- San Diego State University

Transcription

- San Diego State University
TEe
DAILY
VOLUME 65 NUMBER 59
THURSDAY November 17. 1983
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
CSU preSidents may
get salary increase
by Shari Vincent
Dolly A,t...I.rr writer
A plan that would increase the salary range of California Stale University presidents and base administnltion
salary increases on merit will be vOled on Saturday by the
CSU Board of Trustees.
Under the Management Personnel Plan. salaries for
CSU presidenls would fall in a range from $65,000 to
$95,000. Currently the range is $52.728 to $70,260.
SDSU President Thomas B. DIlY is the highest-paid
CSU president, making $70,260.
Presidents will, for the first time , be alll'lIed housing
and entertainment allowances ranging from $300 to $800
a month. as well as the use of a car for business purposes.
The plan also gives campus presidents more control
over salaries for managemenl and supervisory employees
- Ihose not involved in collective bargaining - from
deans, deparlment chairpersons and Health Services
physicians to accounting officers, ground mainlenance
and secretarial staff.
Daily Aztec phOIO by Chris Holme
JUST PLAIN FOLK-Blake Rogers, left, and Mike Nelson, music
Junior, play some contemporary folk songs on campus
Wednesday.
Although some would like to sec the proposal studied
further, administrators and SDSU Senate representatives
said the plan will most likely pass the Board of Trustees
this weekend.
Day said he strongly supports the proposcd changes
that would corne into effect Jan.1 if approved.
Instead of the current system of automatic pay raises,
the plan, called MPP, allows for campus decisions on
who will receive increases and how much they will receive, he said.
"People tend 10 forget thaI the president, and only the
president, has the authority 10 appoint campus management." Day said. He added Ihat il is vital that the president has Ihe aUlhority to award those who deserve it.
Currently. once he appoints someone, he has no control over the salary, Day said. But, he said, "This plan
has requiremenls that the presidenl set up procedures to
evaluate his own management."
According to Day, there is no connection between the
new plan and faculty salary.
.
"The Faculty Union has negotiated a personnel plan
and salary plan," he said. And faculty will sec a 5.8percent increase in January.
Increasing the pay scale of top administrators should
make those positions more appealing to fUlure candidates
fonhose positions, said Robert Detweiler, SDSU professor and representitive to the CSU Statewide Senate.
"The cost of living (in California) is a real concern."
Detweiler said. Some people have turned down top positions because of the high cost of living.
The management plan has not met wilh heavy opposition, but there arc concerns over certain aspects of its
structure.
PI ........ SAI.,\RY on page.l.
SDSU may get energy-saving biomass plant
Editor'.s /lote: This is the first of u Iwo-purt
A $3 million biomass power plant that could
series on the biomas.' phmt proposed ICl( Ille produce up to one-Ihird of SDSU's energy
SDSU e'lmpus. Today. the po.ssible benents of needs could be built on campus as early as
the plunt. Tomorrow. the possible negillivc side 1985.
effects.
The California State University Board of
Trustees is voting on the plant proposal Saturby Jim Tragesl'r
nltlly Aztec starr writer
day at its meeting at Cal State Fresno. The
Report predicts
lack of teachers
by Tara Kaylor
Dally Aztec contributor
The n'umber of education graduates projected for the year 1988 will meet
only 80 percent of the need for additional teachers. according to a recent
report.
This projection is making educators concerned about the quality of future
instruction in the schools, the Journal of Teacher Education reported.
This impending shortage is because of two factors: the dwindling pool of
new teachers and a change in birthrate.
Education degrees given each year have dropped 61 percent since 1971, the
report said.
At SDSU, there has been a decline in the number of students enrolled in
elementary education teacher training programs.
"Eight years ago we had 800 students enrolled in the program. We now
have about 300," said James Kaatz, graduate adviser in elementary education. "I think the number one factor in the decrease is that the word got OUt that
there weren't any jobs."
The change in birthrate, asoutlinerl by the report, will be seen in an increase
in elementary school enrollments by 1985. That increase will continue at least
into the next decade, according to reports. Secondary school enrollments will
continue their downward trend until the baby boom moves through the
elementary grades.
"In order to get the quality of teachers the public expects, teachers salaries
must become competitive," Kaatz said. The salaries differ widely from state
to state. Alaska is dominant in salaries at $34,954 a year. Mississippi is the
lowest with $14,285. Almost two-thirds of the states pay below the $20,531
national average.
"A 1983 Gallup poll said that the public allitude toward education is that
they're willing to pay more for education now," Kaatz said.
The quality of future educators is also under investigation. Not only arc
fewer persons choosing teaching, but the caliber of those entering thc teaching
profession is low and continues to decline significantly, reports say.
Reports say that educators are worried because to meet the shortage practices that allow for less-than-qualified teachers could become widespread.
One practice is using out-of-field teachers to instruct in fields that have a
shortage. Teachers in areas of surplus arc moved to these short areas. even
though they may not be certified in Ihat area.
Another practice is short-CUlling certification or licensing roules.
addition of the planl would mean a revision of
SDSU's Master Plan, making it subject to CSU
approval.
The proposal was approved by SDSU's Un iversity Senate recently, despite objections from
some faculty Ihal the biomass plant would be an
environmental hazard because of emissions
from burning vegetation.
Donald R. Short. dean 01 the College of
Sciences, said that Ihe plant would use chapar1'31 (brush and weeds native to S04Jhern California) as fuel.
Two feasibility studies were completed recently on the construclion and operation of the
plant.
Please see BIOMASS on page 2.
Cranston campaign brings
back former SDSU student
by Bradley J, Fikes
Dally Aztec re.tures edttor
Nostalgia brings many alumni
back to SDSU. Bul whal brought
Jim Bloom back here is Ihe lure of
polilical bailie.
Bloom, a speech communications graduate, eame back here
several weeks ago to help build
the organization of Democratic
presidential candidate Alan Cranston at SDSU and olher local
campuses, as well as the outlying
community.
Bloom has been working for
Cranslon as a field coordinator
since July. His duties include
building campaign organizations
in areas where the Cranston campaign is not established, planning
fund-raisers and even driving
Cranston from one rally to
another.
When Cranston makes a campaign appearance in San Diego
this morning, Bloom will have
already set up press conferences
and arranged for interviews.
"Wherever Cranston appears,
I've gOI 10 !flake everything run
smoothly. If there's a press conference, I've got to make sure every lillie detail is okay," Bloom
said. "Being the lone person in
town, I'm going to be the onc who
calls the press ane! sets up interviews. l'1l have to drive him
around, which I've done three
times already."
Bloom says this personal involvement with the campaign has
given him a rare chance to personally talk to a major political figure.
"It's been a unique opportunity to get to know Senator Cranston. He's very bright and, unlike
whal you'd expect of a candidate,
very quiel and willing to Iislen,"
Bloom said.
Bloom was chosen to build up
Cranston's campaign here because of the polilical and social
contacts he had established while
allending SDSU. An alumnus of
J!M BLOOM
Sigma Chi fraternity, he will be
staying at their house in the college area until Thanksgiving.
"The first week I was here was
spent gelling in touch with old
friends and asking them 10 volunteer. I've been working on SDSU
and other campuses to organize
interested students," he said.
"The toughest thing students
have to deal with is that they tend
to be a lillIe too romantic in Iheir
ideals of how a campaign
works." Bloom continued.
"They think you blow the trumpet and the masses follow."
Inslead, Bloom says. "you
have to build a campaign organization slowly, surely and carefully. By the time you wan I 10 do
something. you have to gel a couple hundred people together. We
have a different organizational
program for each campus ...
"If Ihe people orgamzed on
campus have a positive experience, they will conlinue working
in politics," he said.
Illoom said the varlely of work
he is responsible for has given
him valuable experience in practical politics.
"You wear a lot of hats and
have to be very versatile. ThaI's
one of the first demands of pol itks. You've got to be able to do
whatever's asked of you - or
you 've got to be able 10 learn fast
how to do it."
2-
November 17, 1983 DAILY AZTEC
----------------------Calendar------Today
• Phi Upsilon Omicron will
SS-IIKI III <I p.1ll
• Health Science Club willll1cel
• Chi Alpha Chrlltlan Fel·
lowshlp will Illeel in A/I"c Cenlcr
fIlom L & M al 7 1'.111.
• Aztec Ski Club witlll1eel in AH-
in 1111·.'22 OIl fl p,lll.
Illeel in Ihe FSCS III 6:30 p.m.
• Pre·Lww Society will Illeel in
AZlec Cenler roOIll I. & M III <1:30
• Pre·Optometry Club will
p.lll.
• Student Health Services will
hnve a free vision screening in Ihe
Self-Help Trailer fro 111 10 a.lll. 10 I
p.m,
sponsor lin American Cancer Sociely
film in Aztec Cenler al 7:30 p.m.
• College of Human Servlcel
p.m.
AZlec Cenler roOIll II &
Fornler Seerelary of Heallh. Educalion and Welfare under Presidenl
Johnson wiliialk aboul "The Future
of Human Services in the U.S." in
• N.A.A. will have a wine and
cheese party in Ihe faculty lounge al
• ASlociated General Con·
tractors will Illeel in E-20 I al
noon,
noon,
• AERho,Honor Society for
Broadcalten will huve a speaker
in the Little Thellter al 7 p.m.
21.1.1 al () 1'.111.
• College of Sciences Student
Council will Illeel in LS-IKII al 5 • Alpha Phi Alpha will Illl'c! in
(i
al nooll.
Biomass----------C.nlinued from Pl.' I.
The firsl was an internlll study performed by
SDSU. Alter Systcms. a consulting firm. did Ihe
second study. Short said thai both show Ihe planllo
be a worthwhilc projecl.
If approvcd, thc planl would be financed by a
third-party invcstor, Short said.
According 10 Short. thc primary role of Ihc planl
will be rcsearch and development.
"Our purpose is nOI to go inlo Ihc powerproducing business. Our purpose is research and
development," he said.
The chaparral fuel will probably be galhered
from fcderallands under the Bureau of Land Managemenl. Short said. He said Ihat fuel could eventually be gathered from San Diego City land.
Short said Ihat evcry year lens of thousand, of
acres of fuel are wllsled in coni rolled hum, IIl1d
brush fires. He said Ihallhe SDSLI hiomas> 1>lant
projecl is important because it cun suprly energy
and deneasc fire danger on puhlic land"
One of Ihe prohlems Ihal Shorl ,aid slill ex isis is
finding a way 10 harvesl Ihe chaparral wilhoul
harming the ecology of the area Ctlllected from. He
said that it is importanl Ihal Ihe land nol he slripped. bul harvested so Ihallhe hrush will come hack
laler.
Included in Ihc plan for Ihe planl arc two Pllrttime posititions for ecologislS. One would be concerned wilh Ihe air quality around SDSU and the
olher with environmenlal prohlems from harvesl-
ing Ihe chaprara!.
He also ,aid Ihallhe plant huilding itSl~lf would
have classroom space and a lahoratory for research. In addition. a fuel storage arca would he
located ncar Ihe plant.
Short said he foresees sludenl, fromlllany areas
working allhe planl in Ihe research arca. He said
Ihal engineering students would he involved. as
well as sludent, from the Graduate School of Public Health. He said Ihallhe health sludents would
sludy Ihe effecls, if any, on Ihe puhlic from emissions.
If buill, Ihe plant will be undcr Ihc conlrol of Ihc
vice president for Business and Financial Affair'
and run by the Maintenance Dcpartmenl. Short
said.
• Chr'stlans on SDSU will meel
in Altee Center room K & N al 12:JO
p.m.
Friday
• Society of H'lpanlc Profes·
Iional Englnee" will meet in E328B al I p.m.
• Philosophy Club will have
• Society of Ph)'lici Studentl
will meet in BA·338 at 5 p.m.
Smokeout
schedules
adoptions
Giant cigarettes will be dislribUling smokers' adoption papers
today on the Campus Lab Lawn.
The costumed students arc part
of an effort to promole The Great
American Smokeout. a day sel
aside by the American Cancer
Sociely 10 gel smokers 10 quit.
The adoplion papers are for
non-smokers who are willing 10
Slay wilh a smoking friend all day
to make sure he or she breaks the
habit for Ihe day.
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~-----------------'------~--.--~~~----~
II
lecture on Darwinism in Azlec Center morn L & M at 3 p.m.
12-1~-83
DAILY AZTEC November 17, 1983 -
~
Salary-----------Cnnlinufd rrnm PIM' I.
William Dale Crist, president of
the union that represents CSU faculty, the California Faculty Association, suid the plan needs further consideration before action is taken.
It is not the presidents' salary
ranges that he is concerned with, he
suid, as much us it is the power the
presidents will huve in evaluating
academic administrators.
"There should be some provision
in the plan for fuculty consultation,"
Crist said. "The MPP is ominously
silent on uny role of the faculty
Senute."
The faculty is fumiliar with problems of evaluations and should take
part, he said. Further, it is important
to keep academic administration
closely allied with faculty, but the
new plan alienates them, he added.
"It's important we look in context
of the total needs of the system,"
Crist said. "It's a shame that there is
so much push lilr increases at the
very top and no equivalent push for
increases for faculty. "
The proposed increuses, from the
lower range to the upper range,
would mean a 25-perecnt to 30-
pcrcent increase, he suid.
Robert Ilenjumin and C. Dale
Johnson, SDSU professors and representitives to the CSU Statewide
Senate, have concerns about the
plan.
IISomcnnc's gain is somconc's
loss," Benjamin said in explaining
thut the pi un ullows only a certain
amount of money for raises.
Crist said, "It is fulse to say the
monies (for salaries) don't come
from the same place. If you give a lot
here, you get less there."
The money used for· the increases
comes from the sHite of California's
general funds, Crist said, und could
be used in other places, such as fueul-
ty wage increllses.
Johnson said he is concerned
mostly with the lImount of power thut
would be extended to the presidents.
"There is a possibility thut the
presidents could be arbitrary in rewards and punishments," Johnson
said, but whether they make use of i(
is opcn to question.
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In response to the presidents' salary-nnge increases, Crist said, "It's
true there is no provision in the MPP
that anyone (individual) will get an
increase when the runge is increased,
but it docsn't take much imagination
to see the potential is there.
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~--------------------------------
OF GOD
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word
was with God, and the Word was God ... And the
Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full
of grace and truth ... For of His fullness have all
we received, and grace upon grace ... grace and
real ity came by Jesus Christ.
--John 1:1, 14, 16-17
We are all seekers of enjoyment. Whether in food, drink,
social activity, rock climbing, or the like. In one form or
another, we all experience the desire for pleasure, for joy,
for satisfaction, a need to be enjoying something all the time.
One among us told how he once enjoyed standing on top
of a glacier, drinking in the vastness and beauty of nature.
It was exhilarating for a time, but eventually ... he had to
come down. It was but a temporary enjoyment.
The problem with sOfllallY human enjoyments is just this.
The wine runs out, the feast grows tasteless, the party
draws to a close, the flower fades. What we need is
permanent enjoyment, a Ilivine enjoyment. This is the enjoyment ofGod.
Anothar among us shared how she sought enjoyment in
the world, yet never tasted the satisfaction she longed for.
But when she opened to Jesus Christ, she experienced an
enjoyment that's like being filled with wine all the time.
She found real satisfaction in the person of Jesus Christ.
This is what the Bible calls grace. What is grace? Grace is
just to enjoy God in the person of Jesus Christ. What higher
enjoyment could there be than this? This is fullness of joy
and pleasure forever more (psalm 16: 11). This is the joy that
no man taketh from you (John 16:22). This is joy
unspeakable and full of glory (1 Pet. 1 :2).
How can thi~ grace, this enjoyment, be realized? It's so
simple. By opening to Christ, and fl!ceiving Him, this Person,
- who is Grace Incarnate--comes into our spirit, our deepest
part. From then on, grace is inside us, with our spirit (Gal.
6:18). because Jesus Christ is with our spirit (2 Tim. 4:22).
Now it is Christ .. the grace of God-· who lives in us (GaI.2:20;
2 Cor. 15:10).
The Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit. Grace be with
you. Amen.
--2 Timothy 4:22
CHRISTIANS OF S.D.S.U.
Come and Enjoy the Lord Jesus With Us
Every Thursday
12:30 In the Aztec Center.
Today: Conference Rooms K&N
for further inforrnatlon call: 265· 2743
4-
November 17. 1983 DAILY AZTEC
-----------Opinion----Dally Aztec
Adwr1hin~
MalUl!-!l'r
Editor III Chief
Mary .10 lan'i
Malla~ing
Slfph"n
Eilihlf
J. Curnm
A ..,iMIIIH Advcrll'in~ Mallugcr
')rodul'tillll Supcrvi\nr
Jell' Arnett
Rub YAn de Wetcrlnge lIuy!i
Mirto IlrShu/o
TIlt' PUII,\ -"tfty '\ l'"hh,hl,'ll Montla) lhftl\l~h hnla> ""IIIit' \rh.. I<.)11\ If! W~\lll1l \1;:11<.',1 \ ,'!!Il1\{'nl<ll\\'" Jill!
... i:IoI1L .... m\ rrplT'-Cnl nnl~ ltw QUlhm\ anti a"I~1\ 1li1ilICti t:n\IIInnl ('dllt'ri,ll, h:pr,"",nl Ilk: f).H!., All,', fLIiI<IJ),11
,".Iltr), btlanl Dlred (Ul'Tc\l'.un,ll'nlC' lu. n,lLI~ A/lrr. ~ili, Ill('~t\ SlolII,: llnlH'r"I)". SJIl Ihq!", (,,\ "!IH~
E"~l!ln:d HdlJl ~":\·IW7'\ Ad\cnl\ln" Inl~) 2tl:\ 6'117,
Campus clowns
The Associated Students has approved $97,000 for an on-campus
carnival.
We must insist that the A.S. act more responsibly. first, deficit
spending (the A.S. expects to lose $9,000 on a cllmivIlJ!) is irresponsible in these times of tight budgets. Second, this university already has
image trouble with the area residents and the folks in Sacramento.
SDSU has a reputation as a "party school" rather than an intellectually sound center of higher learning. and a carnival on campus can only
hurt us more. finally, the A.S. is demonstrating a poor sense of
priorities: With many essential programs in immediate need of financial help. the A.S. wants to throwaway tens of thousands of dollars in
the hope that in a few years the carnival will tum a profit.
The Daily Aztec calls, once again, on President Day to stop Springfest before SDSU becomes the circus of the CSU system.
~~-------------------Letters------Conflict part
of any belief
Editor:
I am forced to respond to Jeffrey
Miller's Oct. 27 column on religion.
In doing so, I am forced to believe
that I am not speaking simply for
myself.
.
Miller's column was an all-out
allack on the concept of religion as a
whole, an effort to blame religion for
the ongoing conflict among the people of the earth.
Though Miller is correct in thinking that religious beliefs have led to
conflict, his being an extreme atheist
has apparently caused him to forget
that any belief mankind fonnulates
will inevitably do the same.
To so feverishly allack religion as
being the "pestilence," "disease"
and "social malady" is to do lillie
more than to personally allempt to
spread his blatant commitment to
atheism.
All beliefs originate as ideas within a single mind or the minds of
many. What follows is an allempt to
gain acceptance for this belief on as
large a scale as possible.
Conflict inevitably arises because
without exception the idea meets
with unacceptance. This applies to
concepts and beliefs of any kind and
on any level: cultural, social or political.
It is as true for Marxism as it is for
Catholicism, for socialism as for
Christianity. And it seems 10 apply
all too well to the two most important
concepts of any kind existing today.
I cannot help feeling that the growing struggle between communism
and capitalism poses a greater threat
to human life than religious inconsistencies ever will.
My point is that religious faith is
no more to blame for our eternal
woes than is our faith in any other
cultural, social or political dogmas.
Every belief mankind has ever initiated has led to conllict of various
degrees because none has ever garnered universal acceptance.
If Miller wishes to do away with
religion, then he may as well ask for
an end to anything else hc mayor
may not believe in. because those
beliefs are equally, if not more.
dangerous.
In the meantime. those of us
whose personal religion is very rewarding and is responsible for our
attempts to live as good human
beings (with absolutely no desire to
kill or die in the name of God) will
continue to believc.
Jell' Gasper
journaDsm senIor
Antagonisms
have to stop
Editor:
I am strongly concerned about the
tension between the Palestinian and
Jewish communities of San Diego.
As an observer of this conflict in the
Middle East, I feel that a compromise
between Jews and Palestinians there
is not likely to happen. It is clear to
me that the hostilit between these
two groups is as strong and harsh
here in San Diego as it is in the Middle East.
It is my strong belicf that here in
San Diego a resolution of mutual
antagonism between Jews and
Pales-tinians could be made. San
Diego is not a political ccnter. Its
people arc easy going; perhaps there
is a chance for greater understanding
between the two peoples. I realize
this is easier saitlthan done. but it is
essential for a brighter future.
As long as Jews and Palestinians
continue to condemn each other. I
see no hope for peace. Perhaps the
time has come for both peoples 10
leave behind the connicts of the past
and look more toward the future.
One way of approaching this problem would be to form a coalition of
Jews and Palestinians working
together to resolve some of the tensions and set an example for others
who might be interestcd in such a
goal. For those interested in such a
coalition, I encourage you to call me.
Naftali Camiel, at 286-9418.
Naftall Camiel
political science freshman
If disgruntled,
RB is not far
Editor:
I understand the area residents cnjoy their peace and quiet and would
like to see their neighborhood as undisturbed as possible. Yet there are
several factors that prevcnt me from
having sympathy for these bitter
First, one must remember, what
we now call SDSU "'as established
around the /Urn of the century, at
which time there was virtually nothing around but open space. As the
school grew. so did the neighborhood. CUIT.!ntly, we have a thriving
community centered around the university or, in other words, a college
town. Recently. however, the College Area Communitv Council "OIi
misguided resident; like Annete
Kiewitdejonge have ~en forgetting
the fact that our community is indeed
a college town and not a rctirement
village!
In Annete' s letter to the Daily
Aztec she pointed out how fraternity
parties disturb the neighboring
homes. Obviously. Annete is not
"ware of the hour of community service each fraternity and sorority put
in to help keep the area clean and
happy. And let us not forget that the
Grcek systcm is part of the university
and is an intrinsic part of the college
experience for a great number of students.
Admittedly. living next door to a
fraternity house may nOl be the ideal
situation for those who thrive on silence. But then again. no one is forcing these people to do so. San Diego
is full of small, quiet, sterile communities, anyone of which might be
ideal for Annete and her cronies.
So let us keep this area a college
community as it should be, and remember, Annete, Rancho Bernardo
is just a few miles away!
True, the Daily Aztec was editorializing, and this was clearly lableled as such. but I can sec no public
good coming from such an inflammatory position. We students
should have the maturity to be able to
see thc homeowners' side of it, too.
Name calling and insults will get
us nowhere mighty fast.
David Hartney
finance junior
Ann Fourt
German and nnance senior
Be sensitive
to residents
Editor:
I would like to let the SDSU-area
homeowners know that not all SDSU
students are as insensitive to their
problems as the Daily Aztec would
lead them to believe.
These people have a genUine,
legitimate complaint, and we students calling them a "small group of
fauatics" who arc "suffering from
the delusion that they have exclusive
rights to park on public streets" (as
the Daily Aztcx' so diplomatically
put it) is not going to help the situation.
Both partics need intelligent respect for the other's position if any
meaningful communication is to
occur.
I was particulartly struck by this
when several weeks ago the "Los
Angeles Times" did an intelligent,
fair piece on the parking problem
with equal treatment of both sides of
the story.
American education a lesson in order
"Class will now come to order."
The words echoed like the clicking heels
of jackboots against the walls of the large
classroom. Wide-eyed stares filled the fiveyear-old faces.
viewed order. To mc, order was nothing
more than a means to an end, the end being
education. Order was utilitarian, Iikc a hammer. And while I could appreciatc the usefulness of a hammer, I could never worship
one.
And yet, there were my cducators, treatmg order likc it was an cnd unto itself. I
Iy concealed the real subjcct matter -Introduction to Social Pressure, Conformity 10 I,
Intermediate Concession to Authority,
Advanced Order.
Thc reason for this somewhat limited curriculum soon became obvious '- the
tcachers, themselves the product of our indoctrination system. wcre incapable of edu-
I had no basic quarrel with the '''lIccpt of
"order." Although I enjoyed the antiauthoritarian abandon of the eraser fight, I
realized early in life that it was not terribly
conducive to the leaming proccss.
couldn't figure it OUI. Finally, after years in
California's "educational" system. the
answer came to me.
After seeing a teacher waste 15 minutes
of valuable c1asstime disciplining a student,
I realized that indoctrinalion, not education
was the " raison d'ctre" oCthe public school
system.
cating the students. They could only pass on
the "knowledge" with which they had been
inculcated, i.e. follow instructions, usc a
No.2 pencil and stay in your scat until the
bell rings.
Howevcr, I could never quite understand
the revcrential awe with which my teachers
Thc English, math and science courses
my classmates and I had been taking clever-
Someone giggled. The nervous young
teacher tried her best to give the directive an
air of authority. speaking in loud, bracing
tones that carried an implied t1 ..reat to any
would-be misclcant. All was now in order.
From that first day in kindergartcn forward, I was taught the vital importance of
order. Without order. nothing could be
accomplishcd. There had to be rules, and
rules had to be followed - even if you
didn't agree with them.
Late in my high school career. I finally
met a fcw teachers who were true educators.
They assigned Salinger. Vonnegut 'lIld
Gin,berg. They chalk'nged students to reject simplistic generaliz:ttions and to wrestle
with difficult social, political and moral
questions.
Were these teachers respected by the
school district? On the contrary, they frequently found themselves in hot watcr with
the school administration, the Board of
Education and the PTA for using' 'unorthodox" means of instruction and "inappropriate" teaching materials.
Fortunately for our educational establishment, such subversive troublemakers are
rare. My neighbor tcaches English at a local
high school. Once. she showed me the reading list she assigns to her 17 -year-old students. It was the most innocuous assortmenl
of drivel I had ever seen.
When I asked her why she didn't assign
more substantial literature. she replied. "I
find those kinds of materials very eonfusillg
to teenagers and dbruptive to the order of
thc classroom."
Somewhere, a group of children sit. getting their first taste of the precious fruits of
education: "Class will now come to order. ..
STANZA·DAILVAZTEC Navamber17,1983
3
s T
A
N
z
A
Iranian filmmakers
extol their mission
OJ
t has happened In
uss a.
as happened In China. II is happening right now in
Argentina, Vietnam and Central America. II Is also happening In Iran.
The world 'Is at war with numan rights. Death, destruction and
starvation are the victors .
. In Iran, 10-year-old children are given rifles and sent to the IranIraq border to fight a religlou~ war. They are among the many
casualties resulting from skirmishes, invasions, assaults and "rescue operations" that continue to plague our existence.
Taking a stand against this waste and stupidity is a task that all
human beings are obligated to do, each in their own way. Artists
must continu'l to create art. Often. their art, their vision and their truth
and
torture their very souls.
Daily AZlec photo by Andrew lIeinzep
TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES-Journalism senior Bill Spencer has problems editing audio tape for
Radio News Production, a course offered through the Journalism Department.
'Page Three' gives students
opportunity to air their views
the class learn how to edit and
produce a show as well as strengPARVIZ SnYAD AND MARY APICK
then their journalistic and interviewing skills throughout the
Parviz Sayyad and Mary Apick are two such oppressed artists.
semester, said class instructor
They were two of the hOliest film stars in pre-Khomeini Iran. Sayyad
John Hernandez. The class is rehad been a leading figure in Iranian media. During the Shah's reign
quired for students with an emphhe wrote skits and acted in the controversial show "Octopus." He
asis in the radiofTV news sequhas directed 13 feature films and participated in nine as actor,
t's 11 p.m. on a ence of the Journalism Departproducer or writer.
u ay, a
most San Diegans ment.
Apick has starred in more than 600 TV shows and series segare clicking off their radios. At
The class is structured like a
ments on National Iranian Television. She has also starred in five
least 20 radios are tuned in to real broadcast station. The stufeature films, receiving the Best Actress Award at the 1977 Moscow
KCBQ-AM - not to listen to the dents must accumulate sources
Film Festival for her role in Sayyad's "Dead End."
latest in country cuisine, but to for their proposed story ideas,
In San Diego to promote the opening of the film "The Mission," the
hear Page Three.
while meeting deadlines every
first movie made by an Iranian filmmaker since the Shi'ite revolution,
Page Three is a show produced week.
Sayyad and Apick are in exile.
by an SDSU class, Journalism
The 30-minute magazinePle.se see MISSION on page 6.
474, "Broadcast News Reporting format show includes tours of San
and Editing." The 20 students in Diego sites, profiles on interesting
people and restaurant and movie
reviews. Some of the more popular features have included a night
with an auto repossessor and features on the riSing popularity of hot
tubs and lIotation tanks in San
Diego.
Each week, two students take
on the title of producer/anchor and
assign stories to their student reporters. The following week, the
reporter turns In a two-to-three minute feature on reel-to-reel tape,
complete with bits of the interview,
and music or sound effects to add
life to the piece.
Most of these reporters want to
break into the broadcasting field
and hope this class will give them
the experience to enter this competitive field.
"If someone asks me if I can go
out and cover a story, I will be able
to say 'yes' and put a package
together for them," said Leslie
Groza, a journalism senior who
wants to become a TV anchor or
reporter.
Howevor, students who want to
pursue this field need more than
just the knowledge of how to edit
tape, said Hernandez, who graduated from SDSU with a degree in
radiolTV news in 1977.
Daily Auee photo by Chris Holme
"I'm trying to instill in them the
GANGLY REMNANTS OF A FOURSOME-Original members Gang 4, Andrew Gill and Jon
necessity of being effective in the
King gave an energetic aHempt at keeping their slx-year-old sound alive Monday at the EI
medium," Hernandez said.
Cortez Ballroom, The Gang gave the heave-ho to one two locaf opening bands tt) quit by 10
"That's half the battle. The rest
p,m. and head back to L.A. Playing off their latest album, "Hard," the glaring Gill and leaping
depends on individual journalistic
King were Joined by bassist Sara lee and a surprisingly conforming new drummer replacing
skills, individual creativity and inthe drum machine on "Is It love?" The half-capaclty-slzed audience said It was close.
dividual characteristics."
Still, what is important at this
by Lori Honczarenko
Stanza staff writer
ill
0'
0'
0'
stage is that students are offered
an opportunity to test their abilities
on a major radio station. Instead
of gelling the high salaries of
anchors and reporters. though,
these reporters receive grades for
their work. They also get to hear
a lot of constructive criticism from
their classmates and professor.
"Out in the real world you get a
lot of criticism, and it's nice to
catch that now," Groza said. "Out
in the real world, people are not
willing to take the time out to work
with you like they do in this class."
Class member Andy Heinze
agrees that the criticism is good,
because it gives the students a
sense of what peers think of their
work. HeinLe also said that the
class isn't as easy as it seems.
"We've got limitations with
equipment, having no backing
and being nobodys," Heinze said.
The students would be able to
get more and beller interviews if
they had the backing, such as
working for a large, well-known
station, Heinze said.
Working with reel-to-reel
machines has its limitations, Hernandez said, but students are
dOing a good job considering the
circumstances.
"It would be nice if we had $1
million so we could buy state-ofthe-art equipment," Hernandez
said. "But we are in the process of
substantially upgrading our equipment by next semester."
To facilitate audio production,
new equipment will include a
console mixer, a cart machine
and a turntable.
James Buckalew, an SDSU
journalism professor and director
of public affairs at KCBQ, helps
the two producers tape their show
every Sunday. He said the students do well, considering they
are not polished professionals.
Rather, it is a learning experience.
Although the students aren't
quite at the level of Walter Cronkite or Barbara Walters, their show
fulfills its purpose of providing interesting and entertaining segments for San Diego, while giving
rookie reporters the chance to
practice their trade.
6-
November 17, 1983 DAILY AZTEC
Mission-------('unllnUl'{1 rrum pafll'
~.
Sayyad's situation Is similar to
that of his character. He feels fairly safe for himself, bul on the slim
chance of reprisals, he waited until his wife and children were safely out of Iran before releasing
"The Mission."
(the Shah's secret police), played
by Sayyad.
Sayyad and Apick's predicament is not far from the characters
they portray in "The Mission."
However,
the
onceunquestioning agent becomes
friendly with the colonel and his
sister-in-law (Apick) through a
bizarre coincidence. From listening to their feelings and experiences in Iran, the agent begins to
question the validity of his mission.
The story depicts a Moslem
zealot (Houshang Touzie) sent
from Tehran to New York City to
assassinate an Iranian exile. After
his initial prey is killed by another
faction, the agent is given another
target, a colonel from the SAVAK
Apick's role operates as the
artistic "conscience" of the film.
As Maliheh, she denies art is a
"sin," a belief that has forced her
and thousands of others into exile.
Apick feels her character's dogma
is "very close to my own sentiments." This fine line between
fact and fiction is one of the main
elements that make "The Mission" such an effective drama.
"The Mission" is not an overtly
political film. It is a very human
story about choice, a lUXUry that
Iranians can no longer afford. It
tells a very personal tale of two
men and a woman living in a world
thrown out of balance.
The exiles are depicted in a
very realistic light. The film does
not over-dramatize or preach; instead it affords the Western world
a look at the specific problems
that exist for Iranians in exile and
alludes to the hyprocrisy they see
occuring in their homeland.
eMmlnatlon, patient
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and fitting.
exTI!NDED WEAR
LENSES ON LV $265.00
"One of the basic doctrines in
Islam says that if you are wealthy
enough to go to Mecca, you must
first feed seven starving neighbors, " Apick said. "This is not happening. The clergy in Iran lives in
the same palaces as did the members of the Shah's regime. Poverty and starvation have only gotten
worse.
DR. ROBERT HELLER OPTOMETRIST
La Jolla VIllage 5qUMC
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HEROES
Thurs. Nov. 17
SECRET AGENT MAN-Houshang Touzle stars as an Irr.nlan
agent stalking accused Iranian dissidents In the United St.ates In
"The Mission," opening Friday at the Fine Arts Theatre II, Pacific
Beach,
show their hair, and they cannot
be seen with a man that they are
not married to."
People still do not realize what
has happened over there and
what continues to happen,
Sayyau said. They do not realize
how many Iranians here and there
oppose Khomeini.
It is hoped that the film will clarify matters and relieve some of the
difficulty of Sayyad's struggle.
"The film took a long time to get
started," Sayyad said. "People
who were sympathetic to the
problem were afraid to become
involved politically. Even today,
after 'The Missior;' has already received much critical acclaim, I
have a difficult time obtaining
funding for other projects."
When the U.S. Marines were
killed in Lebanon, it was thought
that the Iranian govArnment had
something to do with it, Apick said,
adding that it made their lives difficult, leaving them to live a day-byday existence.
"The Mission" should succeed
in erasing some of the fears and
prejudices that exist toward Iranians in exile. By bringing world
politics to a very human level,
Sayyad has opened a window of
understanding for the West.
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DAILY AZTEC November 17, 1983 -
I<atrovas uses poetry to p~obe
societal ills, individual longing
IHI
by Julie Macl,1s
st.,f' writer
the same way he read the others
with a powerful sense of personal corvlctlon and an attractive
flair for drama.
Katrovas said that he strives to
do two things In his poems - to
praise and to mourn the people he
admires and loves. But that's a
rather Simplistic Intsrpretatlon.
Katrovas' poems are palrllul explorations of need and longing. In
one poem he admits to having not
talked to God In a long time and
muses over how, as a boy, he
would call upon God like a Irlend.
In another, he questions God's
existence, saying "I have seen
God, but only In women's eyes."
Although Katrovas uses Imagery, the language In his poems Is
direct and comprehensible. II Is
not difficult to hear and understand the anger in his poetic
voice. In fact, many of his poems
begin as somber descriptions of
people and places and then gradually evolve Into expressions of
what Katrovas cells "a Simmering
rage I don't understand, but that I
know I share with others."
Katrovas said that Green Dragons Is not about deep depresslon, but, rather, about "being plssed off." He said he tempers his
"rage" with a sense of survival.
Then he smiled and added that it
is extremely difficult to hold a decent job, like teaching, and contlnue to be consumed by anger.
Although he studied atthA Unlverslty of Virginia and received his
master's (In Fine Arts) at the Unlversity of Iowa, Katrovas still
thinks of San Diego and SDSU as
-
SfMI.,
e recited his poetry as If he
were performing it, accenting certaln words and twisting his face to
express emotion. He rarely
looked down at his book, preferring Instead to look out at his aUdlence.
This was how Richard Katrovas
appeared belore a small crowd In
Scripps Collage Tuesday. Katrovas, who graduated Irom SDSU In
1978, returned to his alma mater
to read selections from his book of
poems, titled Green Dragons
(The reading was part 01 the Llv:
ing Writer's Series.)
Green Dragons, which will be
published by Wesleyan University
Press In December and dlstrlbuted by Harper and Row, is Katrov8s' first collection 01 poetry.
The book entails Katrovas' personal experiences as a boy In
Japan and as a young man In San
Diego. It Is 'Ilso filled with anecdotes about New Orleans the city
where he currently teach~s.
Katrovas began writing poetry
as a child after he bought his first
book - a complete collection 01
Robert Frost's poems. Throughout his schoo.1 years, his mothAr
encouraged hfS poetic endeavors.
One of the poems he read was
calle~ "Elegy For My Mother."
ThiS poem, like many of Katrovas' works, strayed off the topic to
become a thoughtful commentary
on the ills of society. But it also
painted a sensitive portrait of his
mother. He read "Elt'gy" in much
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The 30-year-old poet and alumnus was praised by English professor Glover Davis, who Introduced Katrovas to the audience.
Davis said he was proud of his
lormer student and called his
poetry "passionate" and
"courageous."
It took Katrovas five to six years
to gather the poems for Green
Dragons. Many of the poems
have been published In literary
magazines like North American
Review and Missouri Review.
Katrovas said that while he was
assembling the book, he often
wondered If he was "dealing with
a dead art lorm." He relerred to
the dlHlculty poets lace In trying to
get their work published. Yet,
poetry Is Instinctive with Katrovas
and he doubts that he will ever
abandon It.
Katrovas Is currently working
on a second collection of poetry.
Joking, he said that he would
probably throw the manuscripts
away wMn he receives the first
bad reviews of Green Dragons.
Saying that poetry "gets boring
after 40 minutes," Katrovas
turned the time over to a brief
queslion-and-answer period. But
vivid Images of his far-Irom-dull
poetry lingered in the Cottage, uplifted by the memory of the poet's
engaging dramatic presentation.
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8-
November 17. 1983 DAILY AZTEC
Motley Crue thunders its way
through the din of heavy metal
er-clad heroes who adorn his wall,
he loses his troubles in a sea of
sledgehammer drums and whinIng guitars.
This scene epitomizes "heavy
metal," the audacious, aurally
aggressive brand of rock that has
terrorized parents for more than a
decade. Generally reviled by critics but worshipped by armies of
adolescent fans, bands like Kiss,
Aerosmlth, Van Halen and Judas
Priest have taken turns striking
paydlrt with the heavy-metal formula.
Heavy-metal bands usually
dress In black leather, eften enhancing their "evil" appearance
with quasi-occult symbols, spiked
arm bands, garish makeup or all
of the above. They write threechord songs about the glories of
sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, presumably inspired by a great deal
of first-hand experience. They
also play loud
very loud.
Motley Crue, a Los Angelesbased band with a burgeoning following, fits most of these criteria.
However, Nikki Sixx, the group's
bassist and principal songwriter,
rejects the "heavy metal" label.
"Heavy metal is a very general
term," said Sixx, backstage at the
band's sold-out concert Sunday
night at the Fox Theater. "We consider ourselves just American
rock 'n' roll."
Despite Sixx's protestations,
Motley Crue, with its uncompromiSingly hard sound and use of
makeup, explosives and dry ice
machines, is usually considered
to be definitive heavy metal. Sixx,
however, considers the group's
by Jeffrey Miller
Asslst.m! Sr.lIll,l editor
[]JOhnny'S had a rough day.
His steady girlfriend dumped him,
he flunked his algebra exam, he
lost his job as a bagger at Safeway, and his folks have grounded
him for a whole week.
Venting his frustrations at the
cruelty and Injustice of life, Johnny
slams Ihe door of his room and
turns his slereo up as loud as it will
go. Gazing at Ihe posters of lealh-
METALLIC-Vince Nell (top left), Tommy Lee, Nikki Shoe and
Mlck Mara comprise Motley Crue, one 01 America's most popular new heavy met,1 bands,
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style .. theatrical rock" appealing
to a culturally aware audience.
"Today's youth is very Intelll·
gent, and they know that this Is
theatre," he said. "They come,
and they get a good show. That's
what we are - Amerie:1n enter.
talnment In Its rawest form."
Sixx, 24, also sought·to dispel
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males.
"Our audience ranges from
ages 13 to 27, 50-percenl male,
50-percent female, Our audiences are very Intelligent, they
have goals In life, and we're kind
of a release for them. They know
they can put $10 down and get a
$50 show and get out all their
aggressions from going to school
or work or putting up with their
chick's mouth. It's definitely a
positive thing."
He added that the group's
aggressive stage act and hedonistic lifestyle allow the audience
to live Vicariously the life of the
rock 'n' roll star.
"Our reality is a lot of people's
fantasies," Sixx said. ''They can't
do that, so we do it for them. We
get off stage and raise hell, do
drugs, fuck, drink and have a good
time, 'cause nobody gets out
alive, so why try? Just live It to the
fullest."
Motley Crue was fonmed three
years ago. Sixx and drummer
Tommy Lee found guitarist Mlck
Mars through an ad in the paper.
Within a week, Ihe trio recruited
vocalist Vince Neil and began
playing the L.A. club circuit three
weeks later. After signing with
Elektra Records last year, the
band began to receive national
attention and is embarking on a
coast-to-coast tour, with most
dates already sold out.
Although the group has had
some well-publicized run·ins wilh
the law for lights and involvement
with under-age groupies, 5ixx
said the band does not endorse
such behavior.
"What we do is different from
what they (the fans) do," he said.
"What's good for the goose isn't
necessarily good for the gander.
We can get drunk and raise hell
and get in fights, and we're not
saying its OK. We're just saying
that's the way we are. So, come
and walch us do it rather than do it
yourself."
CIEEBUDGET
AIR FARES
_
round triP from _
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I
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_ AMSTERDAM ..•. $669
_ FRANKFURT •..•• $639.
_LONDON ........ $599• PARIS •..•....... $839.
·
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• HONG KONG .... $699.
SyDNEy ....... $1210*.
hOKYO ......... ' $669.
• Also many olher deslina·
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pass, Int'I Slud.nt ID
card, AYI1 ('ard, books,
I
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I_ mOTe.
_
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452-0630
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Council Trawl
uc Sltld.. nt elf o·on. t d
_
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JnU.s
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DAILY AZTEC November 17, 198. -
9
-----------------------------vinyl-------Veteran blues-rocker John
Hiatt Is on the prowl again. FoilowIng In a similar vein a~ the artistically successful "All of a Sudden,"
Hiatt turns out another In the long
list of solid albums that have spun
from the fingers of this gentleman
who cuts his licks in the bars 01
Nashville.
Hiatt maintains country influences on "Riding With The King,"
but tempers them with touches of
rock, soul, lolk and blues that result In some line music - listenable, II not overwhelming.
The main thing that comes
through this LP is the sincerity 01
Riding With The King
John Hiatt
Geffen Recorda
approach and the realization that
Hlalt Is working at a level that
matches his ambitions and his
level 01 understanding.
The lyrics are olten Insightful
and sometimes humorous. Hiatt
has always been an excellent
song writer and has penned tunes
for a number of rock and country
artists.
usr
at dl/count prlctl
/eaJuring ...
760 Thomas Ave. Pacific Beach
R"\I',,,III11I1 .• SU,If,I[c'\/I'd
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S-l.OO OJ.'F
Coup"n
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Rick Schwartz
PARK & FLY
IWlTl'MVfRS
1:lIj!'Y· . tilt' w,mdt'r/lti {t't'lms o{lwl sU'i rJmg water ns I/Oil rclll.\ lI/ /I :i,'r,'Ilf'
IIIJIJ!I.'i/,hal' III s,~(t ml4siC/,itltlb, !llld tilt' hi'/lllii/ul ll'ooll t'1wirmtmClIl atauT
IHI/lflle 'wt tull romtl.",
The album's title cut centers the
content 01 the LP. A lilting, blowsy
rocker strung along by an organ
rilt, Hiatt rides in soulful style.
"Riding With the King" is a very
satisfying II not landmark LP.
Without the lanlare, make up and
faa-laws. Hiatt has cut himself a
solid niche among blues rockers
and consistently serves up good,
ballsy music.
r---------~--_,
don't lorget tM
TONIGHT!
WARM UP TOGETHER
ATOFURO!
Hiatt's engrossing tunes are
punctuated by traditional blues
rhythms augmented by Hiatt's
plaintive vocals and sardonic
sense 01 humor.
helium balloon bouquets
pal1y goods
hats, horns, etc.
decorations
Christmas items
gift wrap
$3.00 a day
Includes:
valet to and from air terminal. Amtrak. bus, T.J. trolley
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3. Large well secured lot
6. Includea valet service
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You are invited to discuss opportunities for
study in graduate management education
with Mr. John Brown, a representative of
COGME,
COUNCIL FOR OPPORTUNITY
IN GRADUATE
MANAGEMENT EDUCATION
Tuesday, November 22, 1983
9:00 AM - 12 NOON
AZTEC CENTER - ROOMS K & N
Minority students from all disciplines and degree levels
are encouraged to attend.
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10 -
November 17, 1983 DAilY AZTEC
Jade
®
vinyJ--basic beats and simple lyrics,
used to be DODd for a little fun on
the dance floor and were even
worthy of a few. maybe three, repeated listenings at home.
But on this new album (their
fourth), their simplistic sound is
nothing but dull and trivial. All of
the hard-pounding rhythms sound
painfully alike.
Cast
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DAILY SPFClAL $1.85 CHOOSE ANY 2
Egg roll
Veg. chow meill
Fried wullloll
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The high school ish lyrics and
banal song titles aren't any better.
In facl. they're worse. From the
first cut, "Rock You Up," to the
last, "Shake A Tail Feather," the
Romantics pour out all the mundane cliches about love and sex.
In Heat
The Romantics
Nemperor Records
On "Do Me Anyway You Wanna," Wally Palmar sings So sweet
- you 're my desirel Dig deep and
feel the fire. W;th "Love Me To
The Max," he continues on this
same lusty theme, singing When I
get you excitedi I see the fire burn·
ing in your eyes.
The Romantics. with their hard,
Organic Chemistrr Students
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and Ketones ... Carboxylic Acids.
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or lie' with 48k memory and 3.3DOS.
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It is probably safe to say that all
the time and creative eltort that
went into those lyrics culminate In
the oh-so-cool "I'm Hip." Here's
an exciting extract - I'm no angel
I'm no fooll I'm not bragging I'm
just cool..
Those two beautifully PC3tiC
lines, atone, most certainly make
this album a must for every serious music listener's record collection.
Utilizing the basic rock instru·
ments - bass, guitars and drums
with an occasional harmonica
making itself heard - the Romantics do have a catchy beat, though
it verges on monotony. It's the
lyrics that stink.
Maybe someday, on some distant future album, the Romantics
will graduate from the macho
school of pop lyrics and add some
excitement to their sound.
"
•
"
Exp dale
Apply at PSFA 358
Through Nov. 23, 1983
"
Clty/State/Z!p__
Signature
Payment or credit card mformatlon must accompany order
IN A HURRY? - Order by phone (credIt cards only)
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DAILY AZTEC November 17, 1983 -
11
------------vinyl---just slither back onto Billboard's
Top 40 from time to lime. The folks
al Elektra apparently know this,
having released four "new" Doors
albums since Jim Morrison's
death 12 years ago.
However, "Alive, She Cried" is
no shabby product of musical necrophilia. Instead, it is one of lhe
most vibrant live albums released
this year.
Alive, She Cried
The Doors
Eiektra Records
Old Lizard Kings never die, they
Until now, the only live Doors'
recording available (excluding
bootlegs) was 1970's "Absolutely
Live." It was a spotty work, featuring uninspired performances and
a surfeit of Morrison's manic
attempts al poetry.
On the other hand, "Alive, She
Cried" brims with strong vocals,
powerful musicianship and a clear
sense of purpose. Morrison's
stage excesses are kept in check
- his poetry readings and sexual
pr9sence embellish the music
without overshadowing it
Red Rooster," is of comparable
quality, featuring John Sebastian
on harmonica. "Moonlight Drive"
includes a reading of Morrison's
celebration of death, and "Horse
Latitudes" closes the LP oul in the
Doors' characteristic dark, compelling manner.
The LP kicks oH with a smoking
rendition of Van Morrison's "Gloria," recorded at a 1970 soundoheck. Never have the Doors
sounded this tough. This track
alone should dispel any doubts as
to the Doors' stage credentials.
However. "Alive, She Cried"
generally does not reflect Morri·
son's demonic aura. II is an unpretentious chronicle of a good rock
'n' roll band at its peak.
New Way To Move
Units
Epic Records
- leffrey Miller
I'h'U\l' \l'l' pil~l' 12.
The album'S other cover, a
down-and-dirty version of "Little
THIS FRIDAY
THE SIERS BROS.
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and our best year ever!
Thru. Nov. 26th
looks for the Holidays ...
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We will be open at 5 p.m. for Aztec
vs. New Mexico game tbis Saturday.
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Talent Contest
Happy Hour 2pm - 6pm
Daily Drink Specials
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Poppers $1.00
D.J .
Wed. & Fri. Nights
Dancing
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LA MESA
8238 Parkway Dr.
462-2640
The finest
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12 -
November 17, 1983 DAILY AZTEC
( PI1III1Ul't! frolll 11I11o:t' II.
Quick, whal would you call a
cross bolwoon II,., (1o-(1o-s iHld
Devo? No, nol Mrs. f)olalol1eads.
No, nol Go-vo, SOl11ollllng enllrely
unpunchy like, Tlw Units') Yes,
IIlai's iii Sorry, Ihere's no Prize In
it, even if I gave Ihe album away,
Aclually, Ihat's being a lillie
hard on Ihe group, While lislening
to "A New Way To Move" lor the
firsl tllllO, II'S bosl to nol nxpoct 100
l11udl. Just sI11110 and c1anCl) alllnq
and liy 10 c1isCOVDr a now way I;,
1110VO to sUetl 01c1 sounds,
Tile SIX song LP IS a IhlPpy-gOlucky sot 01 boppy tunC's liko "flltl
Righi Man"
"Sol11oday I pray
Ihe rlgllt l11an will cOl11e my way,"
Over and over alld ovm, Raclwl
Webber, in a rather speak sing
sil11ilarlty 10 IIle Human Leaguo's
lornalo VllC,IIISI. qIVt1~; a tonl)Ull'III'
ctwt'k ,'CCOllllhlillllll'nl III lilt" elll·
locllvo voc,lliLilllons lly lilt' Allt'n
blolhuls and Scoll nYSl'1
Actu(1lly, IIw v(lcills alt! nll
ploblem, In I,lel. II ill II ~;rnn-sonu
VOICOS aID vory pluasdlli. It's lusl
Ih(11 111Oro isn'l any doct'nl 1I1SIIUmentation to back IIwlIl up,
Suro, IIwro's Iho ollHlipresonl
synthesizor, playod lour limos
llV()1 tlY t'VOIY lland n1l1111lwI plus
Alit! ,ltlllllll(ldly, IIltl synlll'
t'SI/(lr (\111 IWISt, lurn ,Hid oll"v
Ilvt'ly SOllnd alll1()slllk" ,lilY IIISIIIII1lt'nl lilt' b,lIld wdnts It 1(1 Bul iI's
dililcull 10 111.lsllH IIlll synlllllslllH
"'it'
Ill,ldlilltl tWl'llWW
its tonos aro so
rl)l\ci1(lllical,
II illl cOl11es down to how adepl
111t1 pl.lyol IS at lollowlllg tho instl uGliolls and how l(1st llO IS al
C WH:\ Adolptl CO<JIS ('urr,pony GOldon ('nil,l(lclt) 11[111(11 !ll~ Wt'l
pushing 1110 rigllt butlon,
TllO Unils, in thoir lirst albul11
do pusli S0l110 01 tilo right buttons:
(IS in tho nnsygoing "Your FacD,"
when suddenly the vocals am
tonod down to mnlady-slzo
Judging lrom only six songs
and one instrument, they're not
bnd,
-
()' Ilr-li'~lJ(JhtvRp('r<; ~;Incf.'
/1,,/,\\, }II/:/:,'r
1073
DAILY AZTi!C November 17. 191. -
IJ
--------------------~--sports-----­
Harrison's and golfers' play is up to par
bv Kllren dllSllvll
U;III)' Altrl' SIHlrtswrltrr
She shoots a 73 as Aztecs finish ninth in tournament
II took them three days. hilt the dllY of the toumanlt'nt and finishcd
snslI women's golfteam finally did with II .17 ·ovcr pal' total of I) J:\, '"
it.
strokcs IIhcad of a sUlprising sCl'olHlOn the final day of thl' i{uncho plllcc finish hy Stanfmd.
Bernurdo-lJSIU Invitlltiollul
Evcn 11101'1' slll'prising than StllnWl'dnesday, the A7.tel' WOlllen pllt it
togl·thcr ami playcd the type of golf flll'd's pCrfOl'llUlIll'C, howe vcr • Illlly
gallic thaI ('olldl .John KIl'in had hecn have heen the showing hy Ilanison
saying thcy Wl~rc l'IIPllhlc of pillying. who l'ardl'd her hcst St'llre this
SI>SlI wasn't ahlc to 1II0ve up in sellson.
till' oVl'mll tellm scoring. sclliing for
"I don't even think we 've had an
ninlh phll'e Ollt of 15 tellms, hilt Nlln- even-par sClll'e over the last few years
l'y Harrison picked lip the p"ce for in a tournament," KIl'in said.
Ihe Aztecs und their gume when she
Klein said that Uarrison, his top
shot an even-par finlll-l'Ouml7 J to tic recruit this season, finally I,layed Ihe
I'm co-medlliist of the day with Stan- type of game he had antil'ipated she
fonl's Kllthy Kostas.
would when he recruited her last
New Mexico ellsily held on to the year,
lead it hlld estahlished since the first
"It could ellsily have heen a 70 or
71." Klein said. "Shc .iu~t IIIbsed a
couple of PUlls, She .iu~t h'pt llnt·on·
l'l'ntl'lltillg IIIHI had it goillg all day. "
For Stanford, Ko~tlls' play typi
fied the excellent dllY thl' Mluml had
out on till' golf l'III11'se.
After two dllYs of golf it IIppeared
certllin that BYU, with II III stroh'
lelld over thil'll·plal·e lJSIU, hlld
second place prelly lIIuch sewn lip.
lIowever, till' Cllnlillllll'lI11W 1'1'11111 1.1
strnkes hack in fifth place to "ass the
Cougars, After a horrendous first
dllY, which found the Cllrdinal ill
IIIth place, the tea III heglln its ascent.
But an outstanding third dllY hy
Stanfiml lind II poor one hy nyU
allowed the Cllnlinal to clailll second
pllll'C in thl' invitationnl with 11.~h
sll'llkl~s. BYI I lind I ISH I. Ihl' der.md·
ing dHllllpions. li"d for third wilh
'),\0 stl'llkl·~.
"They Wl'n' .ill~t inl'l'l'dihle."
Kll'in ~aid of Stantiml\ play.
On Wedm'sday, thl' Stnnli,nl pinyer~ ~hol I'OlIlHb of 7.\·75-75· 711.
BYU, a strong tcalll al'l'onling 10
Klein, had 111Il'e playl'f's shool in the
XII's IImlone a 7h.
Of the 1'l'lIIaining Icalll~ that entered the day in the dog fight for third
pillce, Ariwna nnbhed fifth with
940 strokl~~, San Jo~e Statl~ and
UCLA tied for sixth with 91\2
stl'llkes, :1I1l1 USC finished eighth
with 946 strokes.
Kelli Antolock of nyU plaved
colI~i~tellt gilif thlllllghllllt the thIn
dllY totll'lIilll\l'lIt, with IOlIlIIb 01 ./ :
71· 7(" til will th,' illdividllill titk
New Mcxil'II'~ Th,'n'~a Sl'Ilrl'ck alltl
tJSHI'~ Avi~ 111111"" til'd lor M~I'OI
pllll'C with a tlltal III' 22,\ ~tl'Ol·;.'~,.
A~ far a~ SIlSI 1\ 1IVl'1'II1I perf01111
alln' wa~ 1"01l1','IIlt'd, Kleill said th.I'
he wa~ hllppy wilh Ihe lIilllh'platl
filli~h.
"We picked
110 slrokes OVl'!
Klcill snit! pi
SDsi I'~ 'lhll ~tlllk,~ total. "1'111 WI'
plea~cd. "
SJ)StJ'~ I.illda Mcliwell fillall.
11IJllcd hl~r gallll~ togclhcr to shool II
third ruUIlt! 7X. Iwo slrokes hell",
thnn her two previous rounds. ,it'
Pnlly Liscio. who had shot a 79 Oli
Monday, had sollie concentration
prnhlelll~ yesterday allli ballooned !II
1111 XJ,
III'
III~t y(~ar'~ ~l'orl',"
Seniors go out as winners over Waves
Cantrell, Hegerle, Schwartz star
by Kirk Richardson
Hally AlIft' spllrtswrttrr
Prior to Wedncsday night's
wOlllen's volleyball mlltch hetween
SDSll and Pepperdine, Vicki Cantrell, Sue Hegerle, Toni Hinuller and
Karen Schwllrtz were presented with
flowers, honoring them in their final
regular season malch lit Peterson
Gym.
The seniors then presented the fans
with .m outstanding display of volleyhall, hreaking the Waves. 15-10,
15-10, 15-6, in a mutch that was never close.
"We played reully well tonight,"
SDSll Coach Rudy Suwara said. "I
was especially happy we could play
so well without Toni out there."
Himmer. who reinjured her right
arm in Saturday night's match
against USC, played in just one gllme
against Peppcrdine. She said she was
not really dissapointed about sitting
out most of he match.
"I don't think it was my last game
here," Himmer said. "If (found out
it was later, I woul4 be bummed."
Suwara said the seniors really rose
to the occasion.
"I thoughl that Susan, Vicki and
Karen all had very good matches,"
Suwara said. "Vicki had a really
good match. When she cranks, she
cranks. She WllS hitting with such
good timing thllt she hit the angle and
the line at will."
In the first game, SDSlllonked as
if it would blow the Waves nff the
cnurt, jumping out to a 3-0 lead.
However, Pepperdine managed to
keep it close the entire gllme behind
the solid play of setter Sue Dawson.
LI:ading I)-X, the Aztecs capitillized
onlwo Pepperdine errors and pulled
away filr good.
This was Schwal17.'s gallic for her
outslanding setting.
SDSll gave a repeat perfofll1llOce
in the second game, By the time the
Wllves cnuld gel things going, the
:;eore WIlS 12-4 in Ihl~ Aztccs' favor.
Pepperdine hrought the score as close
as 14-10, hul SDSll's Linda Eilers
ended the game with a block.
The second game goes to Cantrell
fIll' her six kills amI two hlneks.
Pepperdine looked as if it might
toughen up in the third game. The
Waves mlled lIut to a 6-4 lead, hut
had trouhle holding lin. SDSll came
stunning hack hehind Hegerle's
tllugh net play and took the game and
the match.
This was definitely Hegerle's
game as the Aztec captllin hlld three
kills and three blocks to help SDSU
turn things around.
Cantrell said the team had a good
time out on the court,
"It was one of the funnest matches
we've played all season," Cantrell
said _ "It was very relaxed out
there ...
The Aztecs play their final conference match of the season when they
go on the road Friday against Long
Bcach State, SDSU, 7·6 in the
WCAA, is currently tied with Arilllna for fourth place in the conference.
An upset by Long Beach State could
cost the Aztecs a chance at po~t­
season play.
•
•
/Jaily Arlte photo by Tom RigKs
LAST CALL-SDSU's Sue Hegerle, one of four senior. participating In their fln~1 regular ....on
match at Peterlon Gym, follow. through on a spike during Wednesday night I match ag.lnst
Peppardlne. The ..nlors went out winners as the AztecI defeated the Waves, 15-10, 15-10, 15-6.
A salute, if you will, to four com-pet-i-tors
Last night at Peterson Gym, SDSU's
Vicki Cantrell, Sue Hegerle, Toni Himmer
llnd Kllren Schwartz pillyed in their final
regular sellson home nmtch for the Aztecs'
women's volleyball team.
It was relllly a night for the violins.
In fact, about the only thing that was
missing was the nasil-Iike, punc-tu-a-ted
voice of Howard Coscll. The man, who in
his his own inimitable way has brought us so
many Monday night fairy tales over the
years, would have been perfect for Peterson
Gym Wednesday night.
.... Good evening, hidies and gentlemen,
and welcome to Peterson Gym on the San
Diego State University campus for tonight's
NCAA women's volleyball match between
San Diego State and Pepperdine.
Tonight, we deemed it necessary to pre·
empt the special Wednesday night edition of
Monday Night Football to bring you a spe·
cial story of four outstanding performers
ending their college careers here tonight for
SDSll,
It is II story that really needs no in·tro·
duc·tion. These arc four athletes, all of
whom arc outstanding in their own right.
Each, complementing the other through
their storied careers here.
First, there is Vic-ki Can-trel!. The young
lady who has put the tiny city of Kent,
Washington, on the map here in San Diego.
frankly, couldn't pass the volleyball. But
over the last two years, she ha~ worked
hard, and now there is not a better passer on
this team.
Secondly, there is Sue Heg-er·le. This
kid can really hussle. In her own in·de-fat-iga-ble way she has excited the many fans
who have seen hl!r play here with her highenergy style on the coun.
'1
1
She holds a plethora of records at San Diego
State, but in her own inimitable way has
warmed the heart of her followers with her
jovial style on the court. Never has thi.s
school witnessed a performer who so, as 11
scem~. enjoys her sport.
But inside that jovial extel ior lie~ the
heart of a ded-i·ca·tcd athlete. Take, for
instance, her sophomore year. This kid,
III
iii! (())
.:
Never, will SDSU fans forgel her diving
save, coming out of nowhere, against Stanford in last year's NCAA consolation championship game at Stockton.
This is a kid that if you come to a SDSU
match and sit in the first two rows. you can
expect to sec her up close and personal,
diving for at least a couple shots (X~r gamc,
A real hustler, this kid is.
Then, you have To·ni HilJl·mcr. A quiet
performer who~e actiom on the court ~peak
loudly. Thb young lady wa~ an MVP of the
conference in 19H2, but ha~ been ~Iowed by
injuries in thi~, her final ~easo;), However,
memories of her blocking, ~lJiking, serving
and leading her team ..... ill not ~(XJn be forgotten. She has, if you will, performed all of
these skills in a pro·fes-sio-nal manner,
something that has sct her apart from her
compatriots.
And, finally, Ka·rill Schwartz. In telling
it like it is, thb is a kid who has been much
maligned in 1983. But those who recall her
performance in leading this team to the final
four last year, know of her talents. She had
the un-enviable task of replacing two
straight AII·Americans, and she performed
beautifully,
Now, with the match ready to begin, we
turn to Don Meredith, And Don, il sure is
going to be a sad momcnt ·... hen thi~ malch is
over tonight, and you have to sing "Tum
out the lights. the party's over .....
14 -
November 17. 1983 DAILY AZTEC
......-._ _ _ _ _ _----Classifieds-Please note:
Holp! N .... d ll.w,ng Homo 101 My "",.·1 AI'
Sprayed. All Sholl. SUPER I:I<'IJ r _ ~~\I·II.'(I
11'!>tIIl1
Because of a computer
malfunction, Wednesday's
classified ads did not
appear yesterday and are
Included In today's Issue.
The Daily Aztec regrets any
Inconvenience this may
have caused.
7~ Itol1"A I'''8~1OII 70. 351'''. ~1
54011 $.1\15.
or 0..51 on.ol.
Utl!>lll'~.
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M,I MII"
(1~1.1I"
"''0(' ,.,'U ,'"n
1009· .klhn SwtItIllor'l!b<'II"I· CltlM
do qUA!'""""'! 0" Ih'~ '''~'I'Y' Call1l4o,' "' M,~~,('"
Dtoach ~8Il·S650.
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eve. 698·3.02 DanA.
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'77 Honda ACCOId S2!\OO Musl Sell. lois N..... Musl
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SlI" I~\' " riM'"~ S~lI '""I, ,'IIn ,M IIwtlll",1
111'011111,111' ,'" III,~ II\II'I'Y' Call1lo,I,'' M.. ~k",l\tI",·h
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FOR SALE
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[)fisk and Ch"" StoC,plalY Sty"'''l)lllng labl~.I,'15
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195011
18 Y"rnaM XS!\OO, V.. ", Oood COIxlll.'n. ~50 0'
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1~8~)
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79 YRmllh" XS4110 G,,,,,I Cond,hon. li~,'"hv Inlt·
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Sh"l~nl MollYAllon COllldlnftlll' lor Sp,l"glesl
Hili •. Rell\lO""IIIII lUI orglllllring ft,ld IIOllCn,ng
1"''!'''Mls 1r01lI ~tu,lnnl IlII/A"'l"tiona. Musl t'tlI1l'
llIulllcalo .. llh Irnlmllllln •• ~llIorltle~. ,osldanco hnll
g'''UI'~.lInd olhm on campus ciulla. ()oadlr"" Nov.
IA $.~ IAhr. lfi·~Shlan ..k. Ai'plylnAlI8CCunlo,
(951.)
on",...
AS. lIusl".... Oll,en "linda" Rhldenl 10 ..ork 15
IUR wk. Acelllnio tyl',nu "nc....R'y. ApplV AZloe
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o.,liYnry DllvtllS Wanl011 ASAP lor SIINlce Corn·
palllnR hlllllg .Iob LOCllllls 281·6683.
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JOin lhn FRSI Fo. A Wo,ld HANDS!. 00 ..llholil
Ellllnll Jilsi On8 DAV. lhll,sdAV Novnrnbtl. 171h
Ami IIonll'" Y"U' F",xl Monoy 10 O.IRIT1 Amllllc".
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NlIIld R.ln 10 EI I'RSO. TX. Pay \~ 0_8. Cilil 263·
0016 lOAve Moss age.
(3931)
All Busin05' Slu<lonl.· Ai'pIV no.. 10. I'",sonnet.
Sales .•\ Advo"'5lnll Sinn 10' Spl. ·O.·Sludonl Em·
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OVERSEAS JOBS· Summer/Vear Rount!,
Europe. S. Amer .• Ausl.al, •• Aslft. All Ileids. $500.
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PublIC Relntion~ Position. Ideal lor Jour. Major
Seeking V"lulble E.per .• 10 Hours Wk .• Local
O'g"nI1allOn. Conlacl Beverly al 582·2483 lor In·
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(2498)
Reliable Students Wanled For Housellttlng. Call
295·9557.
(9554)
SDSU Siudeni ntteded lor FIiPT POI "Ion wllllin
wftlklng dlslllnctt. Job Locftters 2II1·6tI83. (9544)
A NEW CAREER
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Inquire about special
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296-7204
,,
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~~~~7~::~~~~~~~~::'~,:~,~ ~.;,'
In class, he's just another face in the croWd.
In "Heaven:' the hottest dance club in town, he's the main attraction,
$305 2Br House plus GnlAge. P,lYRto Fenced
(9509)
Vllrd. I'elft OK. Homallndlls 583·~225.
S.05 20r Homo Pool •• Iacuul. I'.ls Welcome.
HOlllorlnd8ls 6810 EI Clljon Dlvd. S63·~22S. (9507)
Col. ApI. Manager. needed 10 colillCl Aenllor 011·
eounl RanI. Job Localera 281-11883.
(95~3)
EI Conquistador Conl'lICII lor 8,,111. 3 Mile and I
Femllie openings. You cln move In Nowl Going
F•• 1. CALL 286·2~70.
(11<186)
EI Conqlliliado. Dorm Conlract· Sprtng s.m.lter.
CAli Vlr,ky AI 286·5794,
(9530)
I or 2 F Rmles naedttd 2 sh.,. 28d apt w F avail.
(10lOS)
Jan 1 wlk 2 sl. Call ASAP 2118·47118.
Femllie W.nt~ to ahar. 2 Belrm Houll' P.B. with
worlling Iluclanl. S213mo. 274·7148 tve. (8522)
Frill HoUilng Avaltabte. Walk to School. 3 Br View
of Cllmpul. Call the Clmpua locatert at 281-6883.
More CLASSIFIEDS l1li .,.. Ill,
FOOTBALL: New Mexico, at Albuquerque, Saturday, 6 p.m.
WOM..:N'S VOU.EYBALL: Long Beach State. at Long Beach, tomorrow,
7:30 p.m.
BASKETBAI.L: Men's: St. Mary's. at Moraga, Nov. 28, 7:35 p.m.
Women's: Biola, at Peterson Gym, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
CROSS COUNTRY: Women's: Ekiden Invitational, at Osaka, Japan, Nov.
. 23, to be announced.
SWIMMING: Men's: UCSD and SDSU Invitational, at UCSD, Nov. 30
through Dec. I. all day. Women's: USC, al Los Angeles, Sunday. noon.
~~~-------~---~---~-~~
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~-------
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~-~~----
Thursday, Nov. 17th
NIGHT.
Flbulou. prlza glv.IWlp
Ru•• T. Hiltz • 25¢ Dratta
Ticket giveaways to Charger/Denver pme.
Rock;n'Rhythm & Blues from San Francisco
The Dynatones
Friday & Saturday, Nov. 18th·19th
9PM
An ~LM Presentation AKOCH/KIRKWOOD Production AJOHN G. AVlLDSEN Film ANIGHT
IN HEAVEN
CHRISTOPHER ATKINS LESLEY ANN WARREN ROBERT LOGAN
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•
l========================== STARTS FRI DA Y=============================1
PACIFIC'S LA JOllA
VillAGE THEATRES
8879 Villa La Jolla Dr.
(N. of La Jolla Village Square)
453·7831
1:00 • 3:00 • 5:05
7:00 • 8:55 • 10:45
PACIFIC'I SWEETWATER
& THEATIlES
In the Town and Country
Shopping Center· 805 Fwy.
al Sweetwater Rd. 474·8571
12:30' 2:20' 4:15
6:05 • 8:00 • 10:10
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FashIOn Valley Center
West of Nordstrom' 291·4404
6:00 ' 8:00 • 9:55
AMC WIEGAND PLAZA
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Parkway Plaza
EI Cajon' 440·0306
12:45 • 2:30 • 4:20
6:15' 8:10 • 9:55
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220 North EI Camino Real
EnciOilas • 9425544
5:15 • 7:30 • 9:30
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Imperial Beach' 423·2727
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3156 Sports Arena Blvd.
223·2546 • 1:30 • 3:30
.5:30 • 7:30 • 9:30
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Opens at 5:30
Sunday, Nov. 20th
fIX
pr...nt,
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Tuesday, Nov. 22nd
Jazz
Planllt
Tania Maria
one .how only $7,50
Wednesday. Nov. 23rd
Return of
THE BRATZ
DAILY AZTEC November 17, 1981 -
15
----------.Classifieds---fontlnllt'd ""1",
pall" 14.
Fomlle OH·C.,npul Doon Cunl,nel For Slle In [I
ConqulslAdor. Cnll 21170111143.
(05M)
FrlKl Rnnll For lhe I1ItII 01 Nov.lCnmpanlle Manor:5
min. "om SDSUISI5OIfmI1287·0549.
(9580)
For Sal.: Mile DomI Conlrne! EI Conqulalndor.
Mov, In Now. CIII !Of Inlo. 28707716.
(9599)
MIF Roommlle W.nled 5 Ddrm Unlurn. Housa In
Mlrn M.... S2101mo 1II11. !186·981 I .
(9524)
F. Roommal. Wallied. I large Ddrm. lOmn lrom
S[)SU. $190 hUll. Av.1I Dec. I 891-11600.(16001)
Fomftle Rm.M.le w.nled 10 Ihnr. mllr. Bm. I mile
10 SDSU $ I 40 mo. plul I.... Ind lurnlture. Condo
582·3616 H.nlher.
(18013)
FM Rmmnlas· Huge 4 lIdrm houl. by EI Konk 5 I 15
shftrll' $225 own· Jill 582·3282.
(16128)
$175 OUllel Conngll. Fllne.d Yard. Pels OK.
Hornollnders 6810 EI Caton Blvd. 1183·4225. (9506)
O[ST PROFI!SSlONAl TYI'ING'I:DITINO. Dis.
arlnllons, nu:S[S, Scrnenplnya. mnnumlilla.
[kp. F.lIg. Illachnl/wrllnr. Jllnolln,h. 691H6l5
(2261)
DISCOUNl' TYI'ING· SCRII'I'S· MIRA MESA
AREA· Op[N 6 DAYS· SATURDAY 11-12. CAll
518·2011.
(2449)
Ekperl TYPINGIEDITINO By Bam. 2 Blocks Florn
SDSU. Evenlnga<Wnnk.nd •. 1183-4635.
(9505)
IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NF.IOUUOR.
HOOD. Can you a.y TOMMY T. SfURT? I IIk.lhe
Wly you 8fty Ihnl. Hit IIv'l allhe ll:lSURE CON.
NECTION Whele he Ilikacr"na H.n•• Beely· T'I
lor SUO a •. plul III·up. Can you dial 265·6994?
(7381)
Sure, I kr_ YOII couldl
IBM Typlll: TUESIS SPECIALIST; Also T.rm I'nll'
all, Rasurnes ... FftSlfAccuralll. 281·8981. (9556)
IBM TVpINO: TERM PAPERS, THESI!S, RI:.
SUMES, DISSI:RTATIONS. EOlmm, RUSH
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(11572)
NEED A TYI'IST? RI:ASONABlE, SI'EEOY,
ACCURATE. CALL KAnUE· ANYTIME 576.1217.
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IIndors 6810 EI Cajon Blvd. 583-4225.
(11508)
(11524)
$425 In Milia 2Br Oarnge. Privil. Fenced Ynrd.
Musl See! Hundreda Morell 583·4225.
(Q505)
PREGNANT? TROUBLED? Ekplorll Ihe alllrni'
IIvello abortion. Frfltl prolesllonnl counlellng and
aelvlces. S.D. Pro·l./ln lllaoue 583·5433. 24
hoUII.
(15081)
Mnle Or F.mlle Wlnled 10 Share 3bedroom
House. 3mln 10 SDSU. Reaponllble a Neal. Call
Ironll al 582·6829. Move In 000. I.
(9600)
Nonsmoking F. Needed '10 Iha" 2 br IIPI. In La
Me8R. 5140 ulllilies. 403·1299.
(18014)
"PRIVATE FEMALE ROOM AVAILABLE" Plln
Ahood For Sprlngl N.w Furnllhed 2,Slory Condo
1.5 miles Irom SDSU. 52251monlh Inc!udeI: Own
P,lvale Room, Oaragll WI Opener. MlcrownvlI.
Dishwashor. Pool, Jacuzzi. And Many Mor. X·lrls.
Avnllable Anyllme Aller Dec. 161h. MUll Seall •
583·6413 lynda.
(10001)
Roommales MiF: AIIII.llng Frill!. Cftll SDSU Homll
locnlllrs 281 ·6683.
(~549)
Roommalll Needed lor Home Nllar Collnge. M·F
Including pool more. SDSU Home localell 281·
6683.
(9541)
PEDESEN TYPING SERVICE· TYI'ING, WORD
PROCESSING. AND TRANSCRIBING· 460.4654.
(2470)
PROFESSIONAL TYPINO REASONABll!. PAP.
ERS, RESUMES, ETC. lORRAINE 421.0426
SOUTH BAY.
(2499)
PROFESSIONAL ACADEMIC WORD PRoCES.
SING: SAVE MONEY AND TIME: CAll IF.E 454.
2239.
(9511)
I need. Ride 10. Or on Iha Way 10, SW ORE Iround
Nov. 17. Will Ply moll gam. 265·3039.
(7252)
Need A lawyer But Can'l Anord The High Fee.?
Aaaoclaled Siudeni. CHell legll AIII.lance In
80lh Civil and Criminal M.nara. Call 265.6578.
CAll ANNE 1197·9535.
(UIO() I)
pew TYPINn st:nvICI:· CALL 265·6354.(3004)
CONOAATlJI.ATlON[I In Tllo II" \'ft an,l 1h"
\\U's On wumlnu Illn Ilnnn·. 1rnphy! nund .Iobl
~I 1hll " \41'..
(1fIlXI~1
RAOUI:T R[StRINGING: So1.IIIl·SlIlItIp, $11.l1li·
Ornphlla. NT&W 4350 I'alm AVII., Ln M.. "n. !i81'.
8455 MOII.·FrI. lO·S I!kp. 1213\"".
(115111)
• Dlf. Ron M A III" All Nighle". Yuu AlII nW"lnnlfl
.SKYOIVINO SI'ECIAL FOR STUDENTS: FIlii
Jump COUI"O, Iralnlng & nil III1UIJ)rnnnl Included,
Jump Ihlll.m. day. 185 wllh .Iudllnl 1.0. C.1I421.
01168 lor Inlo.
(1 fl:OIlII)
DU'I 0.1 Rnndy lor I'ally on Hardy. III. Oolng 10
be Aw".oma. Thn .\TII'I.
(10114)
TYPINO· BAnBARA'S BUDGET TYI'INCl &
WORD I'AOCESSING· WORK GUARANf!iW.
480·1618.
(1411)
G.mml .... See yn" 1m Th,,11 SloII on Thurl. II'I
gonna btl Awn.omn. I.ovn, \Til'..
(111116)
Kim. AIlr.ilOlftll", AK: I'mllol.a Room, Uomer, Aug.
6. Where n U Now? S.ndy 2116·3270.
(41180)
TYI'ING, Elpall.nced, Teim I'Ape'" Tllall., Oil'
lel1allOn., Jonn Glunl, 463·1130.
(199)
AXU Linda U: lJ R WAY cool and luper 8pIOiaiio
mell'm "Ilsych"d" 4 1I".lltlma.l"rl .Vlckl •.
(1I!l97)
TYPING TYI'ING FAST FAST lO COST CLOS[
TO STATE. [Mil Y 286·2883. LUANNE 563·6858.
(14807)
0\\ Ma,Iy: I am III"d you nlll my IIHI" brolherll
1: 1:' ~ love, [lilabtll".
(84411)
'
Th. ColitlOea 01 EducallOn and Human Serviens
NeIld A.S. Council Rep,.lenialivell Olin Valunbla
Ekparlol1ClI, Apply Now In The A.S. OIllee, lower
IlIvlIl Allee Cllnler· la.l day I. Novembllr 291h.
(151&1)
UNWANTED HAIR REMOVI![)' f'ERMANENTl Y
In Collegn·ar.a al Aivallldo Medleal Cenler. Cnll
(15123)
286·1601 FOI Appolnlmenl.
UNI'S TYPING SERVICE lOyr Ekp. Thll.." PHD,
a Foreign lang. IBM Sel. CorrllCllng. 460·9858.
(3918)
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY· Complale Color,
R.asonable, 14 VII Ekparlence. F.d 444·1651.
A=O\·.
I'am & J.,1. .. 000d Job on Orllllk Wenk.
We·r. proud 01 you. M~'I'.\ '" Your Siller •.
(16010)
Pally on ...,dyl ,,' ha" Parly 01 The Yeal. Thl.
Friday II .HII And DU Hou....
(16116)
.Randy. Congralulillonlill YQU did an Awlt·
lOme Job on Thll Floll, I .m ao Proud 01 Youlll
loYII You Soooo Muchl • • • Kllarl.
(1I!III3)
AXO Caley Forgy: Wa dug digging with you Sun·
dayl We couldll'l have bul" lhe lind ca.U. wlthoul
(9424)
yall LOYII';! \;I t;J YOUI I'ledge".
AXO Man Scan Fore.man, Think. lor all you,
IUpport and encouragement. WII love Youll ""~
The Alpha ChlPledgel t;J
(11423)
'J.
WORDPROCESSINO· RESUM!;S, TH[SIS,
MSS.S2.00IPO. a UP. COMPUTER RENTAl) IN·
STRUCTION RESUMES. 583-1832 OR 7828.
PROCESS· IT.
(2383)
PERSONALS
(8485)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Atlo Angle: Thank. 4 lhe Gr••1 lime II "F •• In
Fanlalyland." Our adventure WI. 2 Funlll • UI
VICki.
(8598)
A TYPING· Books. papers. Iholes. relumes ...
Fasl, reasonable, near SDSU. Joan 267·3199.
TYPING, WORD PROCESSING, TRANSCRIB·
lNG, THESES, FILM SCRIPTS. Nr. SDSU 468·
0816.
(2437)
CONGRATULATIONS To The lovely LIII1IeI 01
1'4>11 (The be.1 11.ler sorority) on Winning Oreek
Wfltlk, and Speclll Coogr.11 10 RIUI lOf Being
Homecoming Oueenll W.·r. 10 proud 01 Youl
1;1 1;1 1;1 The KAII'..
(16001)
PAPERS TYPED. RI:ASONABlE (SI A PAGE)
"l·....
DU·. nnr!
Thll Floal Building w.. Orlll"
Think lor Every1l1lngl ,,'. Tile II ...·•.
(16131)
TYPltlG·I'ROFESSIONAl·IBM· TERM I'AI'ERS·
RESUMES·lETTERS·ETC·FAST· JUDY· 483·
1I!i82.
(H18)
RAOUET RESTRINGING· Shtiep $7.99, Oraphlte
50.99. NTaW 4350 Palm Ave., la M.... 589·
8455. Mon.·Fri. 10·5.
(8487)
(15179)
lloal bulkllt'" A I'll bUild II IllIIpln cow Willi you
anyllmal ,)JAnica,' 1:'.
(l1li1 I)
Ehl Thelaguccl.1 Tha Slgmnchl &OIher. would like
10 r.mlnd you aboullne Widing. ahe I. only 3 day.
awayl
(11561)
Madel •• AC1oll, And Enlnl1alnela: Gol your Poll·
10110 al lialll'llcnl Call 270·8029.
(9454)
Memorandum: Inl.. rnlhlp SlaH Jell & Doull ......
Job Wall Donel The oHlCe look. G,e.l. Monly'I'
Fri.· I 2 noank. Pilcher on me. Thlnkll Ouell Who?
(liMO)
,,1:
:lIaldulllIl Kim, CooglllulaUon, 011 Fln.lly gel.
Ung InlUaledl You're lhe Bell III all Iny guy oollkl
alk lor I Thank You lor everything you'vo donn.
Love YaB, John.
(9582)
To ....\11 Rhannon· 1'10 1\0 glad we alO bnr.omlno
BLOOM COVa':f..-t_________
ArTEtmON, INTRUP£R:
1H15 151H6 CfNlRAt. u.s.
COMfImR CJ=FIC£. YOO ARE
~OVGl1N6 AN IUU4 INlRUSlON ItnJ lR.&. f1W5.
l~nFY YOCJR5Uf.
"If...
.w.60..
~T:
"SJE ...
IUftfflfY
"5TM~.~
(~Y.
ck""r You lIa Ihn .wnelnnl IHlllO" "ver· I Inva
YIlIIIIl d.llh YOII knnw II YIlU naed Inylhlng I'll bo
rlllllllll ..,,, lor yo" Hnvtl UIIIHI' lllanhlOlvlno IUlkl
(lI!1l1ft)
wonk I'll mill yn lnv. VUR Callill
1Illll"UIICCII' " "V .. , WII hIli 1111011"" 10 btl dontl,
mnrrylng Tllllial wnllkl b. I, Ind III ord.r 10" your
Imll" Ulnw n mlln " wnukillavn 10 he donIllnllnll
Ilylnl TllfIlllolllnr. Blurn.chi
(9Ml~)
loday·allleDlY. Fa,lIndlY. Join PIIOIlIawho 1:.111
and end WOlld Itungol. W. e:ln'l dn II wllhoul yo"
Dlmal .. your lood money 10 O.lnm America. We
Need Voulll
(1I11:!?)
Tn 11111 CIlI,mlng Ollllilimen 01 TKE: W. LovlIlI,,,
Carnalionl and Ihe ,,"lInlKIIl And WI! ElljllClally
love Youlll Congralulallon. on Winning OrHkl
XXXOOO Th.
""."1.
(Itl003)
To Thll Slgmac.cx:IIlIOlhllll· Til.. Th"lagur.c1 fila·
ler. would Ilk" 10 101 yQU know how lI.clled we a,o
101 11111 0.11 [venl Salulday nlglli. I'S: Our blldll
h.. Ylll10 I11III a Alnu'l?1I
(18005)
TKE, l"M, 111m, o\).oi', H,A \EO\:WI·r ••oglnll
w" gol 10 know you bailer dUllng G,k W"kl WII
lurll got lOme a_.oll1l pair upa From Carnlvnl
day 10 S'llng 10 Ihtt Floall " 1".'11.
(16009)
0\ X III bm SI.VII: 'I'ou',e Ih" Cul.llllII.. bro I I'm
lIappy 10 hive you. \'J I:' VIIS Rocky I') I;!. (11555)
M'· •... You·relh. Or.ale,1 Rial .., !lolor"yll We ':)
Youl XO· Thell""all
(16132)
LOST/FOUND
FOUND: SMALl. LHASO AI'SO (Ponlble MI.
Breed). SIn Diego Siaia Unlv . .,al, Gr.v lind
Whllll. He needl a home Now. Can'l Kettp. He II
h•• llhy, Hal lhola. and II Appm •. 2 yrl old. Call
Nancy 485·34211
(8573)
TRAVEL
Alrllnll Tlckel Roundtrip Anywhe,e· Dome.he u.s.
Ekl)lleo Doc. 15. Northwnal Alllin"l. legllly Trnn.·
larablD. Blownlng 560·4~21.
(11542)
CIEE COUNCil TRAVEL: Open M·F 10·(' In lhe
UCSO Siudeni Cenler. CIEE o"el: budge1 nlghll,
rail pa..... laura. bookl, Inaurane•• wolk nnd
'Iudy pr~f8m., and much mole. Call 452·01130.
(2200)
MAMMOTU SKI TRIP JAN. 1·6 $' 6~. SAN F[LlP[
DEC. 9·ll $105. OHAWAY TOURS 275·3030
X:!70.
(11400)
~
~r1Hl5
I1t1I/Nl
I
Read
DAILY
AZTEC
comics
everyday!
G.ABI'IBLD
Support
DAILY
AZTEC
Advertl ••r.
kl)ft 0"\,.00(:
F,,'e, O' c,L.OGI<:
fA"£. NAP.
W~1"~ 1'1.
!J'~ ot,~Oc,,,~ ~l1' "lN~.
~'Je.N O'CLOCK: 6OOF' Off..
£l6~1' O·'l«K'·
root" AROONO,
~'''f. 0"1..0''':
f£,l,A~ ...
DAILY
AZTEC
The I)AII.Y AZTEC CJmifieds
arc ca\y 10 placc.
ine_pcn\ivc. and really
work fa\I!
DAIl.Y AZTEC dmificd\,
Iry (Inc on.
Classlfleds
~~--,_.~@m~]~--_=-------_&----------~PA~/~D~A~D~~'~ER~11~S~E~;i~~-------------------------'
Ute
I-Jite Beer from Miller PreScIlts ...
IJtc
CLUBS
SPORT
....
..
1m~~~~~~an~~
~~~~~ ~~~~na~~~~mn~~~~::::~::;:;~~~~~='~~9m"""no~~~~~~~R~"""'"
EVENTS
MILLE
uPcoMiNG
Lacrosse -
Western Coilegiate Champs
11·8 opm OMBAC
Waterski -
Missioll Ilt-adl
1980 NationaI Ch amps..
11·11) & 20 Ram San Dkg,' lIosts Tourtl,'y
...~..
M"SIl'" Bay
San Diego City Ch amps..
Rugby -
;.?
11·11) H:.lllllnivcrsiti,'s TuUrnaOlcnt
Robb hl'ld
(b,ted with ag..• and
tttnl')
17 and lInd"IIt'n'.
L"hn~. I'<n'lII1<t,,: t7;
.1!l;(KI
Women'"
e",ill". R,,,nnnn: t7; .16;OH
IM·19 Mon',
OVERfiLL WtNNER I'ell. lim<IlI<:
~4:5t
Snowski
11·211 & ~7 Rare' Clink
Crew -
"HI-LITES"
SPORT etUBs IIOMF.COM.
IN(; 8K
TOP nNISIU:RS
National Ch amps
Surfing -
11·1') 7am I'eppenline
t~
All",' nowl
Mal1ll1111th ~hHlI1tain
•
Second in the nation
12·1 Christmas
Rl~g~'fla
Long Bl':lch
~4;
l.eltt.'~mu, Ruhcn-Alhcrtn: 22; 2C);O:!
WURlfn'lt
Crisp. Llluric: ~H: 10
(jan.'ill, Eliltnll: 21; 2l):02
.1(k19 Mrn'!I
Tumey. Mike: .lb: 29:40
Womtn's
P.\\tllO. Sh.mm: .\'7: J5:06
40.49 M,n',
Sail, Frunk
Wumtn'!i
Mnrrls, lklh: 4M; .l~:5.\
50·59 Men',
Uull;ulll}" 1\lhl1: 5J: J5:2J
\\'umtn'!
Hub'wn. Mlt:kl: 52: ,lo:4 \
60 Men'!i
B(lunJ~I. Ci~'n~'
SAILING TEAM RETURNS FROM HAWAII
WOnlcn'!i
Brel..'ht, He-th
I
The San Die)!" State llnil'l'rsity S"iling Team tral'eled tll the Hal':aii:lI~
Islands. Novemher 2 thm 0 tn cnmp,'te against the llniwrsity ul' Hawaii
Sailing Team. The ,·hallcnge. which began I'nur years ag" in H,lwaii pits
the \\;cstcm Athletic Conference \ ~lIlly two sailing h:am~ again\1 cal'h
otIU..'f in hoth h.',UIl f.h.:ing. tn Llscr~ and match racmg lf1 J~~-t.·s.
After arriving N,w.2. thc team. "nnsisting of Shawn ~Iacking" (Captain).
Mark Butler. Wilkm Emlller. Sha,,'n Hig)!inhntham and Chris Prcll got
situated and prepare,j themsell'es for Thursday', pral'tice nut of thc Waiki·
ki Yacht Club. and off n( Diamnnd H,'ad in J·2-1·s. The winds were light
ranging from eight to lineen knllls. On Friday. the team tral'eled tn
Konenhe )':Kht Club which i, on the far side nfthe island. and ,'nmpeteu 11\
Lascr~. mah:hin1! f\lUf of tht..' San Diego Slate team nll~mhcrs a!!ainst fournf
the linin:'fsity ",t' Hawaii tcam nl(·m~rs. The end fcsuil \\:as much rln~cr
than the "'(l)r~ itself. with the University of Hawaii winning Ihrl'C {lUi of
four team race,. On SafUrda\' b:Kk at the \V,"kiki )'a,'ht Club. the tll'n
teams ceared thenbcll'es up'f"r th,' Fnurth Annual Perpetual Tmphy.
entitled the Freednm Trophy. This title "\nIl' fmm two falll,lllS saih'rs.
Der~en l1frhe L'ni\'crsirv l1f Hawaii who sJileo on the twelve merer
"Freedom'':" as (ao:tlCian in its S~((cssful defense against Ausrralia. AI the
fXnnis
same tim.~ DennIS Conn,)r. a San Dieg,) State graullate. wa, the skipper of
the boat.
The trophy il,elf resides in the offi.:e
the Presidcnt of thc respe.:tive
schooL In its fiN .:hallenge in 1980, San Diego State won 3·2: in 1981thc
Univcrsitv of Hawaii won it back J·2: 1982 found the same rcsult, Hawaii
winning 3-2. This year's racc had by far the two Ocst tcams from each
school ever eompeting. Univcrsity of Hawaii boasted cxtremc depth this
year. with two nc" freshmen and two sophomores 011 the team of five
~'hich raced on the J·2-1. Thc winds once again were moderate and the
c()mpetition was liercely close. with the University of Hawaii winning 3·1.
On the last leg alone, ooth teams tacked ovcr 40 timcs Ocfore the Universi·
ty of Hawaii eked out a victory to claim the cup for the third year in a row.
"r
Donations help make this particular competition possible. This year. the
University of Hawaii :;ent us $350. along with the team·received monies
from the San Diego Association of Yacht Clubs totalling $500. allli
Mission Bay Yacht Club donated $100 to the competition.
All in all, even though we lost the competition. the event provcd very. very
successful in true team spirit and comradeship Oct\;een the two schools.
Next year's competition again will oc in Hawaii.
SPORT CLUB DIRECTORY
Badminton
Bowling
Cycling
Crew (Men's)
Crew (Women's)
Fencing
Lacrosse
Rugby
Sailing
Snowski
Waterski
Waterpolo (Men's)
Waterpolo (Women's)
Wind Surfing
Women's Soccer
Wrestling
Tim Tullio
Tim Livengood
Carl Weyman
Gregg Buckley
Judy Young
Barb O'Dell
Bob Lowe
Jim Parker
Shawn MacKinga
Martin Williams
Christy Bergmark
Travis Thompson
Sheila Finney
Leslie Osmera
Tami Anderson
Omar Paloma
ASSOCIATED STUDEnrS
464·2141
582·894Q
287-3747
488·4956
456·0964
282·5610
265·0310
279·1422
266-8930
697-5714
265-3132
265·6424
265·6424
286-8583
286-1047
265·6424
~
SDSU NATIONAL
CHAMPION SURt'ERS
HOST pEPpERDINF.
The Aztec Surfers take the waves
again this Saturday morning
while hosting Pepperdine University. This spectacular surling
event will he held (wm 7:00 am
until I :(K) pm in the green room
off Mission Beach ncar Hamel's
Surf Shop.
SPORT CLUBS HOMECOMING 8K A WET SUCCESS
Over 1.(lOO runn,'rs gathered at San Diego's Jack Murphy Stadium Saturday
Morning to run the I st annual Homecoming SK. Braving a constant down
pour. Graeme Fell linished first. still mnning away from his nearest wmpeti.
tor. in 24:51.
The Sport Clubs >ponsorcd their tirst Homecoming Run 1:lst year. a 5K on
campus which was a rousing succcss but generated lillie profit. In an allempt
to genemte more funds. a decision was made to change the run to an SK and
move to the stadium. Sport Club's Coordinator Rich Clakelcy commented,
"We were apprehensive in our move from On campus 10 the stadium hut. you
can see that despite the rain the Sport Clubs arc sponsor to a great mn. one
which should generate more and more funds for the economically strapped
Sport Clubs every year. ,. R'lce Director John Locher was in agreement and
remarked "That's right!"
Several runners commented that the course was a good one and that linishing
on the stadium floor was an awesome sight. Finish Line Coordinator Eric Hmh
shook his head in agreement. while Craig Curless imemlptcd each, "I was the
oflicial timer!" For the lirst time. a professional finish line company was
engaged to provide an accurate and concise set of results. Utilizing a triple
check system the End Of The Line Company and its pres idem Judy Young
eliminated many problems that have plagued previous races.
Providing laoor for this event were nearly 100 Sport Club athletes and the
entire Rec Sports Staff. John Lucher announced, "It shows just how much the
athletes are devoted to their respective sports when they show up at 4 in th"
morning, in the rain. to work for no personal payment." The Sport Clubs
Council President Mark Benson extended a hardy Thank You to all who
helped and especially to the Rec Sports Staff who have Ocen hard at work for
weeks generating interest.
Sport Clubs would also like to thank Mesa Distributing and Ferraro's for their
unmatched support, and several other donors among whom were Golden
Getaways RV Rentals and Dudley's Bakery. The Homecoming Cllmmillce
also gets a hardy thank you for their assistance.
-wELCOME~~=-!
to 7Ili1Ler1Lme
Comedy Night
Tue.~day 11-15 al 8:00 p.m.
Monty's Den
Also 11·22 and //·29
KCR - Miller Noon COllcert Scrie.~
Cancel/cd neXI Iwo weeks
Relums Friday 12·2 at 12 Iloon
Money's palio • FREE
"'rit/en IIlJd cdlted by Clilb Sports
BOWLING CtUB PUNS
BOWt-A·THON
The SDSU Bowling Team is cur·
rently looking for sponsors to
pledge a penny or more per pin for
3 games. This fundraiser will
generate funds th:1I help defray
the substantial eKpenses of the
SDSU Bowling Team. Anyone
wishing to help some of the
SDSU's lines! can contact Barry
Long at the Red/Black Bowl,
265·6424.
CAL BERKEtEY WINS
SAN DIEGO
INVITATIONAL
The Bears from Cal Berkeley
averaged over 200 pins per game
to sweep the San Diego Invitational held here at SDSU, Octo·
ocr 15th and 16th. The Aztecs
averaging a lillie over 170 pins
placed 12th au! of 16 teams entering. The SDSU Bowlers neKt
match is December 3rd.
W ATERPOLO DIVES INTO
SDSU SPORT SCENE
Men's and Women's Waterpolo
clubs are hard at work putting
together next springs schedule.
Respected nationally as a waterpolo powerhouse SDSU missed
out on the fall pre·season when
ooth teams missed a stroke trying
to form this semester.
WRESTtING CWB NOW
FORMING
The SDSU Sport Clubs announce
the information of the Aztec
Wrestling team under the direc·
tion of Omar Paloma. While nev·
er'l powerhouse, SDSU for many
years was home for a very com·
petitive and respectable wrest·
ling team.
FENCING CWB SEEKS
PARTICIPANTS
Barb O'Dell of the Fencing Club
is seeking interested SDSU stu··
deilts to lill out th~ Aztec Fencing
Team squad.