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C ALIFORNIA S TATE U NIVERSITY. S AN M ARCOS

mMm

Ghosts haunt
local landmarks

Page 9

Phantom brings
horror to stage

Page 16

�NEWS

INSIDE
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990

SITES PREVIEWED FOR
NEWEST CAL STATE SCHOOL
Cal State"\fentura moved one step closer to
reality when an advisory committee identified three potential sites for the permanent
home of the future university. Ventura would
mark the 21st Cal State campus.
NEWS/PAGE 4
PIONEER RECAPS INITIATIVES
Initiatives put forth on the Nov. 6 Ballot are
vast and confusing. Pioneer gives its picks
of the initiatives for the elections with an
editorial comment on each describing how
choices were made. Pioneer also makes a
statement on gubernatorial candidates.
O PINION/PAGE 8
EXPLORING H AUNTED HOUSES
Three stories of area haunted houses, the
Whaley House, the Rancho Buena Vista
Adobe and Room 3502 of the,Hotel Del
Coronado are told by Pioneer reporters.
Stories of who haunts these buildings and
why will let you determine for yourself if
real spirits actually dwell in San Diego.
Also a feature on a psychic who finds missing persons is presented.
EXPLORE/PAGE 9
MONSTER MAZE TERRIFIES
ITS HAPLESS VISITORS
Thrill Seekers takes a walk through the
Family Fun Center's Monster Maze. Find
out why this is one of the best man made
haunted houses in the area.
EXPLORE/PAGE 1 3
•PHANTOM OF THE OPERA'
A TRULY TERRIFYING PLAY
With the absence of Michael Crawford as
the Phantom in this Andrew Lloyd Webber
musical, the stage production takes on a
new terrifying scope. What was once a
heart-wrenching love story now becomes a
tale of horror with Benson's Robert Guillaume in the title role.
ACCENT/PAGE 1 6

NEWS
OPINION
EXPLORE
THRILL SEEKERS
ACCENT
CALENDAR

P AGE 2
P AGE 6
P AGE 9
P AGE 1 3
P AGE 1 6
P AGE 1 8

PIONEER/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 199(j

Task Force d rafts Mission S tatement

J ONATHAN YOUNG/PIONEER
A task force formed to establish a student government at Cal State San
Marcos has overcome its first hurtle in a race to finish a government
package before the end of the semester.
At their Oct. 24 meeting, Task Force members completed a Mission
Statement that would set the foundation for the future Associated Students at CSUSM. The statement is the first in a series of projects that
would establish a student governmental system.
"We are in our second iteration of the drafting of the mission statement
for the Associated Students,** said Dean of Student Services Ernest
ZomalL Zomalt also serves as chair of the Task Force.
"It was a necessary first step before even doing a constitution," said
David Hammond, task force member. "But that bit of work (the mission
statement) is done.**
Task force members sought to write a broad, but firm, foundation for
the university of the 21st century.
"We have had spirited conversations reflecting the best hopes for the
Association,'* said Zomalt. "The task force has done an excellent job in
identifying the critical areas which should serve as the foundation for the
Associated Students.*'
"The gist of statement is to recognize that it*s a world of interdepend-

ence and pluralism," said Hammond, a so we made the mission statement
as one that would promote pluralism and the recognition of the diversity
in the world population.
"The mission statement seeks to provide a path that will be relevant to
the 21st century. At all times the task force kept close in mind that this
school is theCSU flagship for the 21st century.
"Hence, we included the normal commitment to student services and
extra curricular activities, but a lot of the language is dedicated to the
principals of non-discrimination, and supplementing the educational
experience to make the student a more sophisticated person.
"We sought to reflect the bigger mission of the school."
The final Associated Students package would include the completed
Mission Statement, a constitution, and guidelines for a student newspaper
and a yearbook.
The next hurtle for the task force to overcome is to establish a
constitution. Becuase the university is being built from the ground up, the
students on the task force have the unique opportunity of forming any
type of government they wish.
"The slate is not completely clean,** said Zomalt at thefirsttask force
meeting. "There are certain guidline that must be followed.'*
SEE MISSION/PAGE 4

rr—rr
C S U S M Students choose Feinstëin
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Diane
Feinstein was chosen over Republican Pete
Wilson, in an unscientific, anonymous pollof
Cal State San Marcos students, to win in November's election.
Sixty students weie asked by Pioneer out
O ct 26 to write their c tofcesfer Cisflifomia^
next governor. One third of those polled said
fliey would choose Feinstein while one quarter of the polled population said they would
vote forWilson.Twelveundecided votes were
recorded a ni I I votes i br a third party were

overWilson

Sixty students were asked by Pioneer on Oct. 26 to write
their choice for California's next governor.
Pete Wilson (R)

25%

Diane Feinstein (D)
Because the population ^ ^ ^ M ^ s
not demographicaily match the general popaMon,the poHisreflectiveonlyofhow CSUSM
s
t
u
d
e
H
i
e
poll does not necessarily reflect accurately the
outcome of the general election, % &gt; C
f or
Feinstein may reflect the higher female population of the school. Some of those polled expressed that they liked Feinstein's stand on

35%

Other Candidate

12%

Undecided

12%

Because the population of CSUSM does not demographicaily match the generai population, the poll is reflective only ofhow CSUSM
students willv&lt;*? *** Nov. 6election. The poll does not necessarily reflect accurately the outcome of the general election. Number
of students total 10 percent of total population

-I t a e w h o v o t ó ^ W i l ^ ^
his c onsemüve stances on issues,

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�N ews B riefs
S CHOLARSHIPS O FFERED
Two new scholarships are now available through the Cal State San
Marcos Financial Aid Office.
The Soroptimist International of Vista Training Awards offers $595
to aid a woman who needs additional education to upgrade her employment status, is the head of her household or has a familyfinanciallydependent on her and demonstrates financial need. Deadline for the
application is Dec. 15.
Ten national In View awards of up to $2,500 each and five national
awards of $500 each are available to women with strong personal
achievements in any one of five areas: outstanding contribution to
community service, triumph over personal adversity, outstanding contribution to the preservation of the environment, outstanding achievement related to academic interest, or outstanding contribution to interracial harmony and understanding. Applicants must be full time undergraduates, and financial need is not a criterion. Deadline for the
application is Dec. 15.
One book scholarships are also available.
The Friends of the Library and University Bookstore Scholarship
offers $200 and a 10 percent Bookstore discount and is available to
CSUSM or SDSU North County undergraduates who are enrolled in at
least six units. The recipient will be selected based on a 300-500 word
essay responding to the question, "In what way have books influenced
your life?" Deadline is Nov. 9.

Dispute halts construction
until the bill is paid.
In addition to the cost of work previously done on the site, Poss also is
asking Louetto for compensation for
campus, and college officials specu- downtime during the dispute. The
late the disagreement could delay the amount of compensation is yet undeopening of thefirstphase of the main termined by Poss.
campus by one semester.
Louetto, which was awarded the $9
Poss officials claim that Louetto is million building contract in April, is
delinquent in paying them $1.3 mil- in charge of the first phase of the
lion for work already completed at the construction project They have been
site. The subcontractor has refused to
continue grading work on the project
SEE DISPUTE/PAGE 5

Contractor Louetto Construction Inc.
behind in payments t o subcontractor
Construction on Cai State San
Marcos*s permanent campus ground
to a halt last month, due to a contractual dispute between Louetto Construction Inc. of Escondido and grading subcontractor C.W. Poss of
Anaheim.
The dispute sets back the already
tight construction schedule of the

C ONCERT S ERIES C ONTINUES
CSUSM and SDSU North County continue their concert series on
Nov. 4 with Bertram Turetzky.
Turetzky is the most recorded contrabass soloist in America. Since
1995, more than 300 new works have been written for, performed and
recored by him.
The concert starts at 7 p.m. in the University Library. All concerts in
the series are free. For more information, call 471-3515

S TUDENTS S OUGHT T O S ERVE O N B OARDS
The Dean of Student Services is looking for students interested in
serving on the following University Boards and Committees:
• Academic Vice President Search Committee (1)
• CSUSM Foundation Board of Directors (1)
• CSUSM Public Events Committee (3)
Students interested in any of the positions should stop by the Dean
of Student Services Office in Building 125 or call 471-4105.

Aztec Shop officials reported thatthe east window in the bookstore, pictured in this photo taken before classes
this semster, was broken to gain entry into the student bookstore for a burglary last week.

Simpsons stolen in bookstore theft

C ONDOMS A VAILABLE
Student Health Services has condoms available for sale for CSUSM
and SDSU North County students. Cost for the condoms is 12 for $2.
Influenza vaccinations are also available to students at Health Services.

S TUDENT A WARDED S CHOLARSHIP
CSUSM English major Elizabeth Sansom was awarded the $1,000
California State University Scholarship. According to Paul Phillips of
the Financial Aid Office, Sansom is the only student in the state to win
the award.

C OMPUTER F AIR S CHEDULED
San Diego State University hosts a Computer Fair to show the
university departments and faculty their "Partnership between Education and Technology."
It will be on Nov. 1 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Aztec Center,
Montezuma Hall on the main campus.
There will be product announcements, industry speakers, hands-on
demonstrations, games and drawings. Representatives from Apple,
IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba, Microsoft, WordPerfect, Lotus and
Ashton-Tatc will be present.
Giveaways include a computer, printer, software and accessories.

LARRY BOISJOUE/PIONEER
Aztec Shops officials are shouting
"Aye Caramba," after an Oct. 22
burglary robbed them of watches,
calculators and Simpsons paraphernalia.
According to a report filed with
the Vista Sheriffs Department, the
incident occurred sometime between
3p.m. Sunday and 6:50a.m.Monday.
The burglar gained entry by shattering the lower east window of the
bookstore which services Cal. State
San Marcos and San Diego State's
North County campus.
Bookstore manager Deboran
Meeker estimates the cost of items
stolen at $1,486.70. A Macintosh SE
computer, with an approximate value
of $2,000, was left behind along with
hundreds of dollars in software.
Among the items stolen were $400
in watches, $295 in Cassette recorders, $190 in backpacks, $ 155 in clothing and $90 in stuffed animals.

Even though bookstore employees refused official comment, some
speculate that the burglar took items
that are most easily pawned.
Although the computer and software were of greater val ue, they would
be more difficult to sell than the items
taken.
The Simpsons collection, which
includes buttons, T-shirts and baseball caps is a high-in-demand line that
is easily sold to consumers. Bookstore officials claim that great pains
were taken to acquire some the $130
collection.
Buttons, with picture of Bart and
the Simpson family were meticulously
removed from the cardboard placard
which held them. Employees commented that it would have been easier
for the perpetrator to take the whole
placard.
I Vista Sheriffs officer A. R. Riley
arrived at the scene at 9:40 a.m. and
found evidence of a forced entry.
Rather than attacking the lock on the

front door, the burglar used an unknown tool to break the rear window
of the shop.
No evidence was reportedly found
at the scene to indicate the identity of
the crime's perpetrator and, as of yet,
no witnesses to the incident have been
found. As of press tune there are no
suspects in the crime.
Officer Riley indicated in his report that the crime may have been
committed by more than one person.
Riley could not be reached for comment as of press time..
The security firm that patrols the
campus, Wells Fargo Security, was
not on duty during the time of the
incident
Meeker filed Grand Theft and
.Burglary charges with the Sheriffs
Department and indicated in the report that Aztec Shops will prosecute
if a suspect is found.
Security officials at SDSU, which
operates Aztec Shops, said they have
no report filed on the theft.

�4

NEWS

PIONEER/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 199Q

P EOPLE

S ite S earch

With personal writing, Pioneer's columnists
show that they are people just like you.
Catch their columns in this issue.

Dr. Joel Grinolds
With a more health-conscience
public, CSUSM's physician
presents 'HealthNotes' • PAGE 5

David Hammond
Now a CSUSM student, Pioneer's
Opinion editor has dreams to be
the next George Will »PAGE 6

Staff Editorial
Under the direction of
Editor Larry Boisjolie, Pioneer
offers its own views • PAGE 8

Ken Carter
Get it cynical but straight,
without beating around the
bush • PAGE 6

Thrill Seekers

ILM

Hang on as Pioneer takes
you on a new adventure in
each Explore section • PAGE 13

Wendy Williams,
From box office hits to
movie flops, Williams has
the latest film revues • PAGE 16

You can find these columnists in the
only newspaper exclusively serving
Cal State San Marcos.

PMSt

Location sought for newest
Cal State University campus
Oxnard to decide on the final list of
sites for the EIR.
Cal State Ventura moved a step
"We're here to get a university for
closer to reality when an advisory
the county, and I think we'll do it,"
committee identified three potential
John Smart, CSU vice chancellor for
sites for a permanent home of CSU
university affairs, told the committee
Northridge's Ventura campus, which
after the final sites were selected.
ultimately may become the system's
Three pieces of property were
21st university.
placed in an alternate category in case
At a recent meeting, the CSU
any of the top three are withdrawn for
Ventura Site EIR Advisory Commitsome reason.
tee narrowed a list of nine sites to ronmental and community groups,
The EIR process, which will be
three for the off-campus center and also recommended a fourth site, the conducted by EIP Associated of Sacfuture full campus.
Taylor Ranch, remain in the final EIR. ramento, will take a minimum of six
The three parcels that will undergo
At one time, Taylor Ranch, in the months and cost at least $300,000,
the full-scale environmental impact hills westof the Ventura River and the Smart said.
report (EIR) process are:
city of Ventura, has been the preThe advisory committee has been
• The Duntley Trust, a 324-acre ferred site for the new campus, but meeting monthly since April to narparcel that also includes the adjacent unwilling sellers, a probable pro- row an original 40-site list to the final
277-acre Chaffee property. It is in the longed legal battle, and community parcels for the EIR. It will remain as
county west of Camarillo;
opposition convinced CSU trustees an advisory body during the process.
• The Diedrich/Donlon property, in June to abandon it as the only site
CSU began looking for a permaa 590-acre site near Oxnard on unin- under consideration for a campus.
nent site for an off-campus center in
corporated county land;
While there was some agreement Ventura in the mid 1980s. A new
• The Foothill site, a 700-aere par- about keeping Taylor Ranch in the center eventually may evolve into a
cel within the city of Ventura's sphere final selection process, a majority of campus serving 15,000 full-time stuof influence.
the committee agreed to recommend dents.
The committee, which is composed it to the CSU Board of Trustees Ad
of Ventura county and city represen- Hoc Committee on Off-Campus Fa- Watch for the 'CSU-2r logo for
tatives as well as members of envi- cilities, which will meet Oct. 31 in updates on the Ventura campus.
COURTESY O FSTATELINE

CSU

—TT

M ISSION
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2
Sub-committees to the task force
are working on a student newspaper,
a yearbook, and clubs and organizations. The process in which clubs and
organizations could be formed will be
included in the constitution.

The entire package will be submitted to CSUSM President Bill Stacy
and the students for approval.
The Mission Statement was derived
from two proposed statement submitted by task force members William
Christensen and Hammond. Zomalt
combined the two proposals and resubmitted them to the committee.
At the Oct. 24 meeting, the committee made some further revisions to

the statement to finalize it.
According to Hammond, the task
force holds its meetings in closed
sessions. This is because the task force
is an evaluation and advisory committee and not a formal governmental
body.
"We are charged with the expediency to get ideas on the table for
President Stacy and students to approve," said Hammond.

�NEWS

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990/PIONEER

DISPUTE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3
contracted to install a utility tunnel, grade the
area and prepare it for future buildings.
To help in the task, Louetto has hired subcontractors/such as Poss to do some of the
work.
Albeit Amado, vice president of Campus
Construction and Physical Planning, said in
an earlier interview that even minor delays in
preparing the site could set off a "major chain
reaction" resulting in a setback in the construction of the new campus's buildings.
"This stage of work is a critical path for
this project," he said.
According to a recent article in the Times
Advocate, Louetto has a long history of contractual disputes. The article states that, three
weeks ago, the firm was fired from a $6.5
million contract to expand the North County
Transit District's bus maintenance and refuelling stations in Oceanside.
Transit officials claim that the contractor
incorrectly installed fuelling tanks at the site.
Louetto claims that Transit officials never
granted them an extension in the station's
building schedule. Louetto also claims that
Transit officials never granted them extra
time to clean up and remove contaminated
soil that was previously undetected,
Since 1985, Louetto has been involved in
52 lawsuits with its subcontractors. Most of
the suits charge Louetto with failing to pay
for work done on jobs in the county. Some of
the suits have already been resolved.
Although lawsuits between subcontractors and contractors are not uncommon, Ken
Lounsbery, vice president and general counsel of Lusardi Construction Co., says the
amount of legal activity revolving around
Louetto is higher than normal.

Amado said the college secured a performance bond on Louetto before work had begun.
The bond guarantees that a contractor will
complete a project on time. If Louetto does
not properly fulfill its duties in a timely
manner, then CSUSM can fire the contractor
and hire another firm to continue the work.
The college has already contacted Louetto's bonding agent, Reliance Insurance of
Seattle, to force the dispute with Poss to be
resolved. If the dispute is not resolved by
Wednesday, the university will consider
replacing Louetto.
Originally, the college required that the
construction firm settle its dispute by Oct.28,
but extended the deadline late last week. The
deadline was extended until Reliance completes an investigation into Louetto's financial stability.
If Louetto does get terminated by the university, the college would then be forced to
accepttheservicesof theproject'snext lowest
bidder. Louetto acquired the job by bidding
$260,00 lower than the next lowest contractor.
Building on the $15 million Craven Hall
could be set back as a result of the dispute.
Earlier this month bids were received on the
building, a focal point of the new campus.
Construction on the building is scheduled
to begin late next month, but Amado says
they will be unable to proceed until the
grounds are prepared.
The dispute marks another setback in a
series of delays which have put the construction process to a rocky start. Last month
construction was temporarily halted when
trace amounts of the pesticide DDT were
discovered at the site.
Another delay was incurred when excess
deposits of granite and debris were discovered during construction.

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5

HOW TO STAY HEALTHY

Accident prevention
is wisest medicine
We are often asked at Student Health Services, "how can I stay healthy throughout the
school year?" Our answers may sound too
simple, bu it truly is that "prevention is the best
medicine."
The basis of preventative health care is
knowledge (understanding how the way you
conduct your life can help or harm you) so that
you can make beneficial decisions. You can
prevent many accidents and illnesses by making
minor lifestyle choices.
The greatest risk to the health of college-age
persons is unintentional injuries (accidents).
They are the leading cause of death and disability. Over 70 percent ere due to motor vehicle accidents, and half of those are related to alcohol
abuse.
The role that other drugs play is currently
unknown, but given the other hazards associated with drug use, it makes sense to abstain
from any drug, including alcohol, when driving.
One simple tactic that can greatly reduce the
chance and severity of injury in an automobile
accident is to always wear a safety belt whether
you are driving or riding with someone else.
Make sure that all required safety equipment in
your car is in good working order and obey all
traffic laws.
If you drive a motorcycle or motor scooter or
ride a bicycle, wearing a helmet is highly recommended. Defensive driving orridingis your
best protection. Remember, most other vehicles
have difficulty seeing you until it is too late, so
drive or ride as if you are invisible to other

HEALTHNOTES
DR. JOEL

GRINOLDS

vehicles. Most important of all, don't drink and
drive or ride.
After vehicular accidents (including bicycles), the most common serious injuries involve recreational activities and occupational
injuries.
Recreational accidents can frequently be
prevented by getting proper instruction, using
the correct equipment, and using common sense.
Most occupational injuries can be prevented
with proper training and the use of proper equipment and clothing while working.
In future columns, other areas of preventative health will be discussed. If you need further
information or have questions regarding good
preventative health practices, feel free to stop
by or make an appointment at Student Health
Services, located across from the University
BookStore.
Dr. Joel Grinolds is the chief physician for CSUSM
and SDSU North County.

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P IONEER /TUESDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1990

Making millions
during America's
coming recession
Now that the government spokesmen are admitting that we
"might be entering" a recession, you can be sure of one thing
— we're on the verge of a depression. But cheer up. Just
because America's only trade surplus is in IOUs ($15,000 for
every man, woman and fetus) doesn't mean you can't make a
killing in the marketplace.
To make
it simpler for
you to become one of
A merica's
newest millionaires,
I 've c ompiled a list of
products and
P I O N E E R STAFF W RITER
services that
will be in demand during the post-trickle-down 90s.
• Incendiary devices and/or arson service — To take advantage of the increasing demand by owners to cash in on
commercial and home fire insurance policies during the
downturn in business and real estate values.
• Shopping cart and cardboard s ales—To provide transportation and lodging for the yuppies who didn't use the first
service quickly enough.
• Bible and Koran s ales—For the upsurge in fundamentalism that always accompanies an upsurge in unemployment.
• Marketing flammable crosses, swastikas, rope, spray
p aint—For the crowd whose intolerance won't be satisfied
by fundamentalism.
• Wrought-iron bar and security alarm sales — For the
urbanization of the suburbs.
• Liquor store—Provider of America's drug of choice in
good times and bad.
• Pet food distributor — To provide for the nutritional
needs of our growing population of seniors below the poverty
line.
• Coffin manufacturing—To provide a final resting place
for the geometrically increasing number of children who will
die of parental abuse, substance abuse, AIDS, suicide and
good old-fashioned malnutrition.
• Green ink manufacturers — For when President Bush
can no longer extort money through the 16th Amendment or
sell worthless Treasury Department IOUs to Japan and Germany. He'll crank up the already humming printing presses
and spew out enough funny money to wallpaper every city in
America with hundred-dollar bills.
Of course, since the flow of worthless greenbacks is
already occurring, I guess you can ignore my foregoing advice
about the businesses.
By 1995, at the current accelerating rate of inflation, every
American, regardless of profession, will be a millionaire.
And, if you're as lucky as the inhabitants of Germany in 1923
or South America in 1990, a shopping cart full of milliondollar bills may just buy you a loaf of bread.
If you can find the b read.. . or the shopping c art

KEN CARTER

College should adopt Course Forgiveness
Education is not reserved for a few in a democracy. It is for
everyone. Hence, no bureaucratic process or mandate should
disrupt the delivery of knowledge.
Course Forgiveness—the means by which a student may
retake a course for a better grade—is almost extinct in the California State University system. In fact, San Diego State University is its last refuge, and the movement there is to scale back its
application to just one course. At CSU San Marcos, a Course
Forgiveness policy has yet to emerge.
Arguably, Course Forgiveness is a "pro-Education" contingency, and its abolishment is contrary to the spirit of what
education seeks: to propagate knowledge.
With Course Forgiveness, a student may retake a course once
whenever their grade is originally a C- or worse. Both grades
remain on the transcript, but only the later is factored in the
student's grade-point average.
In the worst abuse of this privilege, an individual contemplating graduate school (and who isn't in this credential-concious
era?) could "sand-bag" their GPA by retaking enough courses to
essentially rid the average of everything but stellar grades. This
potential pariah is prevented by limiting the number of courses
that may be forgiven, either overall or by major.
Furthermore, the original grade remains on the transcript
While the numeric GPA may seem impressive, the means to this
triumph will be indelible. Overall, the construction of Course
Forgiveness has its own capacity to quell rampant application.
Notwithstanding these assurances, Course Forgiveness has a
very positive attribute: it promotes learning.

For most of
us, the facts of
life preclude
s tellar p erformance in
every subject.
Sometimes
c atastrophe
strikes, and our
school work is
P I O N E E R O P I N I O N E DITOR n e g l e c t e d .
Othertimesthe
subject is not to our liking, so resistance to learnin g is {»resent. In
a rare instance, the teacher is lousy, so comprehension—much
less enthusiasm—is stifled. The list goes on.
Without Course Forgiveness, the unfortunate recipient of aCor worse grade is condemned to write-off the experience as
frustrating and futile. The subject will likely never be approached again, and education is the ultimate looser.
On the other hand, the opportunity to repeat the course—if
only out of the motivation to improve the grade—will result in a
new, hopefully more successful exposure. In this scenario, the
student and education are both winners.
I urge the administration of CSU San Marcos to adopt a policy of Course Forgiveness. Otherwise, this will become an idea
buried l&gt;y the impetus to do what is easiest, instead of what is
right.
^

DAVID HAMMOND

�L etters t o t he E ditor
President endorses
Proposition 143

P IONEER
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Editor-in-Chief
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Opinion Editor: David Hammond
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Fred Tracey, Wendy Williams
Contributors: David Hatch, Mark Hopkins,
Peggy Osterloh, Michelle Pollino, Tracy
Wilson
Photography: Paul Newman, Stacey Smith,
Patrick Walter
C opyright© 1990, by PIONEER. All rights reserved.
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A THOUGHT:
"Time flies like an
arrow, fruit flies like
a banana."
GROUCHO M ARX

On the Nov. 6 ballot, there is a measure
that will have a profound impact on the future
direction of higher education in California.
Proposition 143, the Higher Education
Facilities Bond Act of November 1990 will
provide $450 million for capital outlay
projects at the California State University, the
University of California and the California
Community Colleges.
This is a particularly crucial turning point
in California. We are faced with a population
explosion very much like the one experienced
after World War II. California's population
growth soon will show up on our campuses.
More than 1.6 million new pupils are expected to enroll in the public schools in the
next decade, ensuring a continual flow into
the state's postsecondary institutions. These
students will need the libraries, laboratories,
classrooms, and equipment that will be made
available if Proposition 143 is passed by the
voters.
The bond act also will help higher education keep pace with technological advances
and improve the campus environment with
funds for seismic safety and energy conservation. Proposition 143 means jobs for workers
to construct and remodel facilities, and for
faculty and staff to teach and assist CSU
students. In the long run, the state's economy
will strengthen by the bond as it will provide
an educated workforce for business and
industry. It is estimated that 65 percent of the
new jobs created in California in the next five
years will require some college education.
Here at CSU, San Marcos, the newest state
university of the CSU system, and the only
state university being built from scratch in the
United States, several projects will be funded
by Proposition 143. They are:
• equipment for Academic Building I
• equipment for initial facility - library
book acquisition, part II
• preliminary plans for the library, Phase I
• preliminary plans, working drawings for
the infrastructure/site development II
• preliminary plans for the academic
complex II
We are asking the voters to consider the
future as they vote on Nov. 6, and in particular, to continue their commitment to higher
education — a commitment that literally
founded CSU, San Marcos one year ago.

Letters W elcome
PIONEER welcomes letters from readers regarding campus issues,
articles written, or world-related affairs. Letters should be no longer
than 250words and be signed by the author with his/her phone number
as a contact.
Send letters to PIONEER, 250-2 South Orange Street, #507, Escondido, CA 92025.
PIONEER reserves the right to not print submitted letters if the manuscript contains lewd or libelous comments or implications. Letters will
not be printed of their sole purpose is for advertising and not information.

book. The Pioneer says that stu4ents would
rather be watching "Married With Children"
than be involved. I would like to offer a
different point of view.
I 'd like to relate the experience of my
effort to "get involved." To get the Task
Force rolling, Dean Zomalt scheduled two
general meetings, one at 12:30 p.m. and
another at 7 p.m. I have a class at 12:30, so I
attended the 7 p.m. meeting.
At this general meeting, I was informed
that there would be an organizing conference
the following Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. This
time and date had been decided at the earlier
meeting, and those of us at the evening
meeting had no voice in the decision. This
second conference would be for the purpose
of deciding permanent meeting schedules for
the committees that would be formed.
Because of my 12:30 p.m. class, I was
unable to attend the conference. As a result, I
had no voice or choice in determining a
permanent meeting schedule for the yearbook
committee to which I was assigned. I later
learned from Barbara Pendleton, also on the
yearbook committee, that only two students
out of five on this committee were in fact able
to attend the conference, and these two
students decided on Tuesdays at 12:30 p.m.!
I explained my schedule problems to
Barbara, and asked her to help me communicate this to the committee. I also complained
about die scheduling to Dean Zomalt's
secretary, Linda Leiter. Ms. Leiter offered to
try to help me, but did not call me back to
follow up.
Ultimately, I was unable to attend the
yearbook committee's first meeting this past
October 9, when, according to Barbara, they
B ILL STACY/CSUSM PRESIDENT elected a chair, discussed goals, and assigned
tasks to members. No one from the committee
called to include me in responsibilities, or
even fill me in.
Hey, I'm willing to miss any T.V. show,
and even my personal family time! But I am
not willing to miss out on Dr. Johnston's
A staff editorial in the Octobcr 2,1990
inspirational lectures at 12:30 p.m. Tuesdays.
Pioneer ("Lack of students at forum surprising") cites student apathy as the reason for the It seems to me that my fellow committee
members ought to be more willing to cooperlow turnout at the Student Task Force
Meeting to organize committees for starting a ate and set a schedule so that ail can attend,
not necessarily one that is the most convenstudent government, newspaper, and year-

Student offers
different opinion

ient. It is not as though they don't know about
me and my schedule conflict I did my best to
communicate this to them, although I was
unable to attend meetings in person.
I am a good student, hard worker, organized, efficient, and I would be an asset to any
committee. I have yearbook organization
experience from high-school, and I really
wanted to be a part of the genesis of our
yearbook here at CSU San Marcos. I 've been
left out without so much as an explanatory
phone call. Your loss yearbook committee.
S HABEN WAHL/ESCONDIDQ

Students do have
a vote at state level
In response to Mr. William Lott's letter in
the Oct. 16,1990 issue, I would like to correct
his statement that, "Students are not voting
members of the Board of Trustees."
Scott Vick, currently a student at CSU,
Fresno, is serving the second year of his twoyear appointment as a member of the Board
of Trustees. Mr. Vick serves on committees,
attends Board meetings and is a voting
member of the Board.
I had the pleasure of meeting Scott when
he attended the groundbreaking ceremonies at
CSUSM. He is a dynamic role model for CSU
students as an involved student leader who
was appointed by the governor to represent
students on the Board of Trustees.
As a member of the Student Governance
Task Force, and the parent of a CSUSM
student, I am proud and excited that students,
faculty and administrators are sitting down
together to work as a team to create our
university:
We are committed to creating a fair, decent
community that encourages students, as well
as faculty, staff and administrators, to maximize their potential. The University Mission
Statement wasn't written as a piece of
advertising hype—we believe in the goals and
values it contains.
J UDITH H . T AYLOR/
DIRECTOR, PERSONNEL SERVICES

�Glancing through this year's
California General Election Ballot
Pamphlet is a long arduous process.
Propositions that negate others
abound in this complicated labyrinth
of social responsibility.
To help comfort you in your
confusion, Pioneer is offering its
picksfor November9s General Election issues.
P ROPOSITIONS
H14 - Local Hospital Districts.
NO - Since hospitals could have shareholder interest in other health-care
corporations, the spirit of a free market economy is violated.

Ballot shows voters' changing view
One must be careful when perusing through this
November's California General Election Ballot This
voluminous compilation of propositions contains Bills
that contradict or negate other propositions.
This ballot does reflect a growing concern for
environmental issues and addresses the need to get
"tough on crime," but don't be fooled by smokescreens.
Some initiatives like "Big Green" are too broad to do
"anything but tie taxpayers' money up in a web of
bureaucracy. Initiatives like Prop. 132 narrow the scope
sufficiently to a point where taxpayers can readily see
the benefits and costs of the Bill.
Other initiatives, like Props. 133 and 149 have such
good ideas, but with exorbitant price tags to the public.
The best advice to voters is to sit down for a few
hours and read the two books outlining November's
ballot propositions. Look not only at the source of
funding for these Bills, look to see who is in favor and
who is against them. From there make up your own
minds.
The mostdifficultchoiceon this ballot willbe for the
Office of Governor.

H 2 5 - Motor Vehicle Fuels Tax.
fiail Transit Funding.
NO - A measure that would divert
fuel taxes to the construction of rail
transit can onlyresultin higher taxes
to maintain a deteriorating highway
network. Even though a mass transit
system would be conducive to solving Southern California's congestion
Timber-Harvesting Practices
and pollution problems, the potential NO - Yes, the greenhouse effect is a
neglect of our highways would be worthy cause, but this Bill threatens
unacceptable.
to put tens-of-thousands of Californians out of work while creating a
Hi® - Alcoholic Beverages.
whole new Sacramento bureaucracy.
Taxes
Plus prospective home-owners could
NO - No tax—especially a sin tax— be charged with the cost of this measshould be written into the state's ure.
Constitution. The liquor industry
wants this Bill to pass to block the
Limits on Terms of
approval of Prop. 134.
Office. Ethics. Campaign
Financing.
D 27. - Earthquake Safety,
YES - Sacramento is too filled with
Properly Tax Exclusion
old blood. This initiative would give
YES - Exempts from property taxes a much-needed transfusion to a tiredmoney spent to improve existing old government Puts teeth into politibuildings to earthquake standards. It's cal corruption laws.
a wonder such a smart proposal was
ever written in Sacramento.
1182 - Marine Resources.
YES - This Bill would stop the indis11 SB - Environment, Public
criminate slaughter of marine mamHealth. Bonds
mals along the California coast by
NO - Even though "Big Green" banning gill nets at no cost to voters.
touches sensible hearts, it is too ex- Need we say more?
pansive in its attempt to solve numerous, unrelated, complex problems in
i - Drug Enforcement and
a broad-brush manner.
Prevention. Taxes. Prison
Terms.
H i®- Drug Enforcement,
UNDECIDED - Provides for more
Prevention, Treatment,
drug education and keeps repeat vioPrisons Bonds
lent offenders behind bars. On the
NO - This Bill is just a rehash of thè other hand, can the average Califorsame territory settled by Prop. 115 in nia family afford another $500 in
June. Passage would raise taxes and taxes? Tough choice for voters.
complicate budget woes. We all love
get tough on crime initiatives, but
- Alcohol Surtax.
enough is enough, and enough was NO - This kind of user tax didn't help
passed last June.
cigarette smokers kick the habit. Why
should anyone think it will help drink• forest Acquisition.
ers; get off the wngqn? ;

STAFF EDITORIAL
This year's gubernatorial race is reminiscent of the
Bush/Dukakis presidential bout of 1988. Both Wilson
and Feinstein choose to sling insults rather than face
the issues facing this state. Neither candidate is particularly impressive or solid.
The best choice for voters is to write in a more
competent candidate than the two principal ones presented to them. As Americans we are not pigeonholed
into voting for just the Republican Party or the Democratic Party. We have the opportunity to choose whomever we see as the best candidate.
Don't vote for Wilson or Feinstein because you
want to choose the lesser of two evils. Choose your
candidate because you want to elect a representative of
the greater good.
In all probability, either Feinstein or Wilson will
take the office, but your write-in vote will send the
message to future politicians that you, as voters, are
more interested in the issues than party rhetoric.

M B - California Housing Bond
Act of 1990.
YES - Good for the economy in two
ways: promotes and preserves real
estate ownership, and stimulates the
private sector. The beauty: this program provides loans, not giveaways.
• School Facilities Bond
Act of 1990.
YES - Education benefits societal
welfare. It is the single easiest "fix" of
most of our problems.
' - County Correctional
Facility Capital Expenditure
And Juvenile Facility Bond
Act of 1990.
NO - Find money elsewhere. See Prop.
146. Better schools means less necessity for juvenile halls.
M S - Water Resources Bond
Act of 1990.
NO - Once again, a proposition that is
too vague and over-broad. Specific
proposals are required. This Proposition attempts toover-simplify the issue
of water management.

H3§ - Pesticide Regulation.
YES - This proposition carves out a
narrow area of influence. It is based
on the work of doctors, university
scientists and public health experts.
Seeks alternatives to pesticides while
insuring an abundant and affordable
food supply.

Retirement, Legislative
Operating Costs.
YES - Gives responsible citizens,
other than incumbents, the opportunity to participate in our democratic
system. Cuts the ties between corrupting special-interest money and
long-term legislators.

- State, Local Taxation.
NO - This Bill is so bad, that only the
minds of Howard Jarvis and Richard
Gann could think of it. Only the outof-state liquor industries are for i t
What the hell is this?

M i - Toxic Chemical
Discharge. Public Agencies.
H - County Courthouse
YES - Closes the monumental loopFacility Capital Expenditure
hole created by Prop. 65's failure to
Bond Act of 1990.
hold cities, counties, special districts NO - This Act solves the wrong proband state agencies as accountable as lems. We need less system-compliprivate industry. What's good for the cating attorneys and not more judges.
corporate goose is good for the governmental gander.
HiH - Childcare Facilities
Financing Act of 1990.
•MSB - Veterans' Bond Act of
NO - There is no such thing as a free
1990
lunch. While the problem of affordYES - How can any patriotic Ameri- able and competent childcare needs
can go against the soldiers of our to be addressed, this act will do more
ideologies? It also helps boost the to raise taxes than raise your children.
California economy by infusing capital into the sagging real estate market. G UBERNATORIAL
C ANDIDATES
1
1 -Higher Education
Facilities Bond Act of
Pete W ilson-NO
November 1990.
Diane Feinstein - NO
YES - Benefits future students and The mudslinging by both political
California's economy by investing in parties does nothing but cloud the
improyed and safer facilities.
voters' vision. I t's time to write in a

Initiative and
Referendum Process.
NO Prop. 137 hinders needed initiative reforms. It lets the politicians
tamper with your rights.
i - Forestry Programs.
Timber Harvesting Practices.
YES - Funds reforestation efforts,
restrictions on logging and "greenhouse gas" studies. Supported by both,
forestry associations and wildlife
biologists.

- Prison Inmate. Labor.
Tax Credit.
YES - No more free ride for felons.
Criminals should do something with
their time other than making license W - New Prison Construcplates. When it comes to the cost of
tion Bond Act of 1990-B
crime, it is the criminal who should YES - The past decade saw a 400
pay the debt and not society.
percent increase in inmate population. If we're going to get "tough on
- Limits on Terms of
crime," we need facilities to house the
P lf}çç f ie0lslatQrs ,
'-.felons,;
&amp;r* * * • VJAM

- California Park,
Recreation, and Wildlife
Enhancement Act of 1990.
UNDECIDED - It's hard to strike a
balance between the immense cost of
• this Bond and the good it will provide.

candidate who thinks more about the
issues than how to make the opponents look bad.
Complied by PIONEER editorial staff
members; every decision does not
necessarily coincide with every
mmbar of the editorialJbdard V.V

�TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990/PIONEER

Whaleys
still haunt
o l d house
tmm

i i l ^ ^ ^ J b r y baffling
mmvnAé&amp;rmomBB

e xmOHADO I S L A N D - W m i m ^ b e m
occurrences in room 3502 at the Hotel tie! %
Coronado, B rt t r n &amp; m ^ ^
a Saetta
Ana auon&amp;y seems totórvetomentose.
The "haunted m om* m I iU called, has had
reports of things thai g o bump in the night for

B 01SJQUE/P10NËËR

OLD TOWN - The yofsag
reporter sat quietly on the old- , .
fashioned sofa in the dead of night
He whispeted n mm$lyt&amp;hh
friends* tuc&amp;edinjd s loping bags entheftaar* ~ n
A,
"
-Do ym &amp;mk s hell come?** . i
v At 2:30 sufifemorning she
* J^àd în Stmt &amp;e study/Her feet ;
;
*didn t touch che ground. Her S
Victorian dr^ssfluueredl in the night

i, B^tauoi^^AIm^y

'&gt;

'-r SEE M O T E 1 2

i l i i t l v i l i l Vista'house
courtyard. Soon the clattering sounds of the
The stpries wme dawnft&amp;mthe Old Ones
.
That at times in thefull moon's pate tight steel-shod hoofecaisefiteiliicfcarfobe wattsto
The Spirit ofMim Chmet
"% Cmkeheardasheridestk^0ughthenight § |§|^ring k m the simâm&amp; é m neâ reverf the
»prom a poem b$ Km Gtaydm
f
^ j ^ ^ ^ l j f ^ t t p É d î m i n ishesand
starving lungs begin fo cry îos forgotten air, .
K ATHY SULLiVAN/PiONEER
Ipi
17:

But t h e ^ i ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
shake with nervous excucmerti
clicked on his flashlight and shifted
the beam into the translucent figure J
coming closer.
The specter dissolved in the light
The year was 1964 and the
reporter; TV talk-show host Regis
P^Jbin, was just one of the m a n ^ É j
visitors of Old Town's Thomas
Wliatey Hotisètosee ghoçtly. i ^iife

%

; - - If

casting eerie shadows eii the^ancient Spanish ; : ^ r i é à é y t ^ ^ ^ âu-ttsierktìc'e^^^Sa^^ajig^^^^*' 'M
courtyard. Ravens peer withfire-driveneyes
home, in the- state.
¿if^^^'ìM^^^m
from the twisted boughs of dead pines. The
Once pmofa 1,184 a c^iaad p$m by
&lt;^urtyaixl of Rancho Buena Vista Adobe is
dead quiet and waiting, Waiting for the hoof
the City'
has ^ ^
beats of the white stallion of Julian Chavez,
been
vJ
distant sound of the hcx&gt;fe, barely
^ f c S e ^ ^ ^ S E E A DOBÉ /PA£3È'®
upon the.

The
P ® f ! i ® p i A L E Y / P A G E 10

, i•¡•I

M W p f Lottie A. Bernard.
•^^m
ipggpom 3312 and not 3502 that May ;
¿ ^ f ^ ^ m h ^ ^ e n |£ate Morgan's ghost, air fg
apparitionfliaiappearedon the blank television screfit Twoftotel %mployees also said
fey saw the face that appeared on the
1
May thinks h e's fotmdMorgan.
IT ~
thatKateMorganis s ^ r
' waiting fer^rliq^eHtW arrive as he was
supposedt o in i 8 91 So when h e didn't, ;
Moi^an shot herself cm the grounds of the
hotel. Her body, was found on the slaps at the
northwestcowsrofifeebuilding* ' *
He death was ruled suicide, But May, who ,
specialises in homicidal eases, determined
thai Morgan's husband did show up, but he
shot her and planted her body on the steps,,

f|
fabled b y .
marty a$ ti)feethe room haunted by a guest»
Kate Morgan, who checked in to the h otc^^B
T ^ ^ g l ^ i ^ D a y i l ^ . 24t 1892,
May has cofféludedin tm book. The
the Nmt for theliamiofihetiotel S)ti Caronadfr Morgan
the. ^ m M

toward the parlor sofa,
The figuie didn't make a sound,
but t h^yfll saw her. They a!! fell
Jher...;''*^;.
[ ¿frBètïï&amp;&amp;what s hedc^s/' %

• • ; •.
•
'

v&lt;l

M MÈSûmœ:
rTihnwnwhii

^

ÜB
' a- • •-

W

-- :

r

BM
^ r--^. ^

S
i

�W HALEY
CONTINUED FROM PAGE

?

of two houses in California l iste| by
the U.S. Department of Commeifre
as "haunted." The Winchester
House, in San Jose, is the only other
building in the state to have suclf a
distinction. There are only 30
"ghost houses" in the nation
listed with the Department of
Commerce.
According to the Historical
Shrine Foundation, the ghosts
Thomas and Anna Whaley still
roam the halls of the building,
they had never died.
Since the mansion was
the public in 1960 as a museum,
June Reading has seen and
evidence supporting the claim
ghosts exist in the Whaley
As director of the museum,
has become a true believer in
ghosts.
She has volumes of stories to
of spirit activity in the historical
monument
"I was with a visitor to the
museum when I saw Thomas
Whaley on the landing upstairs,"
she claims. "He was a small-sized
man wearing a topcoat, pantaloons
and a wide-brimmed hat. He was
turned away.
"He looked solid, but the figure
faded away. One of the (employees
of the house) told me that he didn't
come through the front door. We
then heard a m an's laughter from
the rooms upstairs."
Reading has not only seen and
heard the visions, she has smelled
them as well.
One year, before the holidays,
Reading and a class of school
children smelled the scent of apples
cooking from the kitchen. She says
she frequently smells the cigar of
Thomas Whaley in the main
hallway.
"Most of what they do is very
pleasant," states Reading. " It's as
though the family is just going
about its daily routine."
Candy Brabent, who works as a
guide in the house says she too has
noticed indications of activity from
another dimension. According to
Brabent, a music box in the house
plays without provocation. She says
she frequently hears the piano and
other instruments, such as the
museum's antique mandolins, start
playing by themselves.
"Sometimes you actually feel
someone is there," cites Brabent.
Thomas and Anna Whaley are not
the only spirits to roam the house's
rooms. In January of 1852, Yankee
Jim Robinson was hanged on the
plot of land that was later to hold
the Whaley~House.

attempting to steal the $6,500
schooner PLUTUS, as Thomas
Whaley watched on.
According to Reading, Yankee
Jim can be heard pacing in the
upstairs sitting room. She says the
sound of his footsteps resounds
through the building every s ix,
months.
"I haven't heard him in a while.
I t's about time for him to come
around again," she says.
A fourth spirit, named Washburn
also roams the house. Washburn
was a playmate of the Whaley
children who met her tragic death
when she struck a low-hanging
clothesline in the back yard. She
died of her injuries in the arms of
Thomas Whaley. Washburn is
mostly seen by children who visit
the museum.
Even the family dog, Dolly
Varden, has been heard running
through the hallways of the house.
Reading says that the hauntings
are not always pleasant, however.
Once, while showing a visitor an
antique doll, Reading says the
hallways became very dark and
q uiet
"We heard the baritone laugh of a
man coming from the hall. We
thought someone was watching us,"

she says.
"The person I was showing the
doll to just looked at me and said,
' Let's get out of h ere.'"
Other times windows will be
mysteriously held open and the
crystals of the chandelier will rattle.
According to Reading, actual
physical evidence exists to support
the claim that the house is haunted.
Parapsychologist Dorine Turner
makes frequent trips to the house to
photograph the specters with her
camera. These pictures are on
display in the museum.
Turner's camera acts as a medium
to the spirits of the house says
Reading. Even though the naked
eye might not pick up ghostly
images, they mysteriously appear
on the film when it is developed.
"The pictures show energy
known as ectoplasmic tubes, or a
vapor trail of light," says Reading.
"If enough of these tubes come
together, they look like figures. We
had one of them enlarged and it
looked like a brilliant nucleus."
Ever since the visit by Regis
Philbin 26 years ago, the house has
not been open to visitors during the
n ight In the meanwhile, daytime
visitors can feel for themselves the
spirits that roam Thomas Whaley's
brick mansion.

,.

.

_

„

J ONATHAN YOUNG/PIONEER

0
lk
#
Regis Philbin, TV talk-show host and entertainer saw the ghost of Anna

Whaley on the Andrew Jackson sofa pictured above.

�Psychic energy used
to locate lost persons

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CHRISTMAS
LAYAWAY

J ONATHAN YOUNG/PIONEER
The word came in that a hunter
was lost. For the Montana Mounted
Police, it was important for them to
find him before the coming storm
dropped its snow on the area.
Despite the numerous clues they
had, the police were unable to find
the lost hunter. But all their resources were not exhausted.
The Montana Police contacted
Nancy Kelling, a professional
psychic.
Kelling, now a resident of
Carlsbad, worked with the Montana
Mounted Police and their Helicopter Patrols for about two weeks in
locating lost or missing hunters. She
retells one incident.
"I worked with the Montana
Mounted police and helped them
psychically to draw a map to help
them find a hunter." Kelling started.
Kelling said she was able to pick
up energy emitted from the hunter's
body. "What I do, is go into the
energy field or the imprint of the
hunter," she said.
Kelling was able to draw in her
mind a map using this energy that
can tell more than a normal, two
dimensional map. "Until I did that
particular thing, I didn't realize that
a psychic map would have more
detail on it than a geographic map.
"I went to that space psychically
and you pick up his attitude and
mood, like he was angry with the
other hunters, so he decided to
leave.
"He starts walking to the right of
the truck, going straight ahead and
then veering backwards.
"And then I was getting the slant
of the hill. The direction that he
goes to the right and then there was
the wind and a storm. There was a
steep drop off and a camp fire to the
l eft
"There weren't hunters at that
moment but there was tracks from
three hunters, possibly four . .. and a
deer or a larger animal."
Kelling not only picked up details
that are specific to that area at that
moment, but also emotions.
"I not only get the direction he
was going in, and his emotion,
which has a lot to do with how fast
he will travel, but I also got
imprints of other people."
Kelling used this psychic map to
assist the Montana Police in finding
the lost hunter.
"I was able to tell them to look
for a campfire that's out or look for
tracks from hunters;" Kelling said.

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NANCY KELLING/PSYCHIC
"I was able to get all kinds of signs
or parts of a map that a natural map
wouldn't have on i t
"I did get that feedback that I had
things more psychically preciser or
in their proper order that the map
would have never shown them."
Kelling's map was correct, but in
this particular case, her work was
her own downfall.
"The sad thing is the sheriff
would not go in on the word of a
psychic," Kelling explained. "It
kept coming in as 'You have to find
him before the snow falls' because
he wasn't going to live through the
snow fall.
"We did find him, but he was no
longer alive."
This wasn't the only case in
which Kelling has used her psychic
ability to help law enforcement
officials. She also assisted in the
capture of two arsonists.
" I've worked with the arson
department on more than one series
of arsons," she said. "I picked up
what his pattern was and what signs
or symbols in terms of directions in
order to catch him."
Since Kelling moved to Carlsbad
a few years ago, she has been
working with local police and FBI
agents in the same fashion. Because
those cases are not solved as of yet,
she could not mention any of the
factors involved.
She also works as a private
consultant. In these sessions,
Kelling gives advice from relationships, jobs, past experiences, how
someone presents themselves and
even some predictions.
"A psychic reading is just another
perspective or overview," she said.
"It just gives you other ways to
perceive a situation."
Kelling will be giving a free
lecture dealing with the psychic
field today at the Palomar College
Community Theattfe at 10 a .nr.'
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PIONEER/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990

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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9
Interviewing for Orange Coast
Magazine this month, May states
that Morgan's bullet wound wasn't
consistent with an inexperienced
person shooting herself at close
range. The bullet should have
shattered Morgan's skull.
The next fact that May discovered
was that Morgan's body was found
with her head towards the top of the
stairs, and her feet towards the
bottorti. This is the way bodies are
placed, not how people
fall after shooting
themselves.
Morgan would have
fallen down the stairs, not
up.
May returned to room
3312 alone on Thanksgivin;
Day, 1989. He ordered
Thanksgiving dinner for two to
make up for the holiday Kate never
had in 1892.
May said he felt Morgan's
presence that day and got a feeling
that Morgan was finally at peace,
knowing the truth about her death
was finally discovered.
But May's research hasn't unearthed the mystery behind the
Hotel Del's other "haunted room,"
3502.
It's believed that the hotel's
original owner, Elisha Babcock kept
his mistress in 3502 one night,
where she unexpectedly died.
Babcock disposed of her body
somewhere on the grounds of the
hotel.
Could the ghost of 3502 be the

Like Cal State San Marcos, PIONEER is growing.
And in this issue, our Calendar section has expanded
to bring you more exciting and interesting things to do
between classwork and studying.
SIM

Read It, Keep It

EE3CALEN&gt;AR
JI

spirit of Babcock's mistress waiting
for her lover to return?
I made arrangements to stay the
night in 3502 recently, hoping to
catch a glimpse of whatever it was
that walks the room endlessly at
night.
But I wasn't so fortunate as a
secret service agent who in 1983
was at the hotel with then Vice
President George Bush. The agent
was put in room 3502. Not knowing
he was put in a haunted room, he
laid in his bed and happened to be
watching a television show about
the very room he was staying in.
About an hour after
the program ended, the
agent claimed to hear
: T-e pipes in the room
rattling and the drapes
¡ TV
moving. He

flgl

• • wasted no

|pr

\y

time in
securing

another room.
About three years prior to this
incident, a man checked in to the
room and later complained about a
room on the sixth floor above 3502.
The man claimed to be bothered
during the night by someone
walking around all evenig in the
room above his.
The hotel employee told the man
there is no sixth floor, only five.
I was greeting by two phone calls
from someone out to spook me (the
hotel said they feel there are
pranksters who call the "haunted
room" to scare the occupants).
After hearing about attorney Alan
May's reports, I asked if I could
stay the night in room 3312.
But there was already someone
staying there.
.„

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passers-by and waves the knife
threateningly.
Another chamber has a specter
dressed in black with white polka
dots. Because the walls are painted
with the same pattern, the being
blends in with the surroundings,
causing onlookers to start when it
moves.
One room has the head of a
woman, dctatched from her body,
screaming, "Where's my body?"
The skit sends spine-tingling chills
through the onlooker.
During the duration of the tour,
an immense cast of wandering
scaries roams the serpentine halls,
adding an unpredictable element of
surprise around every bend.
The best part about the attraction
is the eerie atmosphere created in
the maze's hallways. Because the
labyrinth's walls are not permanent,
they can be altered to create any
setting that fits the proprietor's
demonic desires.
One passage is lined with doors
that open and close at random as if
possessed by an evil entity. In
another part of the maze, travelers
are forced to walk between rows of
hanging clothes, well aware that the
beasts of the closet could leap out
on a whim.
Even the floor boards rattle and
shake during a section of thé tour.
To add more terror to terror,

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New Monster Maze makes
visitors get lost in terror
As far as man-made haunted
houses go, the Monster Maze,
located at the Family Fun Center in
Escondido, is a horriginal labyrinth
of suspense and excitement Here,
the traditional haunted house
concept is expanded with a terrorific blend of old monstrosities and
new surprises.
Visitors of the maze will find a
creepy assortment of ghoulies,
ghosties, long-legged beasties and
things that go bump in the night.
These creatures have taken residence in the otherwise meek Maze
Graze attraction of the Fun Center.
The maze itself is a perfect
conduit for ghouls and goblins to
execute theirfiendishacts. With its
twisting tunnels and outdoor
atmosphere, the Monster Maze is a
world detached from the dimensions of normality. What makes this
world so believable are the terrifyingly original apparitions that
spring out around each turn.
As visitors enter the maze, they
are confronted with a talking head
which warns them of the horrors
they are about to see. The maze's
proprietors use technology similar
to that used in Disneyland's
Haunted Mansion, to make the
ghostly head come to life. A real
talking head is projected onto a
model head, creating an eerily
animated illusion.
Inside, the maze contains a series
of original, terrifying horror
vignettes. Each room in the maze
has its own frightening tale to tell.
In one such room, an old hag sits
placidly in her rocking chair while
stabbing a bloody doll with a seveninch knife. The crone snarls a t,

r 500

Palomar College Auditorium
Thurs., Oct. 25 at 6:30 p.m. and
Tucs., Oct. 30 at 11 a.m.
Two Free Seminars on
EXPLORING INNER SPACE
consciousness, parapsychology and
psychic phenomenon
B y N ancy K clling: Professional psychic consultant • author •researcher •
teacher • radio talk show host • consultant for police and fire depts. •
KSDO's Michael Reagan Show • Sun Up San Diego • KFMB's Bill Balance

SEEKERS
haunting sounds permeate from the
depths of the maze. These screaming sounds can even be heard in the
line outside the attraction itself. A
mist floats through one section of
hallways, adding obstructed vision
to the other muddled senses.
The best atmospheric element of
the Monster Maze is the graveyard
setting in the midst of the twisting
passages. Red lights illuminate the
fountain and tombstones spring up
like dead weeds from the parched
earth. The graveyard is the most
haunting element of the attraction
because of its alarming authenticity.
At the maze's end, visitors
confront Spidora, a large black
arachnid with a human head.
Spidora uses the same technological
magic as the head at the maze's
beginning. The talking spiderwoman actually interacts with
visitors to add a unique finishing
touch to the attraction.
The Monster Maze is a great
place to take a date with a taste for
the macabre. It is also a great way
to scare the Halloween-hypers from
your wound-up kids.
At $5 admission per person, the
Monster Maze gives more screams
for the dollar than any other localarea haunted houses. It is a scarunteed way to immerse yourself in
Halloween that will only be around.
ijntil O ct 31.
.

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�14

EXPLORE

PIONEER/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990
courtyard. He is looking for the
thoroughbred horse of Cave Couts,

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9
renovated and added on to several
times during its 100-plus years of
existence.
In 1920, electricity was added to
the house. While the electrician was
putting wiring though the two-foot
adobe walls he ran across an aged
skeleton. Not knowing what to do
about the problem, he continued
with his wiring and plastered up the
wall leaving the skeletal remains.
The bones are still residing in the
wall of the house.
The end bedroom, part of the
original adobe, is associated with
two separate ghosts. The spirit of
Julian Chavez, riding on his white
stallion, and the famed Lady in
White.
"I heard the hoofbeats but didn't
see the ghost," said Clair Schwab,
volunteer docent director. She went
on to explain about the night she
waited for the ghost of Chavez.
"You think it will happen. You
hope it will happen. When you do
hear it your stomach gets woozy
and you get a tingly feeling down
your back."
At midnight on a night of the full
moon, the spirit of Chavez, the
renown "Bandito Rojo," is said to
be heard galloping through the ;

One evening a distinguishedlooking sheriff came to the rancho
looking for a place to sleep for the
n ight In traditional western style he
was invited in to the house and
given a good meal and a room for
the night.
The next morning the sheriff
toured the barns and outbuildings.
Upon returning he asked Couts
where he kept the horse that he had
heard so much a bout Couts told
him about keeping it in his bedroom
to keep the horse out of the hands of
the bandit, Julian Chavez.
The sheriff, so tickled at the
story, told Couts that he was not
really a sheriff but Julian Chavez,
the red bandit, and that he had
actually come to steal the horse. He
assured Couts because of his
kindness that he would not have to
worry about his horses again.
The story goes on to tell of a later
period in Couts life, when he was in
desperate need of cowboys for a
roundup, three vaqueros showed up
at his door step offering their
services.
At the end of the roundup the
vaqueros refused payment saying
that their master, Chavez, was
repaying an old kindness.
No one knows for sure who the
Lady in White is. She has haunted

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the Rancho Bliena Vista Adobe f or
quite some time. Mystery suiTOKiiids
her background. It has been
. .';
surmised that she once was a - servant of the estate living in the ;
same end bedroom that Couts hid
his horse. As the story goes, she fctd
her g old undei; the floor b oards m

the bedroom.
The Lady in White has been seen
looking for her lost gold fright&amp;li&amp;g
guests into fleeing the adobe.
latest sighting of her was on v ^ p ^
when Vista Dimension Cable
shooting a documentary on th£&gt;~ ^
famous adobe.
They thought it would be f i p i p
have one of their crew dress
white dress and roam the h all$£i|
the adobe. Much to their
one of the scenes showed the dre&amp;s
roaming the halls without a trtxJyi
Dimension Cable is featuringlike
Lady in White during the moftth of
October.
The Adobe is located at Altla
Vista Dr., a half block from
Escondido Ave. There are guided
tours Wednesday thru Sunday from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The beautiful
yards can be rented out for weddings and meetings.
On Sunday, Dec. 2, the Rancho
Bucna Vista Adobe will be featured
in Christmas Memories. A h ope
tour of beautiful Vista Homes, :
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�TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990/PIQNEER

EXPLORE

15

MALLO
A guide t o t his s eason's
many haunted houses
With Halloween just around the
corner, San Diego abounds in haunted
events, either real or imagined. These
events are designed to put you in the
mood for that once-a-year haunting
holiday.

The Moonlight Monster Mash, sponsored by the City of Vista, lets young
students rock in the holiday. Student from
12-18 can dance to the latest compact
discs and rock videos on two IB-foot
screens while seeing themselves live on
the video screens.
The evening will also feature a light
show and costume contest. The Moonlight Monster Mash will be held at the
Moonlight Amphitheatre in Vista en
Oct. 31 from 7:30 to
10 p.m. Cost for the
event is $5 and a
discounted rate of $4
will be given to those
who show uo in costume
For more information call
724-6121 or 724 2110.
Adults can also enjoy the thrills of
Halloween by attending one of the many
costume parties in the vicinity. The
Third Annual Broomstick Ball, located
at the Red Lion Hotel at Hazard Center in
San Diego, offers music by Jammin' Z-90
Radio. Costumes are optional.
Tickets are $15 if purchased in
advance and $25 at the door. The event
occurs at 6 p.m. Oct. 31. For more
information call 456-6336.
The Pomerado club in Poway presents
a Halloween Costume Party at its
facilities at 12237 Old Pomerado Rd. The
event begins at 6:30 p.m. on Oct. 31 and
has music by the Big Stone Band. The
event will include a costume contest,
dance contest and games.
For more information call 748-1135.
The Rancho-Temecula-Murrieta Board
of Realtors will be presenting its fourth
annual Halloween Party at the Temecula
Community Center. Costumes are
recommended for the event with proceeds
going to the Community Pantry.
The event starts at 7 p.m. Oct. 31 and
ends at midnight Tickets cost $12 if
bought in advance and $15 at the door.
For more information call 686-1300.
Halloween without haunted houses is
like Christmas without gifts. The area is
filled with both new and old haunted
houses for the visitor with a taste for

terror.
Young fright seekers can find a thrill
at The Haunting, located at the Vineyard
shopping center in Escondido. This
haunted house is recommended for
children ages 10-14.
It runs from 6-9 p.m. on Oct. 27., 30
and 31. Admission is $2. For more
information call 741-4691.
Once again the Museum of Man in
Balboa Park promises to ring terror in the
hearts of visitors at its annual Haunted
Museum. In honor of its 75th year, the
museum has commissioned professional
amusement park designer Robert Stevens
to direct this year's event
Among the many rooms in the
museum are a Dr. Frankenstein Lab, a
^.vamp-infested jungle and eerie
graveyards. Scary characters in the
¡ffljrw
museum include Jack the
fil
m B Ripper and Dracula.
jgjjw I W
The Haunted Museum
^^
^ ^ runs from 7 to 9:30 p.m.
through Halloween. For more information call 239-2001.
Until O ct 31, monsters have invaded
the Maze Craze attraction at the Family
Fun Center in Escondido. The Monster
Maze gives a terroriflc tour of ghouls and
Goblins in the serpentine halls of the
labyrinth.
The Monster Maze opens at dusk.
Cost is $5 per person. For more information call 741-1326.
Touted as San Diego's largest and
scariest haunted house, Terror in the
Dark* located at 1004 E. Valley Parkway
in Escondido, returns for another Halloween haunting.
Tourers will see Dracula's mortuary
and the ever-popular Jason Voorheese of
the Friday the 13th movies will make an
obligatory appearance.
Cost of the attraction is $5 per person.
It is open through Halloween from 5-7
p.m.
Three Southern California theme
parks are also offering their own brand of
haunts.
Knott's Berry Farm presents its 18th
annual Halloween Haunt. Elvira
"Mistress of the Dark" hosts the "Rock 'n
Horror" review each night while ghosts
and goblins roam the fog-shrouded park.
The Halloween haunt runs through
Oct. 31. For information call (714) 2205005.
Magic Mountain also transforms into a

Haunted Amusement Park through Oct.
31. Rides will be altered to give a spooky
feel to the thrilling attractions.
The Spruce Goose Dome in Long
Beach will be transformed into a house of
horror for a costume dance party. They
have entitled this attraction "Spruce
Gruesome Rockin' Spooktacular
Tickets are $18; for tickcts, call (213)
480-3232 or (714) 740-2000. For general
information, call (213) 435-3511.
If real spooks arc what you're after,
then San D icgj has those too.
The Thomas Whaley House, in Old
Town San Diego, is one of the two
certified haunted houses in California.
Here the ghosts of the Whaley family
roam the halls of the old brick house.
Curtains move mysteriously; chandeliers shake and music plays for no reason
whenever the spirits of the house dccidc
to haunt the living.
Even TV talk-show host Regis Philbin
has had an encounter of the supernatural
kind under the building's roof.
The Whaley House is open to the
public as an historical museum. Admission for the museum is $3.
The Hotel Del Coronado's Room
3502 has long been considered to be
haunted by the spirit of Kate Morgan. Her
ghostly apparition has been seen on the
television screen in the room. Atone time
she supposedly ordered wine to the room.
The hotel docs not usually rent the
room out, but the-proprietors will do so
upon special request
Lately, a theory proclaiming Room
3312 as haunted was advanced. Here the
mistress of former owner Elisha Babcock
is said to roam the room.
- The Hotel Del Coronado is located on
Coronado Island in San Diego. It is the
famous building with the red sloping
roofs.
More locally, visitors might find a
specter at the Rancho Buena Vista
Adobe House in Vista. Here the ghostly
sounds of Julian Chavez can be heard.
Chavez rides his stallion through the
courtyard and its hooves can be heard
resounding through the night.
An apparition of a Lady in White can
also be seen roaming the premises.
The Rancho Buena Vista Adobe is
open to the public from Wednesdays
through Saturdays.
See PIONEER* s Calendar section for
more Halloween activities • Page 18

�ACCbNl
MM

•

•

A

m

i

PIONEER/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990

Phantom evolves
into true horror
J ONATHAN YOUNG/PIONEER
LOS ANGELES - As the lights dim
to a sold-out house, the doors are
closed — a custom in ordinary theaters. However, these doors are locked
and will remain that way for the first
part of the show.
The lock-up might be to keep something, or someone, o ut But this time,
it is to keep everyone in as the theater
magic and musical hypnotism of
Andrew Llyod
Webber transports
the audience from
the Los Angeles
stage to the Paris
Opera House, and to
the realm of the Phantom of the Opera.
'The Phantom of the Opera' is a
basic love story between beauty and
beast The show's success has thrived
on this basis from opening night
However, since the lead character of
the Phantom was changed earlier this
year, the feel of the show has lost its
strong love appeal and has transformed
into a true horror story.
Robert Guillaume stars as the Phantom in Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical The Phantom of the Opera.'
Robert Guillaume replaces Michael

Crawford as the Paris opera ghost, a
role which Crawford developed since
his premier in the London cast. It was
Crawford's elegant movements and
rich voice which made the heart pound
with joy and sorrow.
Guillaume's development of the
phantom is quite different
Guillaume is most noted for his
comedic role in 'Benson,' but this
show is no comedy. Guillaume
transcends his role as the cocky
butler with an interpretation different from Crawford's. His
phantom is less
"lovey-dovey" and
more brooding and
cynical.
Guillaume plays a
character which adopts the opera
house as his own home. He requires a
salary from the managers for using
his opera house and reserves himself
a balcony box for every show.
The show begins as new, unbelieving managers arrive and the Phantom's tutoring of lead actress Christine
Daa6 is made known. The opera ghost
tries to keep control of his opera house
SEE OPERA/PAGE 17

'Memphis Belle' flies high with perfected strategies
Traveling back
to family roots
in 'Avalon'

If you could capture the esscnce of the best
war films from the 30s and 40s, combine it with
11 hot young actors, and mix in a famous plane
with a history, you'd have all the ingredients for
'Memphis Belle.'
The story line is simple, therefore strong and
poignant. Eleven guys have made 24 daytime
bombing runs over France and Germany during
World War II and returned to home base in
England unscathed, while their fellow fliers are
being shot down left and right.
The boys and their plane, the 'Memphis
Belle,' have one more mission to accomplish
and it's the most dangerous yet, right into the
heart of Germany.
What makes you care whether these guys
make it back or not is the character studies of
each man, explored in the few days before their
last mission.
Matthew Modine is the fiy-by-thc-book,
goody-two-shoes captain who's looking to return to his furniture business and his Belle from
iti Zì£3Y 101

Memphis, whom he named the plane after.
The rest of the officers consist of Tate Donovan as the co-pilot who wants to be a hero; Bill
Zane as a bombardier who fudged about his stint
in medical school; and DB Sweeney who convinces himself that he's not going to make it
back alive.
The rest of the crew includes Reed Diamond,
Sean Austin, Courtney Gaines, Neil Giuntoli,
Harry Connick, J r. (proving himself to be as
able an actor as a singer), and Eric Stoltz who
creates yet another memorable character.
The script is so well-organized and tight that
the inner working and comraderie of the crew
drags you into the story. Each and every one of
the characters is well-developed with his own
individual idiosyncrasies and moments of
strength.
Visually, the movie convincingly communicates the time period.
Unfortunately, you never get the real sense
of the size of the plane since the parameters of

WENDY WILLIAMS
PIONEER

F ILM

CRITIC

the movie involve jumping from one place to
another inside.
However, with its strong cast and script,
'Memphis Belle' should attract some attention
from the members of the Academy of Motion
Pictures and Sciences when it comes time to
vote for the 1990 Academy Awards.
Out of the 11 strong choices, it will be
interesting to see which performers arc chosen
for acting nominations.

In 'Avalon,' director and writer Barry Levinson takes us back to our roots—back to
when our ancestors first came to America.
The account is bittersweet because of the
fragmentation of those core families who came
here looking for abetter life. They found it, but
the price was high.
Armin Mueller-Stahl, aGerman actor seen
by American audiences in last year's 'Music
SEE ROOTS/PAGE 17

�T UESDAY 1 OCTOBER3^990/P|ONEER

g

—

—

ACCENT

17

'Living Colour' brings rock back t o origins
contemporary black artists since they been directed to a higher, more soperform straight ahead, in-your-face, cially-conscious level desperately
Back in the 40s and 50s, African- we've-got-something-to-say,rock 'n
needed in their chosen medium.
Americans manipulated their blues roll.
Even in that company, Living
and jazz riffs into what was then
Their second album, T ime's Up,* Colour's members stand out as superdeemed "rock 'n roll." Then along
came theestablishment, who took that further supports their strong founda- lative songwriters.
Each song, from the first single,
essence, gave it to white artists, and tions by offering, not only stronger
performances, but also better song- 'Type,' to the humorous and irreverforevermore associated it with Cauwriting and marvelous arrangements. ent, 'Elvis is Dead,' forces u$ to take
casians.
By including non-rock perform- a look at ourselves and consider the
Almost.
ers on many songs (Doug E. Fresh, future we're facing as we rock incesLiving Colour has taken it upon
Queen Latifah, Akbar Ali), Living santly.
themselves to reclaim their origins
Colour has added diversity to an alEmphasizing society's effect on
with a vengeance!
ready impressive recording.
the individual, T ype' couldn't have
4
Their first album, Vivid,' was
Living Colour's writing, like An- been a better choice to introduce this
good. It represents a breakthrough for
thrax, MetallicaandQueenryche, has album to the world. Still, every song
PAVIP HATCH/PIONEER

,

contains a groove e ven the most danceoriented band would love to have, but
with an ensemble that will rock your
socks off from the word "go."
Corey Glover has the potential to
knock every other rock vocalist off
the "metal mountain."
Not to mention, across the mediocre valley on "guitar-god hill," Vernon Reid stands as master of all he
surveys.
On both albums, Reidspews forth
with riffs that will make your mouth
water with delight, revel in their
complexity, and be shocked by their
brashness.

The aforementioned groove is
produced by Muzz S killings, on bass
and William Calhoun, on drums.
These two conceive rhythms that other
rock bands only dream about conceiving.
All of you "sing-along-in-the-car"
rock mcgastars better keep aware
while driving because, when you hear
the grooves that Living Colour has
assembled on Times Up,' you'll be
"bangin' your head" and dancing in
your seat.
Just don't forget that this is one
band who writes their lyrics conscientiously, so listen to them.

ROOTS

O PERA

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16

Box,' portrays Sam Krinchinsky, the
patriarch of the clan. He came to
Baltimore in 1914 on July 4 and becomes a wallpaper hanger for his four
brothers.
^
The family flourishes with business success, marriages and children,
but changes slowly start to fragment
- them. • -jI
Sam's son Jules marries and
changes his name to Kay. Jules and
his cousin Izzy Kirk (who also changes
his last name) become partners in an
appliances business.
With the success of the business,
Jules moves his family, including his
father to the suburbs, away from the
rest of the Krinchinsky clan.
Distance, time and television all
play a part in causing the separations
that become too big to bridge.
Levinson based his story loosely
on his own family. He gets his point
across, but not as strongly as he could
have.
He has a penchant for bizarre
camera angles in this film.
Levinson photographs most of
Sam's memory sequences in a stilted
time speed which lends a symbolism
to their re-telling.
However, he also uses annoying
tracking shots in certain scenes that
are distracting and never give the
audience anything to focus on.
The storyline also starts and stops,
neverflowingevenly to the conclusion.
Still, with such a fabulous cast,
including Mueller-Stahl, Joan Plowright, Aidan Quinn, Elizabeth Perkinsand young Elijah Wood, how could
a director go wrong?
He also couldn't go wrong on the
overall theme of the movie which
revealsapieceof Americana to, which
we can all relate.

As the Phantom, Robert Guillaume hypnotizes Christine, played by Dale Kristien, with his solo "The
Music of the Night."

and gain the love of Christine.
His love for Christine isn' t possible
due to the horrifying disfigurement
that makes him the beast. The addition of a third character, Raul, also
ruins the dreams of the Phantom, as
Raul i s the man to win the heart of
Christine.
Guillaume's phantom gets no sorrow from the audience arid never gains
the love of Christine. What he does
get from both parties, however, is
fear.
In trying to maintain the power
which he has savored as the opera's
phantom, Guillaume' s character casts
spells, curses, kidnaps and even kills
throughout the show. Combine his
heavy, staccato baritone voice with
his abrupt, shallow movements and
you have a very sinister man.
Guillaume stands in the spotlight
several times and gains theaudience's
praise for his singing and performance; he is still the star of the show.
But the audience still cannot sympathize with his character as they did
with Crawford.
The sympathy is directed to his
victims: Christine, Raul and the cast
of the opera house. Dale Kristien and
Reece Holland are two of the original
cast members and use their experience and familiarity with their roles to
draw the audience's compassion.
Of course, the show couldn't maintain its success without the support of
the special effects. The stage transforms from scene to scene with ease
and astonishment At one point, the
stage even erupts with fire.
The score by Webber is not hindered by the cast change, but it has
evolved into another dimension of
stage performances. T he Phantom of
the Opera' has enjoyed a long run in
Los Angeles and will continue to haunt
audiences for years to come.

�18

CALEN2AR

DON P EDRO T ALENT S HOW
N IGHT: A Showcase for musicians
and singers every Friday and Saturday
18TH ANNUAL H ALLOWEEN
at Can-Cun Restaurant, Rancho
H UNT: Ghouls, ghosts and goblins
Bernardo. 485-8282
will be roaming the passages as
E LVIR A : The Mistress of the Dark
Knott's Berry Farm is transformed
will Headline a "Rock V Horror"
into a ghost town through Oct. 31.
revue each evening at Knott's Berry
Elvira, the Mistress of the Dark, will
Farm, Buena Park. (714) 220-5005
be featured in a "Rock V Horror"
G REG H ARTLINE: Performs
revue each evening. (714) 220-5005
Tuesday through Saturday nights at
H ALLOWEEN
J .P.'s Lounge at the Pala Mesa Golf
BASH: Club Acaand Tennis Resort, Fallbrook. 728pulco in San Marcos
5881
will have a Halloween
J AC K A LDRIDGE B IG BAND:
Bash Oct. 31. High2 to 5 p.m. on Sundays at the San
lights includeacostume
P0RARYART:
Diego Women's Club, San Diego.
itiii
contest with a$500prize
B ig m • B The museum will
Admission is $7.50.
a nd $ 1.50 s pecial
showing "HallowJ EFF B RISTOL: Performs 6 to 10
"Halloween Brew." Club
een With Nicolas
p.m. on Tuesdays through the month
Acapulco is located in
Roeg: Don't Look Now." This is a
of October. 792-5200
Restaurant Row, San Marcos. There continuing tradition of showing horJ UDAS P RIEST: With Megadeth
is a cover charge and you must be 21- ror films by international directors
and Testament on Nov. 10 at the San
years-old. 471-2150
every Halloween, This show will
Diego Sports Arena. 278-8497
H ALLOWEEN C OSUTME screen at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 31.278M ARK L ESSMAN B AND:
9497
P ARTY: The Pomerado club in
Performs Oct. 31 at the Del Mar
Poway presents a Halloween Costume
S PRUCE G RUESOME R OCKHilton, Del Mar. 792-5200
Party at its facilities at 12237 Old IN' SPOOKTACULAR: The Spruce
M IKE M AISON: Performs J to
CSUSM and SDSU North County continue their concert
Pomerado Rd. The event begins at Goose Dome in Long Beach will be
10p.m. Sundays at Acapulco,Rancho
series on Nov. 4 with Bertram Turetzky.
6:30p.m. pn Oct. 31 and has music by transformed into a house of horror for
Bernardo. 487-6701
Turetzky is the most recorded contrabass soloist in
the Big Stone Band. The event will this costume dance party. Tickets are
N ELS: T he children's songwriter
include a costume contest, dance $18; for tickets, call (213) 480-3232
America. Since 1995, more than 3 00 new works have
and performer debut his latest album,
contest and games. 748-1135.
or (714) 740-2000. For general
"Chickens." on Nov. 4 at 1 p.m. at the
been written for, performed and recored by him.
H AUNTED A MUSEMENT information, call (213) 435-3511.
Poway Center for the Performing Arts.
The concert starts at 7 p.m. in the University Library.
P ARK: Magic Mountain transforms
T ERROR IN T HE D ARK:
Tickets are $5.50.538-0118 or 632All concerts in the series are free. 471-3515
into a haunted park through Oct. 31. Touted as San Diego's largest and
0301
Rides will be altered to give a spooky scariest haunted house, Terror in the
P ASSION: A 9 p.m. performance
feel to the thrilling attractions.
Dark, located at 1004 E. Valley
is s cheduled T uesday through
H AUNTEDMUSEUM ' 90:This Parkway in Escondido, returns for
Saturday nights at H enry's in
attraction is sponsored by the Klee another Halloween haunting. Tourers tale is set to music in this play being
Carlsbad. 729-9244
Wyk Society and is open from 7 t o will see Dracula's mortuary and the presented by t he San M arcos
P OWER S URGE: FeaturingGary
9:30 p[.m. through Oct. 31 at the San ever-popular Jason Voorhcese of the Community Services. The show will
Farmer and Felipe Deagular every
Diego Museum of Man,Balboa Park. Friday the 13th movies will make an continue through S unday. Tickets are
BIG BANG: Performson Tuesday Wednesday through Saturday at 9 p.m.
239-2001
obi igatory appearance. Tickets are $5 $5,744-1875
nights throughout October at the Old at Fogerty's Pub, Escondido. 743M ONSTER M AZE: Escondido's &gt; per person. It i s open through
T HIRD ANNUAL B ROOM- Del Mar Cafe, Del Mar. 755-6614
9141
Family Fun Center has transformed Halloween from 5-7 p.m.
STICK BALL: Jam to music by ZBILLY J OEL: Performs Nov. 7 at
R HUMBOOGLES: P erforms
their Maze Craze attraction into a
T HE HAUNTING: The city of 90 Radio at a party sponsored by 8 p.m. at the San Diego Sports Arena. Sundays throughout the month of
"Monster Maze." This haunted tour Escondido is sponsoring this haunted SERVE of San Diego. This ball starts 278-8497
October at the Old Del Mar Cafe, Del
costs $ 5 and continues through Oct. house at the Vineyard in Escondido. at 6 p.m., Oct. 31, at the Red Lion
C ARDIFF R EEFERS: Performs Mar. 755-6614. Also performing
31.
Tickets are $2.741-4691
Hotel, San Diego. Tickets are $15 in Oct. 31 at Winston's, Ocean Beach. Thursday nights throughout October
M O O N L I G H T M ONSTER
T HE L EGEND O F S LEEPING advance and $25 at the door. Costumes 222-6822
at the Old Pacific Beach Cafe, Pacific
M ASH: The city of Vista sponsors a HALLOW: Washington Irving'sfolk are optional. 456-6336
C ONCERT S ERIES: CSUSM Beach. 270-7522
and SDSU North County continue
R OCKY H ORROR: The Rocky
their concert series on Nov. 4 with Horror "mini-show" presents live
Bertram Turetzky. Turetzky is the bands before showing the movie every
most recorded contrabass soloist in Friday nightat the LaPalomaTheater,
America. Since 1995, more than 300 Encinitas. The bands begin at 11 p.m.
new works have been written for, and the tickets cost $5.436-5808
ESCONDIDO FARMER'S MARKET: Open every Tuesday from 4 t o 8 p.m., this
performed and recored by him. The
SOUL P ERSUADER: Performs
attraction features food, farmers, crafters and live entertainment. Jackstraws and a
concert starts at 7 p.m. in the Monday nights throughout October
Halloween celebration highlight Oct. 30; Sanctified Saxes appear the next week, Nov.
University Library. All concerts in at the Old Pacific Beach Cafe, Pacific
6. The market is on Grand Avenue, between Broadway and Maple, Escondido.
the series are free. 471-3515
Beach. 270-7522
D ALE T URNER: - Performs
T ABACCO R OAD: Performs
MAIN STREET FESTIVAL &amp; FARMER'S MARKET: Vista presents its 5th annual
Wednesday nights at the Old Del Mar Thursday nights through the month of
"hometown marketplace" on Thursdays from 6 to 9 p.m. It features vendors, crafts,
Cafe, Del Mar. 755-6614
November at Top of the Kingston
D R.
CHICO'S
I SLAND Hotel, San Diego. 232-6141
farmers and entertainment. It's on Vista Way, between Citrus and Santa Fe.
SOUNDS: Performs Sundays nights
T AMI T HOMAS' BIG BAND
thjDughoutjpcipbqr^t thp 0 $Pacj/icBeach Cafe, Pacific Beach. 270-7522
CONTINUED

H oliday

dance for students, ages 12-18. They
can dance to the latest compact discs
and watch rock videos on two 18-foot
video screen; they can even see
themselves as a mini-cam scans the
dance floor. Those in costume can
participate in a contest and get $1 off
the admission charge. The dance starts
at 7:30 p.m. at the moonlight
Amphitheatre, 1200Vale Terrace Dr.,
Vista. Tickets are $5 and a current
school ID card with picture is
required. 724-6121 or 7242110
SAN D IEGO MUSEUM
O F C ONTEM-

PIONEER/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990

C oncert S eries

M usic

F armer's M arkets

�CALENDAR

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990/PIQNEER
CONTINUED
SWING: Performing at the Mission
Inn, San Marcos, on Wednesdays from
7:30 to 11:30 p.m.
THECRY &amp; T HE A SSEMBLY:
Performs at the Distillery East,
Escondido, on Oct. 31.741-9393
UPSIDE DE H EAD: Performing
Wednesday n ights t hroughout
October at the Old Del Mar C afe, Del
Mar. 755-6614
US BAND: Performs Oct. 31 at the
Trojan Horse, San Diego. 582-1070

D aily
C oncerts
BACCHANAL: Here is a list of up
coming concerts the the Bacchanal:
• Ambrosia - Nov. 1
• Foghat with Lonesome Dove Nov. 8.
:
• Kenny Rankin - Nov. 2
• The Guess Who - Nov. 10
• Tower of Power - Nov. 13
• Warren Zevon - Nov. 4
The Bacchanal is located at 8022
Clairmont Mesa Blvd., San Diego.
278-8497
BELLY UP T AVERN: Here is a
list of up coming concerts the the
Belly Up:
• Steve Allen - O ct 30 at 7 and

C hildren's P lays
ALICE IN WONDERLAND: The Star and Tortoise Theater present this musical
based on Lewis Carroll's children's story Thursdays through Sundays through Nov.
17. Tickets are $8-$10. 296-0478
BABES IN TOYLAND: The Christian Youth Theater presents this production at the
Kit Carson Amphitheater Thursday through Saturday through Nov. 4. Tickets are $5
and $4 for children. 743-7392
THE LEGEND OF SLEEPING HALLOW: Washington living's folk tale is set to
music in this show being presented by the San Marcos Community Services/ The
show will continue through Sunday. Tickets are $5. 744-1875

9:30 p.m.
• Private Dungeon - O ct 31
* • Chris Issak - Nov. 1
The Belly Up is located at 143 S.
Cedros, Solana Beach. 278-8497
METAPHOR
COFFEE
H OUSE: This North County hot spot
has several events throughout the
week.
• Sundays - Open Mike
• Mondays - Jazz Open Mike
• Tuesdays - Poetry Open Mike
• Wednesdays - Folk/Blue Grass
Open Mike
• Thursdays - Progressive Jazz Jam
Session
• Fridays and Saturdays - Showcase

CashGiveav/ays^
Show your btu

^

• Saturday s - Peggy Minafee from 8
The Metaphor Coffee House is
located at258 Second Ave,Escondido. p.m. to midnight
The U.S. Grant Hotel is located at
489-8890
326 Broadway, San Diego. 232-3121
U.S. GRANT H OTEL: This San
Diego hot spot has several events
throughout the week:
• Mondays - South Market Street
from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m.
A LICEIN WONDERLAND: The
• Tuesdays - Pieces from 5:30 to
Star and Tortoise Theater present this
8:30 p.m.
• Wednesdays - Earl Thomas and musical based on Lewis Carroll's
the Blues Ambassadors from 5:30 to children's story Thursdays through
Sundays through Nov. 17. Tickets are
9:30 p.m.
• Thursdays - Romy Kaye and the $8-$10.296-0478
BABES IN TOYLAND: The
Swinging Gates from 5:30 to 9:30
Christian Youth Theater presents this
p.m.
• Fridays - Tobacco Road from 6 p roduction at the Kit Carson
Amphitheater Thursday through
to 11 p.tti*

^

p ay n o C o v e r s

C OUPON

NO COVER CHARGE
G OOD A NYTIME
Present t his c oupon and C lub Acapulco w ill w aive
any and all Cover Charges. O ne coupon per person.
N o l imits.

T heater

19

Saturday through Nov. 4. Tickets are .
$5 and $4 for children. 743-7392
BROADWAY BOUND: Piatio
Playhouse presents the concluding
c hapter
in
N eil
S imon's
autobiographical trilogy on Friday,
Saturday and Sundays through Nov.
4. Shows will be performed at the
Patio Playhouse in Escondido's
Vineyard Shopping Mall. Tickets are
S5-S10.746-6669
BURN T HIS: The San Diego
Repertory Theater presents this show
about a restaurantcur' s and dancer's
lust and love. Shows are performed at
79 Horton Plaza, San Diego, through
Nov. 4. Tickets are $ 18 and $22.2358025
C AFE C HAOS: San Diego
Repertory Theater present ' Cafe
Chaos' on Fridayand Saturday nights
through O ct 31. This show will be
performed at 79 Horton Plaza, San
Diego and there is a $5 donation. 2265222
C OCKTAIL H OUR: T his
comedy will play through Nov. 4 at
the Mission Theater, Fallbrook. It is
presented by the Fallbrook players.
Tickets are $6 and $3 for children.
728-0998
G UYS A ND D OLLS: T he
Lawrence Welk Resort Theater
continues their performance o f'Guys
and Dolls' through Nov. 3. Tickets
CONTINUED N EXT P AGE

O CTOBER 3 1
COSTUME PARTY WITH $500 GRAND PRIZE
HALLOWEEN BREW SPECIAL

�PIONEEB/TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1990
CONTINUED
are $25434.749-3448
KPUG: Valley Playhouse performs
4
TheKPUGTalkRadio Broadcast' at
the Town and Country Hotel, San
Diego, indefinitely. Performances are
8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and
7 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are $9.50.
232-5784
NAKED THEATER: The Naked
Theater Club presents 'Improvizado
Psychotto' at the Ruse Performance
Gallery. The show runs indefinitely
on Mondays at 7 p.m. 236-1347
OLD GLOBE THEATER: The
Old Globe Theater presents two
shows.
• Hamlet- Shakespeare'sbest will
be performed at the Old Globe Theater, San Diego, Thursday through
Sunday. Tickets are $20-$27.
• Heartbeats - A Musical revue by
Amanda McBroom, the Old Globe
performs this at the Cassius Carter
Center Stage in Balboa Park through
Nov. 4. Tickcts are $22-$3G.
For performance times and more
information, call 239-2255.
PLAY ON: This comedy is
presented by the Poway Performing
Arts Company through Nov. 10 at the
Golden West Academy, Poway.
Tickets are $5 and $5 for seniors and
students. 679-8085
SAVED: SDSU presents this drama
about gang violence in London. It
wiff be performed at the Experimental
Theater on the main campus Thursday
through Saturday. 594-2548
THE LEGEND OF SLEEPING
HALLOW: Washington Irving'sfolk
tale is set to music in this show being
presented by the San Marcos
Community Services. The show will
continue through Sunday. Tickcts are
$5.744-1875

Rancho Bernardo. Tickets are $5 or
$6 at the gate. 487-1767

C omedy
C OMEDY N IGHT: North
County's own comedy spot presents
Benny Ricardo every Tuesday night.
Call 757-2177 for a current list of
comedians. Comedy Night is located
at 2216 El Camino Real, Oceanside.
THE IMPROVISATION: This
comedy spot has several shows
comingup:
• Bill Hicks, Bob Kubota and Ed
Crasnick - O ct 30 through Nov. 4.
• Rick Rockwell, Dave Anderson
and Karen Anderson - Nov. 6 through
Nov. 11.
The Improvisation is located at 832
Garnet Ave, Pacific Beach. 483-4520
THESMOTHERSBROTHERS:
Perform Nov. 1 at 8 p.m. at the San
DiegoCivic Theater. 236-6510or2788497

- .i

,

V

F ilm

SAN DIEGO MUSEUM O F
CONTEMPORARY ART: In its fil
series, the museum presents Michelangelo Antonioni'sfilmsof theearly
1960s. Thefilmswill be shown at the
museum in La Jolla. Tickets are $4.
The museum is also showing
"Halloween With Nicolas Roeg:
Don't Look Now." This is a continuing tradition of showing horror films
by international directors every Halloween. This show will screen at 7:30
p.m. on Oct. 31.
278-9497
SPACE THEATER: The Reuben H. Fleet Space Theater in Balboa
Park has four shows through Oct. 31
• "Race with the Wind" - Omnimax adventures on the seas.
• "We Are Born of Stars" - The
world's first 3-D Omnimax film reARTS ALIVE: Sponsored by the turns to take audiences on a 5 billionFallbrook Art Association, this juried year journey through the evolution of
show is open to visual artists. It's life.
open through Nov. 3 at Security
• "Laser Rush III" - New laserPacific Bank, Fallbrook. 723-2652 or light concert featuring the music of
723-2229
Rush
CRAFTS FAIR: More than 65
• "Rock-It to the Stars" - a new
craftsman, artists and exhibitors will laser-rock space fantasy.
show and sell their art at the 12th
238-1168 or 238-1233
Annual Arts and Crafts Fair. It will
take place at the Bernardo Winery,
Ranchô Bernardo, on Nov. 3 and 4.
Send your information
NORTH COUNTY ARTIST COfor Pioneer's Calendar
OP GALLERY: Annual juried
exhibition. Artist and instructor at
section to:
Palomar College, Paul Jones, is the
juror. It open Nov. 9 at 218 E. Grand
PIONEER
Ave., Suite 201, Escondido, from 10
Attn: Calendar Editor
a.m. to 6 p.m. 738-0414
250-2 So. Orange St
THiRDANNUALART&amp;WINE
#507
FESTIVAL: Sponsored by the
Escondido, CA 92025
Rancho Bernardo Chamber of
Commerce, this show will be
presented at the Blue Courtyard,

A rts

CALL FOR ENTRIES

The first semester of CSU San Marcos is well underway.
We, the students of the first class, have a unique opportunity to
found an intellectual community and give it character and
voice.
We have gathered to pursue one such opportunity by
creating a literary journal. It seems appropriate to choose
"Beginnings" as the theme of our first edition.
If you would like to share in this endeavor, please send
samples of your best writing, photography, or art work to be
considered for publication.
Theme:
Beginnings
Deadline:
December 7 ,1990
Categories: Prose nonfiction, prose fiction, poetry,
photography, art
Length:
2,000 words
Size:
Please restrict photography and art to a
maximum of 9" x 11"
Format:
Typed, double-spaced manuscripts (poetry
*
may be single-spaced), only black and
white photos/art.
Maximum number of submissions: Four per category

We are happy to accept for consideration all submissions
from CSUSM students, staff, and community members.
Include a self-addressed, stamped envelope if you wish
entries refunded after judging.
SEND ENTRIES T O THE O FFICE O F KENNETH MENDOZA

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