaming the Chico riot on one
source, such as the magazine, is irresponsible.
"I think to blame the whole thing on
anyone else other than the administration at
Chico State is wrong and unfair and a dodging of responsiblity. "
Ptease see CHICO on page 2.
Author to speak today
Tobias offers a feminist
perspective on arms race
by Cathy Sanchez
Daily Aztec staff writer
When the American people
were informed about (ranscam,
many questioned the federal government's judgment. They
wanted answers about the spending of their tax dollars on the hostages-for-arms deal.
Sheila Tobias, a leader in the
fit:ld of women's studies, said she
believes "public understanding
of the isslles must be increased if a
true national debate on defense
and military spending is to take
place."
Tobias, co-author of "What
Kinds of GlIns a. . e They Buying
for Your Butter: A Beginner's
Guide," will discuss the "feminist perspective on defense spending," 3 p.m. today in Hepner
Hall Room 221.
SDSU's Women's Studies Department is sponsoring the event
as part of SDSU's New Views of
Women lecture series. The event
is open to the public.
"Feminists are very critical of
defense spending and recognize
that every dollar spent on support
for the military, is a dollar not HER PERSPECTIVE-Author Sheila Tobias will give a feminist
available to be spent on social view on defense spending at 3 p.m. today In room 221 at Hepner
Hall. She says every dollar apent on military support Is a dollar
programs," Tobias said.
The book discllsses the deci- , not available for social programs.
sions behind government spendscience professor at the Universiing on defense weapons and the Peter Uoudinoff, Shelah Leader
ty of Arizona in Tucson. She also
specific items on the "govern- and Stefan Leader.
wrote ' 'Overcoming Math Anxiement's shopping list." The book
Scientific American magazine
ty," in which she discusses the
also discusses what the Defense dubbed the book "a well-written
feminist issue of mathematics
non-maihematical primer of the
~epartment bought for $182 bil"iion in the fiscal year of 1982. She nature of modern war."
avoidance.
PleB5e see TOBIAS OD pllge 3.
co-authored the !>ook along with
Tobias is a visiting political
2 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
Fewer jobs and tests predicted
March of Dimes
~
"BIRTH DEFECT'> FOUNDATION-
ar~
PLEASE HELP FIGHT
sooce
BIRTH DEFECTS
tt'l\
conll()~ed ll..
,,'''':V.Jh.tlt",
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END OF THE SEMESTER STUDENT SPECIAL
•
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$39 95
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UNLIMITED TANNING
Reg. $5990
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(CPS) Thanks to thc mergcr
mania that swept thl'ough Amcr·
ica in 1986, studcnt corporatc-job
prospccts arc dimmer than last
spring's, two reccnt national sur·
vcys of corporatc hiring plans indicate.
And grads this ycar arc likcly to
be tcstcd for drug usc or cvcn
AIDS beforc gctting a job.
Michigan Statc's annual sur·
vcy, rclcascd in latc Dcccmbcr,
found that big companies, in par·
ticular, havc cut back thcir plans
for hiring new collcgc grads.
A Northwcstcrn Univcrsity
study rclcased at the same timc
prcdicts dcmand for 1987 grads
directnr and author of thc annual
Endicott·Lindquist Rcport.
About 56 perccnt of companies
Lindquist survcycd said thcy'd
intcntionally rcduccd thcir man·
agerial staffs during the last year
through rcorganization, hiring
frcczcs, tcrmination without
scvercncc or carly rctirement in·
ccntivcs.
will mirror 19!!6 hiring. hut cm·
ployers say they will scrcen appli·
cants morc closcly than hcforc.
And starting salaries. whilc in·
crcasing an avcragc of 2.1 per·
cent, will lag bchind innation.
Both Michigan Statc and
Northwcstcrn obscrvers blame
thc unpreccdentcd wavc of corpo·
ratc mcrgcrs and acquisitions that
rcachcd rccord Icvcls last ycar.
"Downsizing, consolidations,
mcrgcrs and acquisitions havc
cost thc country jobs in somc of
our biggcst and best paying cor·
porations," said Victor Lind·
quist, Northwcstcrn's placcmcnt
Michigan Statc's annual sur·
vcy of 700 busincsscs also found
thc biggcst companies arc thc
oncs CUlling back thc most, rc·
ports MSU survcy co·author Pat·
rick Schcctz.
Plea'le see JOB'i on page 3,
I
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$199 Complete
Colored Extended Contacts
Chico
Continued from page I.
Michacl Lambrix, a liaison officcr bctwccn Chico
Statc's Grcck systcm and Chico City Policc, said fratcrni·
ty mcmbcrs hclped police clcan the area ncar fraternity
row Saturday night.
"Thc outsiders totally trashcd our town," Lambrix
said. "And on Monday, the sororities and fratcrnitics had
signs on thcir lawns saying, 'MTV go home. We don't
want you.' The community of Chico has lost $100,000
with the cancellation of 'Pioneer Days.' "
Wilson said, "Evcry rinky dink (pcrson) in northern
California with a six·pack and a car was herc this
wcckcnd. They trashed the town."
Wilson said SDSU - sincc it is not a "residcntial"
collcge - is bCllcr equipped than Chico Statc to deal
with MTV and thc problcms thc mcdium might bring. But
WJ D3 x 4
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THE FAR SIDE
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1m
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By GARY LARSON
his advice to SDSU's administration was to "canccl
MTV."
Bryan Jacobs, SDSU's Associated Students president,
said he has' 'the greatcst amount of confidence in Public
Safcty officals, and the fact they arc prepared to handle
any incident that may arisc during Spring Ficsta."
"Extra Public Safety officcrs will bc on duty, as well as
the student patrol," Jacobs said. "We're uscd to running
largc events here. We've held concerts in the Open Air
Theatre with groups slJch as the Policc, Oingo Boingo and
Madonna ...
SDSU Prcsidcnt Thomas Day said hc is conccrncd
about MTV coming to usc Spring Fiesta "as a back·
ground for thcir commcrcials."
"I'm looking into it," Day said. "j suppose that
thcre's always the possiblity of an unruly mob, but I don't
anticipatc any such problcm."
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For Fall 'B7-SP 'BB
·Administrative Assista~t
for Programs
·Administrative ASSistant
for Governmental Affairs
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·AS Parliamantarian
Pick up applications in Aztec
Center Office, downstairs.
Deadline is May 6, 1987 @ A pm
PART TIME
Honda '82 Accord Hatch, 5·spd. Pioneer Sys.
Michelins. well kept, 86 K $3200. 481-6985(88688)
SPORTS MEDICINE
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Contact Heidi Peterson A.T.C. 693·4556.
71 Volks Convertible. Excellent condition $3 ,500
Call Nina, evenings 425-2863
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A,S. Administrative
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Coordinator Openings
Phone Help Neeoed In
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Available: 283-6017
Please see CLASSIFlEDS un pUke 5.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES.
~hatever cO,lJege degree you earn, the Navy can help you make the most of it. As a Navy
officer, you 1\ lead the adventure. You'll get the advanced training and managament
experience as you advance your career in:
Financial Management
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You .must hav~ a ~A/BS degree, be no more than 28 years old, pass aptitUde test and
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''Well, If I'm lucky, I should be able to get
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
FOR INFORMATION CALL 265-5281
NAVY+OFf'ICER.
LEAD THE ADVENTURE.
THE DAILY AZTEC APRIL 29, 1987·- 3
Jobs--Continued rrom paRe 2.
For example, companies with more than 10,000 employees said they'd hire
9.3 percent fewer new college grads this spring, Scheetz said. Firms with
5,000 to 10.000 employees will cut new grad hiring by 1.5 percent.
General Motors, faced with falling profits, announced in late Deeember it
will halt college recruiting efforts altogether.
In response, Michigan-area colleges are trying to bring smaller firms to
campus to recruit.
"We're expanding our job days to small and medium-sized companies,"
said Janis Chabica. director of Cooperative Education at the University of
Michigan.
But, while hiring will increase among smaller companies, as much as 6.7
percent in companies with 500 to 1,000 employees, overall hiring will slip 2.4
percent nationally, Scheetz said.
National Honor Society
Presents
§
Tobias--- I~
Conllnued from pURe 1.
and Society" and "Understanding
Star Wars" for other publications.
Tobias studied history, literature
and foreign languages at HarvardRadcliffe and Columbia universities.
Her other interests include German Nazism and socialism, race relations in the U.S. and Great Britain,
the Vietnam War, feminism, and demystifying defense.
Tobias taught at the University of
Califomia, San Diego; University of
Southern California; Vanderbilt UniTobias and Goudinoff successful- versity in Nashville and Wesleyan
ly withstood a copyright infringe- University in Connecticut.
ment suit brought on by Retired
General Daniel Graham of the High
Frontier Organization.
Other books she co-authored include "Weaponry and Military
Spending," "The People's Guide to
National Defense," and, soon to be
published, "Women, Militarism and
War." The new book is a collection
of essays including "Shifting Heroisms: the campaign rhetoric of retuming G.1. 's running for office in
1946 and that of Vietnam veterans
running for office in the 1980s."
Graham said Tobias and Goudinoff "used segments of a pro-Star
Wars videotape produced by High
Frontier for rebuttal purposes without permission." Graham and the
High Frontier Organization claimed
"unlawful copyright infringement. "
The American Civil Liberties Union defended Tobias and Goudinoff,
citing' 'fair usc" under the copyright
code.
Tobias is currently working on increasing awareness about ballistic
missile defense, launch-on-warning
command and control of early warning systems and accidental nuclear
war.
Tobias wrote a two-part selies in
Ms. magazine on "The Intelligent
Women's Guide to Defense," and
wrote articles on "Dilemmas of
Modern Weaponry in Humanities
"Is Art An Important Dimension Of Truth Or Is
It A Means Of Propaganda?"
*
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29
I§
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AT 7:00 PM
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Dr. Ida K. Rigby, Professor of Art History
Dr. Leon Rosenstein, Professor of Philosophy
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THE DAILY AZTEC APRIL 29, 1987 - 5
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CLASSIFIEDS
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Continued rrom pn~e 2.
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THE DAILY AZTEC APRIL 29, 1987 - 7
~~
........................
~
Artists shoot for 'The Sun and Moon'
by David Goode
Stanza contributor
Daily Allee photo by Ion Moe
AMSTERDAM ARTISTS-Artists Ulay (lett) and Marina Abramovlc
premiere a new performance art piece Saturday In the Little
Theatre. The Amsterdam couple's art work Is also on display In the
University Gallery.
A performance art piece by husband-and-wife team Marina Abramovic and Ulay, called "The Sun
and the Moon," premieres Saturday at 8 p.m. in an exclusive engagement at Hepner Hall's Little
Theatre.
The piece reaches beyond drama with its unique handling of time
and motion within the limited context of using the two artists' bodies
as the artistic medium. Ulay will be
sitting very still on top of chairs
stacked on the stage when the
audience is admitted and will not
move until they have left the one
hour show. The sense of timelessness resulting from Ulay's immobility will contrast sharply
against Marina's symbolic movements. This conflict between
opposing forces lies at the very
heart of their work.
The performance piece is only a
part of Marina's and Ulay's exhibit. The Amsterdam couple's
life-sized Polaroid photographs
and videotaped movies will be on
display in the University Gallery
until May 21. The artists will also
conduct a slide-lecture April 29 to
discuss their work and experiences.
Many of the photographs exhibited in the gallery are portraits of
the artists offered as an aesthetic
element open to interpretation.
Every piece they display has a
companion related to it in some
way.
"It is very important, this freedom of interpretation," Marina
said. "You can't be given all explanations for every thing. We
provide the elements and the audience has the creative part of
seeing how they all relate to each
I(eaton's directorial debut
tries for a bit of 'Heaven'
ranging from religious fanatics
to hippies, to militant '80s
youth - and their testimonies
in the film are contrasted with
footage from many old films
and television shows illustratIng Heaven, death and love.
She basically covers life, not
death, which is not such an
easy task, However, by keep:lOfifStramlost. . iog her qu~stlons to the point
'~"''''''''. ......... .. • and utilizing
arty blend of
tremendously by film editor
Paul Barnes, who made the interviews and film footage all fit
together. This man is the cut
and paste man behind
Keaton's collage, there's no
doubt about it.
But besides the Interesting
images that Barnes has.
together, Keaton makes .
terviews visually Int'~rA!lm~n
too. They don't take
or in an
other."
The most recent work presently
on display is a series of Polaroid
photographs entitled "Die Mond,
Der Sonne" that exemplify the
dualistic nature of reality. These
images are carefully back-lit to
create a shadow within the photograph. The existence of both the
shadow and solid forms at the
same time is described by the
artists as reality split into physical
and spiritual planes.
The life-sized photographs are
taken with the only camera of its
Idnd, but the unique results
achieved are not the main advantage. Ulay likes the way the size of
the image is a one-to-one spatial
relationship. Marina prefers the
clarity of the photograph and the
vivid colors.
"The Polaroids are closely related to our performance because
their life-size creates a sense of
immediacy," Marina said. "Some
call it porcelain painting because
the color is layered upon the surface like a relief. No grain is
visible."
The Polaroid format was used
with the greatest visual success in
a series of four pictures called
"Modus Vivendi," or ways of living. The series contains two pictures of each artist and is displayed in malelfemale pairs to both
accentuate their interdependence
and contrast their differences.
The relationship between life and
death is found within "Modus
Vivendi," but the conflict between
the classical beauty of Marina's
images and Ulay's broken posture
is even more visible.
The artists' most powerful
visual relationships are found in
their videotape series that captures tho essence of cultures on
all the continents. Three "Continental Videos" can be viewed at
the gallery on video monitors
placed inside huge, black travel
trunks. Just as memories are
stored in trunks, the videos act as
a reservoir for the artist's experiences from which a global interdependence can be developed
and nurtured.
"I consider the whole world's
culture as one," Ulay said. "That
is what our work is about, a cultural retrospective."
"We don't think of ourselves as
Dutch, German or Yugoslavian
artists, but as artists of the world,"
Marina added. "The world is our
studio."
Student's thesis
paints family life
by Lisa S Estrella
Stanza staff writer
With 200 people showing up
for her first one-~erson installation exhibit, it can only
mean one thing: success. Last
Saturday, Leah Younker's
Master of Fine Arts thesis was
finally exhibited in SDSU's
Master Gallery.
Younker's "Family/Politics"
features more than 15 arcylic
paintings examining elements
of family Ufe, such as sexuality,
childbirth and parent-child relationships. These images are
juxtaposed with other canvasses which depict aspects of
war and militarism to emphasize the connections between
psychological, social and political realities,
"The idea behind the exhibition is to show the connection
between the contexts for families in our society," Younker
explained.
Younker credits psychoanalytic feminist writers like Nancy Chodorow, Sara Ruddick
and Caroline Whitbeck for influencing her work on parentchild relationships. But she
also includes a women's studies class she took with Kathy
Jones.
"A lot of the ideas and
themes I focus on came from
that class," Younker recalled.
"She's really a brilliant professor.
"I don't know much about
psychoanalysis, but I've always read things about
psychologists, and basically it
has to do with the mother-child
relationship and how that
shapes the next generation.
So psychoanalytic feminists
apply that to culture at large."
In May, when Younker
graduates, it will not only mean
that she's a professional painter, but it will also mean she
can start applying for teaching
jobs on the college level.
"But one thing that's really
important, is that I've already
started showing my work to
galleries," she said. "I figured
that I'd get out and start taking
the risk."
Although her painting slyle is
commercial, her philosophy
and interpretations of motherhood are not.
She's not willing to compromise her art. And she's the
type of artist that doesn't want
to tell her viewers what to think.
"I just want to tell them what
I'm thinking," Younker said. "I
want them to come to lheir own
conclusions.
"It's going to be hard for me
because of that, in terms of
getting a gallery. Some of the
things I paint are hard for pe0ple to have in their living
rooms, Like a woman giving
birth. But I think there is a place
for it."
"Family/Politics" will be on
exhibition through May 1sl.
Gallery hours are from noon to
4 p.m. For more information
call 265-6511.
6 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
What to do if you sight aMountain Fresh Rainier
a state law enlilfcement ollicrr. Often sllch n'ports arc invest igated immediately.
and if the MFR's cannot he tracked down. the informat ion is passed Oil 10 the
proper authlll'it ies.
Below is a reprodu~tion of the ollidal Vuestionnaire that is given to persons who
report a sighting. If you see an MFR. IiII out the form c<Ifl'fully and send it to:
Rainier Sight illgs. Rainier Brcwing Company. 3100 Airport Way S.• Seattle. WA
<JHB4. Your cooperation is greatly appreciated.
If you see something that you cannot explain. what should you do'?
Well. the Rainier Brewerv's advice is first to use ~()mmon sense. Think ahout
it for awhile. Quite often vou will shortly realize that what vou saw has a rational
explallat ion.
.
.
II' you ar'~ con\'in~ed that vou have SCl'n a Mountain Fresh Rainier. you ~an
report it to the manager (;f any local ~~rocery store. liquor store or t.;vern. Each
ston' has at least one employee who is assigncd to such phenomena, If there is no
gron'ry hase in your near vicinity. you can give your report to any hartender or to
Plrmse
This questionnoire has been preparod so that you can givo the
Ralnior Brewing Company as much information as possiblo can·
corning the phenomenon you have obsorvod. Please try to
answor as many quostions as you possibly can. Tho information
that you glvo will bo used for rosenrch purposes. Your nome
will not be usod in connection with any stotemonts, conclusions,
or publications without your pormisslon.
5. If you saw tho objoct during DAYLIGHT. whoro was thl! SUN
locotod as you looked ot tho objoct? (Circle ono):
a. in front of you
d. to your left
b. in bock of you
a. avo rho ad
c. to your right
f. don't remombor
8. W" wish to know tho ongulor sizo. Hold 3 match stick at
arm's longth in line with a known objnct and note how much
of tho object is covered by the head of the match. If you
had performed this oxperimont at the time of tho sighting,
how much of the objoct would have boon covorlld by tho
mstch hood?
•
9. Old the objoct:
1. Here are three ortist's drewings of outhenticotod M FR
shapes. Did tho object you observod most rosemble
(Circle one)'
a. bright moonlight
b. a few
b. dull moonlight
no
don't know
don't know
b. Suddenly spood up snd ru.h away?
yes
no
c. Brook up into parts or oxplodo?
yos
no
don't know
d. Givo off smoke?
yos
no
don'l know
e. Disengago its top?
yes
no
dOl,'t know
f. Display
yes
no
don't know
c. no moonlight. pitch dark
d. don't remombor
0
foamy whito contrail?
d. don't remembor
6.2 If the MOON was visiblo, circlo the quadrant that most
cloorly roprosents the phose of the moon when you sow
the object:
•• 0.
6.3 Draw tho hend of the compass to reprosont the direction
10. In thn following sketch. imogino that you are at. the point
shown. Plnco an "A" on the curvad lino to show how high
the objact was above the horizon (skyline) whon you fir.t
saw it. Placo a "B" on th ... ~mo curved lino to show how
high tho objact was obovo the horizon (skyline) when you
last saw it. Pia co an "A" on the composs when you first saw
it. Place a "B" on the compass when 'IOU last saw the object.
toward which you saw the object:
2. Whon did you soe the objoct?
MOnth
yes
MOON (Circle one):
8.nono
c. many
Day
a. Appear to stand still at any timo?
sidering the STARS and MOON?
6.1 STARS (Circlo ono):
B.
A.
6. If you sow the object at NIGHT, what did you notice con-
Year
3. Timo of day (indicate by drawing hands on clock);
(Circle one):
P.M .
A.M.
....--.....
'1
"
7. Those oro objocts found in tho vicinity of recont MFR
sightings. Circlo any similar objocts you might
heve obsorved at the time of tho sighting:
I
11. To roceivo your froe MFR·spotter stickar by roturn mail.
complote this form and sond it to the Rainier Browing
Company. whoso address appear. at the top of this page.
VVhatisyournome? __________________________________
address __________________________
4. Where woro you when you saw the object?
city _______________________
slato, zip ____________'--_________________
noerest postal address
city or town
OHlelai U.S. MFR larm
FDS Form Mal 87 867
Btate or county
III: 1'I,."llf1\ IIh:CU I<JIIlU:I ... .ill' 11I1I:lhl!C'IIII, ,:lHiUulkJ frulil (Ju":r
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dlaille . Slank,) M.l. Ki(l"ppd (lllh" MJIl""I'. iI()l'l'ing.
ilr"v.IIl~. anu ()nn~lII, S(~"'I)
8 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
Foreign films have home in local library
by Paul Gordon
Stanza staff writer
Every Monday at 7 p.m. the
third floor of San Diego's Central
Libmry undergoes an amazing
transformation. Obscure art films
from abroad illuminate a small
room that co,nfortably seats 150
patrons. But what is so special about the program is that it is free.
Promoter Ralph De Lauro, of
Chula Vista, conceived the idea in
1983, while showing film exhibitions on a Gaslamp district rooftop
near Fifth Avenue. The programming consisted of movies from the
library's collection.
All De Lauro had to do was rent
.. a 16mm projector for $16 a night
and, equipped with a homemade
screen and films, he got friends to
chip in for the shows.
"One day it dawned on me that I
was getting these films from the
library and yet they weren't doing
anything wth them. They weren't
having any kind of regular film
programming," De Lauro recalled.
Finally, the exhibitor
approached library management
and said, "Hey, I'd like to do a film
series here. I know you have the
resources as far as the films go;
you certainly have the space."
The response was positive, but
after working with the library for
two years, De Lauro felt that he
couldn't go on showing the same
films, over and over again. "I got
tired of using the somewhat limited and somewhat beat-up,
abused collection of movies they
owned," he said.
So, to extend the range of his
films in 1985, when the central lib(ary closed for .three months because of extensive rain damage,
De Lauro asked them to kick in.
They gave him a smali grant.
Now, to enhance programming,
De Lauro obtains movies from
Budget Films, a Los Angeles distributor. The maximum he can
spend is $50 per film. With that, he
feels he can interest quite a few
people in cinema.
April opened with "Toni," by
Jean Renoir. Other films shown
include "Orpheus," "Animal
Farm" and "The Overcoat."
The Mexican Film Council is Interested in previewing six featurelength films from their country.
"That would be real nice, being
able to offer Mexican film pre-
mleres, free of charge," De Lauro
romarked.
More funding, the promoter
said, would improve the selection
of films he could show. "If you
want to do a free gig In America,"
he said, "you need money behind
It. Right now, to keep the series
going at the same level, and to
expand and improve it, we need a
new infusion of money."
"I think the cinema in San Diego
needs a shot in the arm," De
Lauro said. "I think people are willIng to support our films. There is
room for that smail, intimate art
house.
"The combination of an artistic
outlet for me and a public service
for people is a great mix, and
when you start doing things for
money, things change; I don't
mean your sincerity has to
change, but when you are hustling
a buck, it's always got to be somewhere In your mind's frame of reference."
One of the reasons De Lauro
Humphrey's offers sound
alternative to big venues
by John Cataldo
Stanza staff writer
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4575 College Avenue
has continued the series Is be- hear from them again."
cause he got tired of the recycled
So far, the library has not dicfilms the Ken Cinema plays. "In tated programming content to De
San Diego, we are just seelrlg the Lauro. The..only time he really got
any criticism was when Pierre
tip of the iceberg," he said.
"It's not like New York here," De Paolo Passollni's "Teorema" was
Lauro, an ex-New Yorker; shown.
lamented. "There, you have libOne woman called the library
raries, colleges, the French Society, the German Society. You've asking why they were showing a
got a iot of these film events, ev- pornographic movie. "After I
erybody and his brother has a screened it, I realized that they
cinema somewhere, plus the in·- probably show more in '80s televidependent alternative trips that sion, as far as nudity Is connumber more than several. It's cerned, than they did in this '60s
film," De Lauro said. "The library
almost a sensory overload.
As for the future, De Lauro fore- administration has considered
sees that one Monday night each putting out a disclaimer with the
month time will be devoted to local film but then thought again, realizfilmmakers who want a forum for ing they probably would at1ract
more wierdos."
their work.
Is ths video Industry hurting the
But the entrepeneur has had
cinema?
problems.
.
Not according to De Lauro, who
"fn the two and a half years I've
been doing this I've talked to ab- drew an analogy: "You can alout half a dozen local filmmakers ways make dinner at home, but
and the response is always, people still go out to restaurants.'!
'Yeah, it's a great idea,' and then It's the same Idea with cinema and
they vanish Into thin air; you never home video, he says.
Besiqes the Sports Arena and
the Open Air Theater, there aren't
any decent concert venues in San
Diego, right?
Wrong.
Take a look around, because
slo~ly but surely San Diego is
shedding Its image as a concert
wasteland. In addition to the
aforementioned places, there's a
host of other smaller, yet still enjoyable, venues about town that
have concerts.
.
These places tend not to be in
the limelight as much, but often
they offer the only oppurtunlty to
see big name (and not so big
name) acts without the hassle of
sharing the experience with 4,000
of your closest friends.
Such a place Is Humphrey's.
Located on Shelter Island, Humphrey's has been quietly presenting an impressive series of summer concerts for a number of
years. But for an equal number of
years they have been grappling
with the Simple fact that not . Lewis and the Everly Brothers enough people know they are this year I want to do a IIttie more
there.
country music.
.
"We hold 1,000 people ana we
"BaSically I'm just trying to get .
sell out quite often, so we do names of people that are on their
almost as much business as the way up, or whose careers are not
Open AirTheater, but we don't yet cresting to the point where they
have the notoriety (of that. can play the Open Air Theater or
venue)," said Scott Pedersen, a the Sports Arena. I'm trying to get
Humphrey's spokesman.
names that are almost that big but
So in an effort to expand aware- not quite."
ness, .and attendance, HumHumphrey's also shares the
phrey's has been spending more distinction of being the only aleo. and more money on improve- hal and food serving venue that
ments to the facility. Over the last welcomes all ages. So that eli minthree years, they have upgraded ates the trouble of not being able
both the sound and lighting sys- to see your favorite group just betems. But the improvements don't cause you're not 21. And the outend there - Humphrey'S ha.s door setting on Shelter Island is
been slowly expanding Its re- the almost perfect compliment to
petoire of acts to include much both the music and the dining.
more than the usual jazz-fusion
The summer series begins May
fare it has become known for.
15 with Lee Ritenour and con"I've decided to expand the tinues through September with
series by doing some R&B and such acts as Larry Carlton, Grover
some pop and a little comedy this Washington Jr., B.B. I(ing, Donoyear," said Humphrey's spokes- van, the Dave Brubeck Quartet,
man Kenny Weissberg. "Last Emmylou Harris, Ricky Skaggs,
~ear we did more nostalgia acts the Four Tops, Ray Charles and
like Fats Domino and Jerry Lee Miles Davis.
286-6004
•-:-)_~-·~V
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AUCKLAND
ONUSI
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~ ItrdI.JdttJ sJtpoIt tranllf'1ls, 2 nIQhts accommodItfMs.wl a ~ dtIy cily au. J<ns eo NtwI ZMIIttd tbIt at $739.00
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§fJjJ.
STUD.N;·
RAVIA.
NnwolK
If you're waiting for a chance to break into advertis.ing o~ newspaper produ.ction, wait no longer. Get
experience now. The Dally Aztec has paid positions
.open for stUdents interested in advertising account
services, layout and paste up. If you're selfmotivated~ ent~u.siastic and don't mind making
mon~y while galnl~g valuable experience, drop by
and fill out an application before 5-1··87. For more
informatio~ contact Ty Kramer (advertising) at 265 ..
6977 or Gina Brazell (production) at 265-6975. We
can't wait to hear from you.
THE DAILY AZTEC APRIL 29, 1987- 9
s c
E
N
A
o
R
vinyl
. Well, ahem . . . We need to clear our throats and get In the
Scenario mode. It has baen a while, you know. Use it or iose it, as
they ~sed to say in the pre-AIDS days.
Let's start with tonight, shall we? Black poet Marl Evans will read
from her work at 7 in Montozuma Hall. In addition to being a poet,
Evans is a mUSician, writer, educator and activist who is the author of
the acclaimed I am a Black Woman. She will be reading from her
current collection of poems, Nightstar. The event is free.
In another free reading, black poet and children's author Lucille
Clifton will read from her work on Monday In the Council Chambers
In Aztec Center at 7:30 p.m. Clifton is the author of the Juniper
Prize-winning poetry collection Two Headed Woman and has aiso
won an Emmy.
If you'd rather see people move around more on stage, check out
SDSU's Choreographer's Ensemble production of 3Formst4
Dances, which Is a thesis concert by Cheryl Grabowski. The concert, on Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. In the Studio Theatre,
Women's Gym 208, explores cerebralism, primitivism and AmerIcana In four original works and will cost $3 for students and $5 for
everyone else.
OK, now let's get to the fun stuff (sorry, cerebrallsm was never·our
strong suit. Couid you guess?). The Fleshtones make a rare local
appearance tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. in Montezuma Hall. The
show Includes the Orange County surf-punks Agent Orange and
local heroes Manual Scan.
Monday night, Montezuma Hall will see the San Diego return of
the Stranglers. The band has been around for 12 years now and has
mellowed considerably since their controversy-laden early days, but
they always seem to produce something worthwhile. Opening the
show will be Vigil (who?). Don't be a stranger, OK?
The Cult
Beggars Banquet/Sire Records
****
"The new Cuit album's in," my
editor quietly sneaked behind me
and said. As my eyes lit up, he
added, "You did mention you
wanted it, didn't you," looking at
me a bit skeptically.
Yes, sitting here was the girl
who'd not oniy missed the rise of
Led Zeppelin In junior high (opting
instead for music of the classical
persuasion), but also that of ACt
DC in high school. And I called
myself a rock critic.
But I was determined not to let
this metal-mania pass me by
again. Especially when these
trends flash by so quickly, as only
a band such as the Cult can fully
understand.
Well, I took it home, slapped It
on my brother's killer new stereo
and, 10 and behold, with the help
of an 18-year-old head-banger
and a few LP's by Metaliica,
Motorhead, MDC and, of course,
Zep themselves, I could now begin to fathom the "might of metal."
And, if I must say, Love Removal Machine is a good introduction
to the what metal is all about. Ian
Astbury screams out "babys" that
would make Robert Plant proud.
Billy Duffy rips out guitar riffs that
would make Angus Young tremble. And it definitely needs to be
played on volume 10, as is the
case with the best metal (so I'm
told).
The rest of the album, with the
exception of a pretty terrible remake of Steppenwolf's "Born To
Be Wild," is basic enough metal
fare - simplistic lyrics, pulsating
bass-line and hot guitar licks - to
satiSfy that heavy metal icon Jim
Trageser.
It certainly must please Rick
Rubin, one of Def Jam's top men,
who coined the sound that catapulted the Beastie Boys to the top
of the charts. Rubin has scored on
his first straight shot at metal without the clever lyrics of hlp-hop.
•
The Cult, meanwhile, have
finally earned a spot on the top of
tho ~harts, which Is what they
have been vying for since they
first banded together as the
Southern Death Cult, nipping at
the heels, and hoping for the
appeal, of Bauhaus; then as the
De~th Cult, hoping to cash In on
the newly found coolness of Jim
Morrison; then as just the Cult,
who sounded like the new Journey for the '80s.
What if the Cult members eV9r
relied on their own Ingenuity to
create a new sound? We must not
think bad thoughts ...
- Leic,h Andrews
TItA VEL SEMINAR
For
The Independent Traveller
On A Budget
Presented by
BERNARD STRIEFi
CTC
SDSU Campus Travel Advisor
April 291h
5 pm
FEATURING
How To Select The Best Air Fare,
European Rail Pass, Youth Hotels
Work Abroad, Cultural Tips and
Much More
REGISTRATION A MUST
AZTEC CENTER
INFORMATION
BOOTH
....
_ --_
.~/SDSiJ
..............
...-_.
MAY 1 & 2, 1987 • 6:00 PM - MID·NIGHT
•
P~EP CLASSES
AT YOUR
CAMPUS •
Aztec Center, San Diego State University
Great entertainment presented by the A.S. Cultural Arts Board
Enjoy game booths, Laser Maze, "Dating Game,"
drawings for big prizes
•
•
•
•
•
•
TASTE OF STATE FOOD COMPETITION
20 popular, local
restaurants competing
6:00-10:00 PM each'night
Tickets:
- Vote for your favorites
along with celebrity judges
For more inrormation, call 265·6947
Free parking
'5.00 SDSU studenls/tS.OO general public
•
•
•
•
•
•
Be at the
PRE-SPRING FIESTA PARTY
• • • •
NIGKf MOVES 5K
FUNKUN
Friday. May I. 7:00 PM
For more Informal ion
call. 265·6424
Friday, May 1, Noon to 5 PM at Monty's Den/Henry's Place
For more Information on the Unforgettable Fun of Spring Fle.ta '87, call21J5.6551
1[4:
ororonn
Exh'Q.
PROCEEDS GO TO BENEFiT CAMP
San Diego State. University
01 Extended Studleg
Colleg~
• • • •
Authors of Best·Selling Textbooks
ENJOY TIlE SPRING
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10 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
vinyl
Come As Ypu Are
Peter Wolf
EMI America Records
***
It has tl'iken nearly three years,
but Peter Wolf has finally released
a follow-up to his fine first 5010
outing, Lights Out. Unfortunately,
it can't be said that the wait has
been worth it.
Although the new LP does
show a semblance of musical expansion from the Wolfman, Come
As You Are more often sounds a
bit labored, as if Wolf spent the
interim trying to develop some
new ideas, only to come up uninspired. The result is not all that
diHerent from his work with the J.
Gails Band. Some might say it's a
bit of a step backward
The problem stems from having
to expand from the ground he laid
with Lights Out. On that album,
Wolf and collaborator Michael
Jonzun took elements of hip-hop,
rap and urban soul and fashioned
them into an appealing piece of
dance-funk.
On the new LP, Wolf maintains
his rhythm and blues base, but
instead of expanding on the direction established with Lights Out,
the album 'retreads familiar territory not unlike latter-day J. Gells
Band. Wolf and Jonzun only team
up on "Mama Said," which may
explain the lack of musical dare.
But the album does have its
strong points.
"Can't Get Started" kicks off the
album, and it's an example of Peter Wolf doing what he does
best- a break-neck r & b dance
number punctuated by Wolf's gritty vocals and a snappy horn line. II
is straight-ahead, no-frills barbusting rock. And it's also a fairly
safe maneuver.
"Flame of Love" e.nd "Love Me
All Night" are soulful dance tunes
and the manic "Thick as Thieves"
harps back to "Rage in the Cage"
from Freeze Frame. But beyond
the imtial appeal of these songs,
one gets the sense that Wolf
either has run out of new ideas or
has lost his sense of adventure.
Yet, Wolf is able to overcome
the stagnation with the sheer
panache of his performance, as
evinced in the title 50ng. "Come
As You Are" is one of those irresistible, joyously happy songs. And
despite the tired imagery of bees,
the moon and bluebirds, Wolf's
enthusiastic vocals propel the
song along its hoppity-hop
rhythm.
In fact, in the video Wolf
bounces around like a marionnette gone crazy through Small
Town, U.S.A. It's a charming bit of
mumbo-jumbo that leaves the
viewer exhausted just by watching. 11'5 too bad the rest of Come
As You Are doesn't make the
same impression.
- Inigo Figuracion
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SPORTS
THE DAIL Y AZTEC
APRIL 29, 1987 -
11
Il;ijtters· advance After only a day's rest
ttb·:,finals.o·fWAC
Aztec
batsmen
on
road
;,by,;t(tlrev"
Pearlman
';PO!Jy ~C;lIportJl6'riter
by Dcn Patterson
Daily Aztec sports editor
):AJ,.BUQUERQUE, N.M.-Just.mlnutes before the San Diego State
;.~tl,~~.~n~!lterun~eat New Mexico on its home court 6-3 Tuesday
'~()I1l~g In. the semifinals of the WestemAthletie Conference chamipi~~~~ips.'l"obOs player Steve Bickham sat propped against the wall of the
'furun~bUlldirijf:at\he Lobo tennis club )ookingcornpletcly drained.
·'\;Blc!d1~~;half.?fthe.Lobos' No.2 doubles team~t hadju5t lost to
::SDS:U~sJulio NOriega and Leland Rollins, called .out to teammate Jack
iOrll'fut,"i:ley,man, doh't worry 'about me, just keep going and win for
. ;'..";- :",'
.. ':'.".", ", "'>
.'
i . '
.
",'
....
",'._
~~ftdi~;{lit~t~~''wh~ilicr,Prlffin, w~o pl~yed Nod doubles 'with Kilri
.:.ltaleiWoli'.9r'itot ~use,with Noriega lind Rolling's victory j SOSo. had
·,·~i'¢'adfWrti~}iplbe. J,llatch. Itwas New'Me#co's
!)it(.icistseven>,yem;,
,
t)rs,t hanudoss. in
./,<
:,~\<~~~l~~gti,i\t~~;l~ltd R~llin~~tNo~ ~~.~~ give.Il.~!?S~h.Qlfofi~ singles,
j:"Jctori¢s.,~otiega:~atGnffm 7~5f ~4 and RoUmgdefeated.fronk Jaeger
:'~~<j;;~~"/\:\>:~;':::J>:'.·i<
,
/'.;,;'
<
'.
<
"
, / ' : ' "
. . . •'\:;';<::,:
, ... ':.,:
"'«,:, /'.'
:!?~t 1\tNo>3'bea~H~le. 6-2,6-3:rindO()~}fyotrilg atN,'6. ,s'beat:
"dcW;S·:6f2. r
.............. " ; ; ' . " > , { " , ' " '.'
up defeotfngCQStand ~Youlig~t
~agli/Gfiffilt~nd Hale',. 'ended
':doubles+i;/ 6,,~ i,?'"6;,they 'weretbclone' Lobo,'doubles teum~to win: .'
i;6~fNoi3doublesAZt~s' RiissellMyers and PaulB8ileyte~ up for a
(~~;§i2,6-3viFiory.:.);:"<'.' ,;;}i:,~.}":~':' :<,' . ' .',
Yi'~:'11:lis;Wl1sa':wliole·teatrietfort."Aztec:coochSldp Redondo said;
\~YE.XerYb&ty'Aidit:"',::·
. : . , : " . < . " , : '.
;:>[~$.p'~Ul~ aSl;is~ntc(laches Jerry,(;OOpei and IlUlSmitllWefe alsO: Satis.
died;:Withthe·wfutc,:..·.. ' . . ' , ' '. .' ". . '
glild)ie,ba~ a,toughmatch/' Coopersaid; .HGohlgirit()the finals
;(ageihst.,Utahtoday, at2 p.rn:) the guys have gotten all pumped'up. l'rrf
of these guys.. . .
.
. .
.Redondo., who has seen Utah win the WAC seven out of the last eight
y~~,feelshis just reward wili coine against the Utes this afternoon.
::'\'All of ushllveput our hearts and souls into this since day one, .. he
'~iiid,;;"~~'ve worked ~4)bard.l've paid my dues~ and now. it's time for a
}~ig:up$et Our reward iscoming, thisis it. ' . .
...' " .
;f:r;;':':Jhi~ isol!l!of my best'team~; I'vehad sonle really good teams in the
)ast;but I~mconfident. I hope 00<1 heard all of this." , " ~
;;;it{;!1l,
.reflllr proqd
Nationals doubtful
after women. lose
San Diego State's women's tennis
team was virtually eliminated from
all possibility of going to NCAA
Nationals Tuesday afternoon in
Westwood, losing to UCLA 6-3. The
Aztecs split singles play with the
Bruins hut were defeated in all three
doubles matches.
SDSU (l0-!3) needed a win last
Wednesday over BYU or a victory
Tuesday over UCLA (21-5) to attain
a berth at Nationals. The Aztecs,
who have made 10 straight NCAA
Tournament appearances, still have
an outside chance of qualifying by
winning the PCAA Tournament,
which will be held at UCLA May
14~17 .
SDSU's top player, Monique Javer, returned to action against the
Bruins after missing the last two
matches for health reasons, She defeated Jane Thomas at No. 1 singles
6-3, 6-2.
Other Aztec singles victories came
from Dana Bleicher (No.3), who
defeated Allyson Cooper 4-6, 7-5,
6-2 and Kristin Hill (No.6), who
defeated Wendy Ouwendijk 6-3, 6-
4.
Douhles, the Aztecs' Waterloo,
saw SDSU surrender set points in
No. 1 doubles and No.3 doubles.
Cooper and Jane Thomas defeated
Hill and Jessica Buss 4-6.7-5,6-3 at
No. I. Joni Urban and Jennifer Fuchs
defeated Anne Moeller and S.ondra
Mitchell 6-4, 6-1 (No.2). Catherine
O'Meara and Maria LaFranchi defeated Javer and Kelly Rapp 6-7, 7-5,
6-4 (No.3).
-Don Patterson
Daily Aztec plloto by )011,. Maba,.glo
ISLAND BALL-SDSU's Steve Montejano (top) makes a tag while
James Campbell (bottom) delivers a ball to the plate during Sunday's loss to Hawaii at Honolulu. Today the Aztecs take on WyomIng at Laramie.
Sunday is the traditional day of
rest, but this week San Diego State's
baseball team worked Sunday and
rested Monday.
The Aztecs (27-24. 8-8 WAC) lost
to Hawaii 13-6 at Honolulu SUI'day,
giving the Rainbows a four-ghme
sweep, and returned home at 6 a.m.
Monday. Tuesday at 7 a. m., the team
boarded a plane for Laramie, Wyo.
where the Aztecs will play four
games with Wyoming (23-17, 8-8
WAC) today and Thursday. The
series will likely detennine SDSU's
chances to qualify for the Western
Athletic Conference Playoffs.
SDSU will have some of its hitting
strength back in Laramie. Nikco
Riesgo and Curt Lewis, the Aztecs'
second and third leading hitters who
missed the Hawaii trip to catch up on
school work, were on the team flight
Tuesday morning. Also back is
pitcher Greg Page, who didn't go to
Hawaii because of a sore arm.
Meanwhile, Wyoming has gotten
productivity at the plate this season
from tirst baseman Mike Mulvaney
(.425) and second baseman Craig
Maki (.402). Ron Downs (6-4. 4.63
ERA) has been the Cowboys' top
5tarter with Jim Walter (1-0, 3.13)
showing effectiveness in relief.
Wyoming had not had anybody
sidelined with injuries until last week
when starting pitcher Randy Hayes
(2-2) broke his leg in a motorcycle
accident and was lost for the season.
Hayes was the Cowboys' lone lefthanded starter.
SDSU appears to be healthy forthe
first time this year. Shortstop Steve
Montejano missed most of the beginning of the season with art arm injury
but started all four games in Hawaii,
though his fielding is not yet up to the
standards that prompted Hawaii
coach Les Murakami to call him the
best shortstop in the league barring
none.
BASEBALL NOTES-Wyoming had similar results with Hawaii
on the Islands to the Aztecs. dropping a four-game series ." Parry,
who was the Aztecs' hottest hitter in
Hawaii as he has been all season. had
swelling in both knees because of the
Astroturf in Rainbow Stadium but
was healthy enough to play all four
games". SDSU has Thursday and
Friday off before traveling to Fort
Collins, Colo. for a four-game ~eries
with Colorado State.
Aztec autographs available at Smith Field
HONOLULU-Maybe it was indicative
of what was to come when the photographer
I was traveling with showed his camera to a
small hoy, about 2 years old, at the Los
Angeles Airport Thursday, The boy took
the camera and put it up to his car.
Despite repeated efforts by the photographer and the boy's mother to get him to
look through the viewfinder, he continued
to press it against the side of his head like a
baseball fan trying to pick up a game on a
distant radio station. Things just weren't
right on this trip from the beginning.
A flight and hotel cancelation preceded
our eventual arrival on the Islands Friday.
Then, the Aztecs lost four straight to the
Rainbows, delighting fans on Oahu and
sending SDSU home with :mother 0 for
Hawaii trip,
But all was not lost. The trip was a learning experience. Whether Hawaii is winning, which is often, or losing, which is
rare, Rainbow fans fill all or the majority of
the 4,312 seats in Rainbow Stadium. After
the final out of the games are recorded,
children make their way down the cement
steps of the stadium with a slightly glazed
look of expectation and admiration in their
eyes and a pen drawn, ready for use.
"Excuse me, Mr. Owens?" said one
small fan to Hawaii's third baseman Markus
Owens after Sunday's game in which
Owens had hit a home run. "Can I have
your autograph'!"
Owens, like all Hawaii's players, graciously obliges the requests, Rainbow
games are the subject of extensive exposure. They're televised, broadcast on the
radio, and talked about by cab drivers. hotel
clerks and workers at McDonalds. On game
days people refer to Rainbow baseball
games as simply "The game."
Rainbow coach Les Murakami has
brought interest in the baseball program
spreading from the pineapple fields, known
as the "boonies" by Oahu locals, to the
town of Waikiki, where high school graduates from the mainland have flocked for
years to celebrate with Mai Tais, Wahines
and song.
When Murakami was hired in 1971,
baseball was a c1uh sport at Hawaii, played
on a field with its fair share of weeds, Now,
his team plays in Rainbow Stadium, a brand
new facility that looks like a scaled down
version of Jack Murphy Stadium with
Astroturf.
In general, things arc quite diff~ent from
Smith Field here at San Diego State. When
Rainbow games conclude, Murakami retires to his air conditioned office, cracks a
light beer and talks wilh members of the
Hawaii media. Aztec coach Jim Dietz can
usually be found raking Ihe dirt on the
mound after SDSU's games, and media
attention, except for special occasions, is
sparse.
If there is one spot where SDSU outdoes
Hawaii, it's Ragger's Rail. Rainbow fans
enjoy ribbing players from opposing teams,
but it rarely compares with things that can
be heard on the rail. Murakami, who l"bels
inhabitants of Ragger's Rail with the dubious distinction of being the crudest baseball fans he's seen anywhere in the '.'lation,
said the Aztecs arc much tougher at home
than on the road.
. 'They gel so much help at home by the
rail," he said. "I wouldn't bring my wife or
any woman oul there."
Like them or hate them, though, Rail
raggers arc among the few SDSU fans who
support Aztec baseball with the consistent
enthusiasm shown by nearly all Rainbow
fans, Hawaii's isolated location is one obvious reason for its boosted attendance. But
just once it would be nice to see an autograph seeker at Smilh Field.
12 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
ALL
Awalt is the first Aztec
taken in the NFL draft
\
by Don Patterson
Daily Aztu sports tdilor
San Diego State tight end Robert
Awalt became the first Aztec
selected in the Tuesday's NFL draft
when the St. Louis Cardinals made
him the 62nd overall pick in the third
round.
Awalt was the second tight end
selected in the draft following Rod
Bernstine from Texas A&M, who
was selected by the Chargers in the
first round.
Awalt's high draft position was no
surprise as he was considered
throughout football season as the
most likely candidate to be an NFL
caliber player as w,,11 as one of the
top athletes on the team. He earned
third-team Associlltcd Press AIIAmerican honors and waf, selected to
play in the Shrine Game at Stanford.
His physical strength statistics show
why he hR~ been heralded - he
bench presses 395 pounds. he runs a
4.67 40-yard dash and he stands 6foot-5 and weighs 240 pounds.
His accomplishments during the
season were also impressive. Awalt
caught 45 passes, two for touchdowns and averaged 12 yards a reception.
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Awalt played for Sacramento City
College's JC National Championship
team in 1984 before transferring to
SDSU in 1985. He caught 15 passes
in '85.
S!. Louis picked two other Western Athletic Conference players in
the first three rounds, selecting Colorado State's Kelly Stouffer, the
draft's sixth overall pick, in the first
round and Hawaii's Colin Scotts
(70th) in the third round.
BYU's Shawn Knight (lith) and
Jason Buck (17th) were also first
round selections, taken by New
Orleans and Cincinnati respectively.
DRAFT EXTRAS-As of 10
p.m. Tuesday, after 10 rounds, no
other Aztecs had been selected besides Awalt. Aztec safety Steve Lauter, linebackers Richard Brown and
Randy Kirk, offensive guard Doug
Aronson, defensive tackle Levi
Esene and running backs Chris Haray and Corey Gilmore were all candidates for possible selection.
Daily Aztec photo by John Mabar.glo
FIRST PICK-SDSU's Robert Awalt drags UCLA's Craig Rutledge
Into the endzone during a game Isst seaecn. Awalt was the first
Aztec player selected In yesterday's draft.
1987 Spring fiesta's Taste of State
6:00· t 0:00 pm May t and 2, .981
The food bargain of the centuryl
Buy your taste of
state ticket at the
Aztec Center Ticket
Office or at the
campu lab lawn
table. Don't miss outl
Where else can you
try food from twenty count 'em, twenty different restaurants
for a total cost of
$5.007
$5.00 for'SDSU Students
$8.00 for anyone else
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" ' - - - - - -_ _ _,J
THE DAILY AZTEC APRIL 29, 1987 - 13
~~~m.IHnl~RDE~.N~ml;~~!~I[E!::Z:::EX!~~
CLASSIFIEDS
7
(ontlnued from pIKe 5.
BALLOON DECORATORS NEEDED CALL 5631006 OR APPLY AT BALLooNATIKS 4478 I'.!
30th S1.
(28132)
Needed Immediately::
Phone Pros
as well as Beginners
lor our Solena Beach Ofiice
Convenlont Location
Excellent Worl<lng Conditions
"plus nexlble schedules
for all studenl$.'
No SBlllng, $4l!Olhr. guaran'eed
plus dBily & weekly bonuses
FuREIGN STUDENTS
Get a job beforE ;'ou
graduate & stay In US under
new law. Send 519.95 f!lr this
step·by·step guide. Young
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2 FEMALES WANTED FOR 2 Br 2 Ba CONDO 1 I'.!
MILES FROM SCHOOL AVAIL Aug 1 or May 1
(opllonal). Call Christine 265·1700
(29472)
Experienced Salesgirls wonted for womon's boutl.
que. Hardworking and vivacious personality. Summer openings only. Serious applicatslnulre at 2132
Avenlda De La Playa or con~act Kim at 456.
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bdrm starts @ $495. 3 bdrm starts @
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w/garage.·
Home away from home for this summor. Wosherl
dryer, pool~aculZl, 5 min. to Stato. $150 sharel
$300 own room avail. 6-1 to 8·31. Call now Lisa or
Bridget 287·2512
(26150)
LG. CPTD. 1 ADRM ACROSS FROM CAMPUS
6151 MONTEZUMA 265·7637
(26106)
2 BDRMS AVAIL IN FULLY FURN LARGE
HOUSE 2 BLKS FROM SDSU SUNDECK
WASHER/DRYER & MICRO INCLUDED MUST
SEE CALL JILL 582-3282
(26157)
2 BDRMS AVAIL IN FULLY FURN LARGE
HOUSE 2 BLKS FROM SOSU SUNDECK
WASHER/DRYER & MICRO INCLUDED MUST
SEE CALL JtLL 582·3282
(26157)
Cheerful 1 Bodroom Apt. Close to CBmpu~. 5419.
$100 Bonusl Pool, loundry, assigned parking. 4333
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* Spring 5peclah*
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Should overage $8-$12 hour
Call 755-8257
FEMALE ROOMMATES WANTED
JUNE· AUGUST
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FULLY FURNISHED TWO STORY APARTMENT
OWN ROOM $208ISHARE ROOM $178
CALL EVENINGS 464·5418
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F RMMT NEEDED MAY 1. Sunrise
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000000000000000000000
Monday May 4
1051 UNIVERSITY· HILLCREST· 295-2195.
~~~~~~~~------------'--
8:00 Pm - Montezuma Hall
THE STRANGL.ERS
This week May 1 & 2
MIARI
Wednesday
College Rock Night
$1 00 Off Any & All Drinks
(With School 1.0.)
from 9-12
For more infor.malion call Rockit Talent Agency 619· 588·ROCK
Vigil
$10 SDSU, $12.50 Public,
$1 more the night of the show
000000000000000000000
Coming Soon!
Dream Syndicate
Mojo Nixon
The Downsiders
Tickets available at Tlcketmaster
and the Aztec Center Ticket Office
14 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
CLASSIFIEDS
Continued from pal!e 13.
----------
M RMMT WANTED 2 SHARE RM 5150IMONTH
5 MIN WALK 2 SDSU POOL PARKING CLEAN
KEEP TRYING FOR BILL AT 265-2846 (29481)
TALK YOUR WA Y TO THE TOP!
Increase your vocabulary. business acumen. and self-esteem
aHln the privacy of your own home. or while drlvlng. flying or
even Jogging! This unique cassette tape series combines
motivational and professional reflections with a fantQstlc
vocabulary building program. The specially selected
vocabulary words include spelling. definitions. synonyms
and examples of correct usage.
Climb the ladder of success that leads not only to professional
growth but to Improved relationships. health and well-being.
Complele money-back guaranI . . , ff you are nol complele¥ satisfied. relurn
lhe lopes In lhelr orignol condrtion within 10 days rnd your money wil be
cheerfulf,t refunded,
Orderbolh PowerWordl Par! I and Part 1I(12Couetle Topes)
and receive FREE, a BONUS TAPE on EFFECTNE COMMUNICATION.
POWER WORDS PART I (6 casseNe lopes) 539.95
POWER WORDS PART 11(6 casseNe lopes) 539.95
POWERWORDSPAflT I & II
$69.95 (Include. Banua Tape)
Colfforoo Residenls odd 6% soles ICDC.
Postage and Hrndling
5 250
o
o
o
Pay by check or money order.
WORDS ARE POWERI • P.O. Box 2642 • Villa. CA 92083
LooKIN FOA FM TO SHARE ROOM 4 SUMMER.
113 UTILITIES & 5200 A MONTH. POOL. JACUZZI. WASHER & DRYER & MORE. COLLWooD
MEADOWS. 26S-ll701
(261171
••••••••••
••••••••••
3 bdrm house 4 Gummer subleHlng on campus
comer 01 Lindo Paseo and 55th. Individual renting
up to 5 people. Available June 1st - call 5822537
(26113)
ROOM FOR RENT IN 2 BDRM HOUSE WITH
WASHER. DRYER. FENCED YARD. FEMALE
NON· SMOKER PREFERRED. $200 & 113 UTILITIES. 10 MIN. FROM SDSU. 283-7935 (29494)
CRAFTS
FAIR
Alow 4 10 6 weeks for delivery.
April 28 - May 1
. Campus Lab Lawn
NAME _____________________________________
_____________________________________
ALBERT'S
COLLEGE APTS.
Is the Trip to School,
the Traffic, and the
Parking getting to be
a Hassle????
How would you like
to live a 5 minute
walk from campus?
2 FEM NONSMK 25·40 TO SHR 3 BDRM HOUSE.
1 BA. FRPL. GARAGE. LNDRY $3ooIMO & UTIL
582-2915
(26072)
FUN M/F ROOMIES NEEDED NOW OWN RM &
BATH IN LUX APT8 MILES 2 SDSU. PooL,JAC,
TENNIS, RQTBL & MOREl $347IMO 576·8170 Iv
messagel
1260761
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED N/S PREF own
room bath $310 & $134 dep lownhou!l8 wi own
backyd. flroplnce. corfY.lrt, pool, tennis ct. 10 min 10
campus AVAILABLE 5-22. 571-ll758
1261151
M RMMT 2!:1RM OWN RM 2MI SDSU S267 mo &
dep Avail. now 466-1536. 541-1604 Brat or 4445185 DenisA
(26125)
M/F n/smkr own room 4Bdrm 28th Home LlI Masa.
All greal roomlos. $300 & d&p 484-8'129 (26100)
M1F ROOMMATE WANTED: OWN ROOM $285
MASTER BDAM WI BATH $325/MO 3 BDAM
HOUSE 287-9072
(26101)
M1F RMMT. NEEDED: TO SHARE A FURN., 2BR.I
2BA. 7 MIN. TO SDSU, POOL, LAUNDRY.
$312.50 PER MO. & DEP .. UTILITIES NOT INCLUDED. MUST BE INDEPENDENT AND RELI".BLE. AVAILABLE MAY 1. 583-8592
(26119)
Extra large apts., oversIzed
closets & built-in Electric Appliam:es. Four buildings, each
with pool anri Idry. facilities and
off street PKG. Choose frorri Furnished and Unfurnished studios:me, two and three bedrooms. Located one block from campus.
:(NNr Peterson's Gym)
Don't Hesitate!!!
CALL NOW
ALBERT'S COLLEGE
APTS.
5460 55 th St.
SUMMER
ADDRE~,
583-7402
~--~EMPLOYMENT~~~
CITY___________STATE ____ZIP___________
Words effeclively used ere lhe mogic carpel on which we
STUDENTS
F ROOMMATE NEEDED TO SHARE ROOM IN
COLLWOOD MEADOWS CONDO 240/40 287·
0347
(29493)
OPPORTUNITIES
nv 10 success,' (!ill)
This may be the most Important move you'll ever makel
Hope Chest Consultations
LASERIUM
$1000
per month to start
PRESENTS
ROOMMATE WANTED OWN ROOM $250 per rna
/I $125 Dap. For more Inlo call 698-5744(26073)
SUBLET FOR SUMMER $360 APT & UTILITIES. 2
BLKS FROM SDSU. QUIET PERSON CALL 265·
8884
(29491)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
A NEED FOR A TYPIST? Roasonable--Speedy-Accurate. Kalhla 576·1277 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.(9617)
Complete training program
Full company benefits
Paid vacations • Flexible hours
Full time career positions available
ALPHA 1-2-3. Thesis, ms .• diss .• report, granlediling. 1yped or laser prlnled. Exp. English leacherl
writer. "uto';ng. JANE HANSEN. 6987635
(11471\
ACADEMIC TYPING/WORD PROCESSING,
THESES. RESUMES. PAPERS, ETC. SHARON.
448·6826
(88888)
AM TYPIST WILL TYPE YOUR PAPER FAST
AND ACCURATELY. $lIPG. DBLE SP. FRAN:
569·7715
(68686)
Rogers Co.
3288 EI Cajon Blvd. #2
San Diego, CA 92'104
j
AT THE REUBEN H. FLEET SPACE THEATER
AND SCIENCE CENTER e BALBOA PARK
238-1168
Also Still Showing:
"Utes Out Laserium"
20% Off Regular Admission With Student 1.0.
Tues-Wed-Thurs
Noon to 4:00 pm
No Phone Calls
BEST WORD PROCfTVPING. Theses, Resumes.
Papers. Transcription. Lorraine 421-9426 (88888)
Earn $40 Man/Women having diarrhea call Heal1h
Services 265-5261 or walk In
(17154)
Sleep resBarch provIde.
Insomnl. treatment.
#not door to door
No
Join the Arnold Air Society
and Nestles at our Spring
Fiesta game booth.
COllt.
Difficulty failing uleep?
Age1~? cln Je.nnle
Buchanln, Doctoral Itudent, at
530-05S5 Qr 530-4433
#not books or knives
LASER PRINTED RESUMES. Unbelievable quali-
ty. Fast. Groat rp.los. Call 565-4342 PM (26142)
Nestle~
Oui/<·
~
¢:
CHOCOLATE
MIUC
MS TYPEWRITER SERETARIAL FOR ALL TYPING. COPYING. WORD PROCESSING NEEDS
CALL 578·2011
(BS688)
A+ TYPIN~
•
spnng
Word Processing
Papers, Theses, etc ...
Fast, Reasonable
near SDSU, 287~3199
WOAD PROCESSINGfTVPING ONLY $1.75 PER
OS PAGE FASTI GREAT WORKI BY SDSU 5624214
(28121)
~~..o-"..rOOOOOCOOi
§.Love Your Nails! M
8
Full Set '12 Off
irst
Time ,CUt:3to, Iners
Only. Ask For Betty
461-1522
t
.
Frisbee Toss
May 1 and 2, 1981
6:00 pm - Midnight
7400 EI Cajon Blvd 201
~~~JOOCC~coooa
Local pilot/attorney looking for
weekend riders to share airplane
rental costs. Lor-al 1·2 Hr trips
over SDSU, coast, mountains
& desert. $10-20 per person. Calli
JOHN at 278-2238
J
Please _ CLASSlt'IEDS on
£I~gt'
15_
THE DAILY AZTEC APRIL 29, 1987 -
15
CLASSIFIEDS
Continued rrom pORe 14
All typing, word proc., reports,
legal, resumes, etc.
evening I same day avail.
PERSONALS
EXPRESS'
SECRET ARIAL
AX AI' AX AI' AX AI' AX AI'
CONGRATULATIONS'
DAVID CARROLL·
CREWMAN!
AX .11' AX .11' AX .11' AX .11'
,23j-9m I 482-0682
.11'
---
AI'
(26097)
Savo for the Summer· Bikini Line Waxing: 2 Ses.
sions for $20. Reg. $20. Reg. $15 09. Tho Total
Look, Mission Valley Shopping Ctr. 291·6767. Fa.
clols, make·up lossons, color anolysls also avail.
able.
(88888)
TYPING WORD PROCESSING TERM PAPERS
RESLIMES. LASER & LET fER QUALITY 283·
3500
(88888)
AI'
(26135)
PROTECT YOURSELF!
CONDOMS
by mall
22.2-~278
special Inlroduclory offer
Nationally Known Brand
PROT EX
30 (or $9.95
spermicidal' lubricated
super thin' textured
Complete Product Line Listing
Available Upon Request
Discount Prices Discreet Packaging
0% of net profits donated to AIDS research
AI<I> Crewmon Eric Solvo, Beautllul Eyes
Paul Booton, Houso Rop Rick Phillips
Volleyboll toam, swimmers, syncro toam Chili
Sauce and tho rost of tho Dolta Forco!
Anchor Splash is here
Lot's celebrate it with beer
We'll show tho rest wh~'s '" 1
And whilo we do wo'li havo some fun
So get PSYCHED, You Know wo'ro cool
Wo'li show them how It's done in and out
of tha pool.
Your coaches are ready, lot's do our best
And Saturday wo'li be victorious above
oil the rest!
GOOD LUCK • YOUR AI' COACHES
(26147)
When IOU nan out 0' time, Coll Ill.
8:DDam 9:30pm
7 DayllNightlllloUdays
By 19,ppointment Only
TYPING, WORD PROCESSING, transcribing,
4584 68th St., Collego Sec. 466·0616, 460·
64 t 1
(88888)
462·0187
..J
RoundtrIp
fROM
,
LONOON ..... " SoI28 ZURiCH ........
PAAIS •. , '.' •.. ,
COPENHAGEN
FRANKFUAT ... $610 AOME .....• ,."
lMSTEADAM . ' 'sea . ATHl:NS, .... , ,
'514'
T.E.E. TRAVEL
'6;2
ie.4;
'694
's44
287·1162
Study Patients Needed
• New medication study
• Receive up to $450
• 3·9 months duration
• FDA approved
• Board certified physicians provide treat·
ment at no Charge to you.
If you are on regular medicatton for asthma and
would like to be part of a study to find a
more effective treatment cal1:
271 .. 1690
.GARRY 0 HAUN IV. My dear U R tho bost!
Congrats on promot. Computer brain U R spoiled to
chooso own hrs. ·days. Include mo in your prog.?
= I won't complain .VL.
(26112)
\7 Ar\7FIJI\7 .11'\7
GOOD LUCK IN ANCHOR SPLIISH
WE LOVE YOU, \7YOUR COACHES
(26152)
TYPING TYPING·ALL KINDS·HI QUALITY·
REAS. PRICE·EDTG. NEAR SDSU, MSCOLLINS
286·2863
(11034)
r Typing Emergencies
YOII COULD BE IN ANOTHER CLUB, fiND
MAYBE GRIIB A PEEK AT IT.
OR PERHAPS YOU COULD WATCH IT OVER
THE WALL. OR YOU COULD BE THE ONE
THAT'S HAVING ALL THE FUN, THE SELECT
FEW.
(26096)
WI SDSU STUDENTS. LUANNE ADMIRE 5~·
6858
TRAVEL
AI'
HE LUAU 87
AX AI' AX AI' AX .11' .1X AI' AX
CONGRATULATIONS!
ERIC CHAPPELlt
MOST BEAUTIFUL EYES'
AX AI' AX AI' AX AI' AX .11' AX
TYPING I FASTI CHEAPI6 YEARS EXPERIENCE
take a brook today
como vls,l your coaches at
THE PEPSI BOOTH'
AX AI' AX .11' AX .11' AX .11' .1 X
9GARRY 0 HAUN IV. My dear U R the bost!
Cangrats on promot. Computer brain U R spoiled to
chooso own hrs. -days. Include mo in your prog.?
I won't complain 9VL.
(26112)
=
MICHELLE LAWSON, MY LOVE FOR YOU HAS
MANY BRANCHES. HAPPY, SAD, SILLY, MAD,
INTERESTING, AND GLAD. THE BEST PART IS
KNOWING THIS TREE WILL LIVE FOREVER!
P.S. JACK SAYS HI TO JILL.
.ANDY
(26149)
INSOMNIA?
Ag'3 18·60? Participate in
confidential research study,
Treatment at no cost.
Call Juannie Buchanen,
lloc10ral student at Cal
Schoo: of Professloroal
Psychol09Y, @ 743-4433
TYPING: TERM PAPERS, RESUMES, COVER
LEITERS. IBM 85 PAT BURTON 206·
(88888)
2927
fif~OME
RNDY
286 - 1455
4773 HOME AVENUE
(3 MI SW of SO STATE)
1 - 8xlO
SONJA MATHEWS, WHERE R U? MEET ME 'AT
INFO BOOTH MWF AT 3PM. DOES CHRISUCSB
RINGBELL
(26093)
2 - 5x7
8 - wallets
TUTOR·MATH, STAT, PHYS (20 yrs experience).
Call 287·9070 (leave message)
(11423)
EI Calon Blvd, at 63rd
1 M,le south of SDSU
SDSU STUDENTS 53.00 ANYTIME!
POUCE ACADEMY 4 (PG)
(12:15)' 4:15' 8:05' 12:00
THAEE AMIGOS (PG)
2:00 . '6:00 . 9:45
TORAG~
Don't Tote!
Store it for the summer.
Lockers $1 Q/month
15 larger size units
RED HOT FANTASY NUMBERS: For Women call
976·6367 $1.75. For Man call 976·5969 or 976·
(15687)
2040 $2.00. Groat for Jokes or partyl
3
AAJSTOCATS (G)
(12:30)' 2:15' 3:45' '5:31)' 7:00
Separate Admission Required
BUAGLAA (A)
8:30' 10:20' 12:00
2
TIN MEN (A)
3:00' 7:15 -12:00
OUTAAGEOUS FOATUNE (A)
(1:00)' '5:15' 9:30
01
THE COLOA OF MONEY (A)
(1:00)' '5:10 '9:15
MONA LISA (AI
3:15' 7:30 '12:00
(NOON)SHOWS SAT'iSUN
MIDNITE SHOWS
"MILITE SHOWS S1.9S ~iUN·THURS
$2.00 ALL DAY
Featuring
Cypress Gardens
::n
o
eP¥0\PO
:I:
o
CJ)
Sun Solutions Lotion ..
463-6969
M-F: 9 am • 6 pm
Sat.: 7 am - 4 pm
<
• The convenience of one
single visit on campus
• No gimmicks or high
pressure sales
• Bring this ad for S21K1 off
While drc.~s .~hin rcquircd I()f mCII
Checks Of Cilsh ONL Y
16 - APRIL 29, 1987 THE DAILY AZTEC
~: ~: :, :~ : ':m "': ': 1 Own
SAN
DIEGO
Air
STATE
UNIVERSITY
PHYLLIS
HYMAN
AND TIff
JAZZ
EXPLOSI N
'AM
cJ~
AL
PAT
OAVI
METHENY
SANBORN
JARREAU RAMSihffNlS
STANLEY
ONSALEJ
FRIDAY
TURRENTINE
FR/~~
8PM
TUESDAY
AUGUST
AUGUST
JEAN CARNE
25
HOWARD JONES
WITH SPECIAL GUEST
7PM
FROZEN
SATURDAY
MAY
KENNY ROGERS
RONNIE MILSAP
T. GRAHAM BROWN
ANDY TAYLOR
16
WITH SPECIAL GUESTS
AND
PSYCHEDELIC FURS
WITH SPECIAL GUEST
5PM & 9PM
MONDAY
MAY
25
BPM
FRIDAY
MAY
22
GEORGE BENSON
WITH SPECIAL GUEST
KENNY G
AS/SDSU
'i7CK4iP~~ at May Co .. Mad Jack·s. Civic Box Office. Perkins Book Worm. Arts Tix and Aztec Box Office. To chargo by phone call (619) 278- T/XS. Produced for
S.O S. U. ASSOCiated Students by Avalon Attractions. No bottles. can or alcoholiC beverages permitted in or around the facility. No line ups at the box office prior to
6AM May 1st. Random priority numbers will be issued at that time. S.O.s.u. Students with 1.0. Jre entilled to student discounts at the Box Office.
BPM
SATURDAY
JUNE
13