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                  <text>Local News; Conservationists Concerned about Environmental Effects o f San Elijo Hills Development
Page 2
Happy Halloween!
W here are the San
Diego Haunts?
Page 4
http ://www.esusmpride.com

ThePride
California State University San Marcos

News....... . .....2-3
Arts ...... .
.....4-5
Opinion.... .
6
Food............ ..........7
Calendar.....
8
,

Vol. IX No. 10/ Tuesday, October 30,2001

Staff Members Sue
Campus for
Discrimination
By AMY GRANITE
Pride Staff Writer

Faculty and students listen to speakers during thefirst statewide CSU teach-in. Several campuses held
teach-ins. San Marcos held a teach-in Oct 25-26. Various speakers discussedfaculty issues and
grievances infront of The Dome. (Pride Photo/James Newell)

The trustees of California
State University San Marcos
and Barbara Dovenbarger, con­
troller of the university, are the
defendants in two separate dis­
crimination lawsuits involving
employees from student finan­
cial services.
This month two of CSUSM’s
accountants filed lawsuits, alleg­
ing discriminatory practices
enforced by Dovenbarger, also
the Director of Student Finan­
cial Services, on the basis of
gender, race, and pregnancy.
Cecilia Boze was employed
by the university for nine years
and was the acting assistant

director of operations in student
financial services. Boze stated
that she resigned from the posi­
tion because of the stress she
suffered due to discriminatory
practices, according to the law­
suit she filed at the Vista Supe­
rior Courthouse.
In her complaint, Boze also
stated that she was passed over
for jobs and promotions that
she was qualified for, and that
the positions were often given
to unqualified individuals who
were Dovenbarger’s former col­
leagues, some of whom were
white males.
Another accountant at
CSUSM, Kim Gomez, filed suit
at Vista Superior Court,
^ A rticle cont. on pg. 8

Grievances Expressed; Acclaimed Speaker
Urges Societal and Educational Change
By j a m e s N e w e l l
Staff Writer
At the first statewide CSU
teach-in, faculty and various
guest speakers joined represen­
tatives of the California Faculty
Association (CFA) to present and
explain current trends in the
CSU system that are leading
toward the corporatization of
education.
Distinguished guest speaker
Stanley Aronowitz, an acclaimed
author and professor from City
University of New York, was
the final speaker. He began his
address with thoughts concern­
ing his home state of New York in
light of the recent tragedies, then
quickly moved to the changing
priorities in education. Explain­
ing the corporate mentality as a
“they take and we pay” cycle.
The teach-ins, which were
held at all 22 CSU campuses,
were initiated due to the continu­
ing disagreement between the
CFA union and the CSU admin­
istration. Some of the issues con­
tributing to the impasse include
class size, declining tenure fac­
ulty, and stagnant professor sal­
aries. The CSU contends the
quality of education students
receive is top priority, but the
CFA believes . the vital issues

“ I f thefaculty are getting a raw
d eal and staff are getting an
even worse deal, what are the
students getting ... ”
— Charles Goetzl

Stanley Aronowitz spoke at the
teach-in. (Pride Photo/JamesNewell)
concerning the future of Califor­
nia’s higher education systems
are being ignored.

The CSU
Prior to the system wide
teach-in, the CSU released infor­
mation pertaining to the issues
under scrutiny. The CSU con­
tends they are already 2.3 per­
cent above budget for this year.
The administration says the CSU
system is ahead of the national
averages for faculty . salary
increases and legislation for
budget increases is not probable,
given the state’s current eco­
nomic situation.
The CSU claims that one
of the reasons tenure faculty

hires are declining is that the
arduous task of finding new
faculty would draw staff away
from time spent with students.
500-1,000 searches per year are
conducted for full-time faculty,
and the CSU says this has yielded
an increase of 221 full-time fac­
ulty members in the past six
years.
CSU has had a merit pay
program since the mid-1990s.
The administration said they
believe the merit pay program
improves the quality of educa­
tion students receive by reward­
ing outstanding achievement by
faculty.

At the CjSUSM Teach-in
The CSUSM teach-in, held
outside the Dome, focused on
budget numbers’ manipulation,
lack of time for student/faculty
relationships, the declining qual­
ity of education, and changes in
university priorities.
Liliana Rossmann, CSUSM
professor of communication,
hosted the teach-in, and provided
Article cont. on pg. 3

Damagefrom the explosion in FCB. (Pride File Photo/Victor Padilla)

Students and Faculty Anticipate
Repair of Foundation Building
By AMY GRANITE
Pride Staff Writer
Students and professors
attending classes in the trailers
in the Foundations Classroom
Building (FCB) courtyartfeagerly await the reconstruction of the
FCB building, which was dam­
aged by a July blast in which a
boulder struck the exterior wall,
damaging FCB 101, and another
boulder came through the door
window, striking the opposite
wall in FCB 103.
The boulders struck the
buildings as a result of an explo­
sion by Hanson Aggregates, the
company that blasts to clear
rock for the university, and
to gather rocks for construc­
tion. Temporary trailers in the
FCB courtyard are replacing the
classrooms until construction is
complete.

Some students and instruc­
tors said they will be glad
to leave behind the uncom­
fortable, temporary classrooms’
small windows and poor ven­
tilation systems. “It* will be
nice to have a larger classroom
with better ventilation control,”
said Maureen DuPont, a math
instructor. She teaches a math
class that has 50 students in one
trailer, and many complain about
air conditioning problems.
Crowding is also an issue.
“I can’t even walk down the
aisles of the rows of seats in
my classroom,” said DuPont. “I
would fall if I did.”
Facilities Services said they
project the construction will be
completed in three weeks. “I
hope everything is settled and
we can be moved in and back to
normal by finals,” said DuPont.

�Conservationists Concerned
about Environmental
Effects o f San Elijo Hills
By MARY SUE WEBB
Pride Staff Writer
‘ an Elijo Hills is the resi­
S
dential development on the west­
ern slope of the ridges above
CSUSM. Residents also iden­
tify the development with San
Elijo Canyon, the creek that cas­
cades through the canyon, and
the creek’s destination, San Elijo
Lagoon in Cardiff.
But the president of a local
conservancy group said that the
San Elijo Hills development is a
threat to those areas.
Leonard Wittwer, a molecu­
lar biologist who is president
of the Escondido Creek
Conservancy and chairman of
its Land Use Committee, said
he is concerned that water con­
taining herbicides and pesticides
from the proposed San Elijo
Hills’ golf course could hurt
both the creek and the lagoon.
“Herbicides and insecticides that
they spray on plants, and fertil­
izers they use, would go into the
runoff,” said Wittwer. “Nitrogen
and some phosphorous will lead
to algae blooms in Escondido
Creek, and that water flows into
San Elijo Lagoon, which already
has been impacted by urban
runoff”
Water from urban areas runs
into the creek and gives it
year-round water flow. Seasonal
.streams run down the Double
Peak, the tallest ridge west of
CSUSM, and flow into the coast­
al lagoons. The developers are
seeking the approval of the city
of San Marcos to construct a
golf course on top of Double
Peak.
“If they build the golf course
on the ridge, everything that
flows down the north side would
go into San Marcos Creek (and
into Batiquitos Lagoon)” said

Larry Osen, a geography teacher at San Marcos High School, stands at the top of Double Peak;
San Elijo developers propose to build a golf course below the peak. (Courtesy Photo/Larry Osen)

Conflicting Interests over Use of
Cerro de Las Posas Ridgeline
By KEVIN HAWK
Pride Staff Writer
San Elijo developers applied
for a conditional-use permit that
would aliow them to build a
160-acre, 18-hole golf course,
clubhouse, and related facilities
if San Marcos approved the golf
course in 2002, on top of the
Cerro de Las Posas ridgeline, in
addition to the 3,398 homes
presently being built in south­
western San Marcos.
The
6,800-yard course would begin
at Double Peak and extend south­
west to the communication tow­
ers. Developers applied for the
permit in November of 2000.
This proposal has many San
Marcos, Lake San Marcos, and
Elfin Forest residents concerned
about environmental impacts on
wildlife, the destruction of natu­
ral vegetation and popular trails,
and pollution from the water
runoff that would be used for
the upkeep of the fairways and
greens. “The trail system is
a greater amenity than a golf

course could ever be,’r said Larry
Osen, of the city trails advisory
committee.
Since San Elijo Hills devel­
opers submitted an application
for the golf course last October,
the city has been studying how
the golf course would effect
wildlife and plants on the ridge­
line, said Curtis Noland, gen­
eral manager of San Elijo Hills
developers, as published in the
North County Times.
City planners originally
planned for Double Peak
Regional Park to occupy the
entire 200 acres, of natural,
open space on top of the ridge­
line, but with the proposed golf
course, the acreage allowed for
the regional park may be reduced
to 40 acres. Jerry Backoff, Chief
City Planner for San Marcos,
could not be reached in time for
comment.
Osen,
who
assembled
Friends of Cerro de Las Posas,
says the group is taking an
active approach to prevent the
golf course from being built on

t6p of the ridgeline. “The Friends
of Cerro de Las Posas has
engaged in a campaign of awareness, informing San Marcos res­
idents of a San Elijo Hills’
plan to sculpt the ridgeline with
a 160-acre professional golf
course,” said Osen. '
The Friends attended city
council workshops to voice their
concerns and ask questions,
wrote letters to the editors of
local newspapers, distributed fly­
ers, and collected signatures for
their petitions.
Earlier this year, at the Grand
Avenue Summer Festival at
GSUSM, the Sierra Club spon­
sored a booth where Osen and
three other volunteers promoted
awareness of the environmental
effects a golf course would cause.
“We’re not opposed to a golf
course, but we are opposed to
the course being built on top of
the ridgeline,” said Osen. The
Friends collected 250 signatures
for their petition, which will be
presented to the city council.

Wittwer. “Everything else would
go into Copper Creek and will
end up in Escondido Creek and
San Elijo Lagoon.”
The developers have said
that golf course runoff could be
contained in traps.
Wittwer said that the nitro­
gen a nd phosphorous wouldn’t
evaporate from water held in
traps. Besides the water issues,
he said there is also an issue of
the loss of habitat for animals if
a golf course is built.
“You also would no longer
see the sunset behind the ridge­
line if buildings were there,”
said Wittwer.
In February, the Escondido
Creek Conservancy acquired 76
acres to protect the scenic creek,
which flows from Lake
Wohlford on the east side 6f
Escondido near Valley Center,
and through the rural Harmony
Grove/Elfin Forest area, into
Olivenhein. Escondido Creek
then flows under a bridge at the
eastern terminus of Encinitas
Boulevard and into San Elijo
Lagoon.
The conservancy hasn’t
taken a position for or against
the proposed golf course at this
time. About 10 years ago, early
in the development’s planning
stage, however,-the organization
opposed the development plans.
Those who would like more
information on the conservancy
are asked to visit their web site
at www.escondidocreek.org.
A citizen water quality mon­
itoring organization, San Diego
Stream Team, separate from the
conservancy, also tests and mon­
itors the water quality of local
streams. Those who would like
information about the team are
asked to contact the San Diego
Regional Water Quality Control
Board at (858) 467-4387.

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�T he Pride

Students Hear Buddhist N un Discuss
Life, Religion, and World Events
By STEPHANIE BAIRD
Pride Staff Writer
Venerable Master Yi Jih, a
Buddhist nun from the San Diego
Buddhist Temple, visited pro­
fessor Susie Lan Cassel’s gen­
eral education humanities stu­
dents Wednesday. - In class*
Venerable Master Yi Jih dis­
cussed Buddhism, and her life
as a Buddhist nun.
Jih, who has a closely shaved
head, and was dressed in a tra­
ditional brown robe, joked with
the students* saying that she was
surprised that her look was not
fashionable with students at Cal
State San Marcos. “I don’t have
to spend my time on hairstyles
and fashion,” Jih said to the
students. “My mind is free and
joyful, and I give others happi­
ness.”
Jih became a Buddhist nun
in 1980, only a few years before
most of the GEH students were
bom. She was not bom into a
Buddhist family; she recalled
that her family went to a Taoist
temple when she was young.
While she attended a university
in Taiwan, she became inter­
ested in Buddhism and joined
the Buddhist Society. She soon
became inspired by Buddhism,
and went to the temple and
retreats with the society.
While Jih was still at the
university, Venerable Master
Hsing Yun, the founder of the
Fo Guang Shan International

Venerable Master Yi Jih, a Buddhist nunfrom the San Diego Buddhist
Temple, spoke to the students of Dr. Susie CasseVs general education
humanities class. (Pride Photo/Stephanie Baird)
Buddhist Order, headquartered
in Taiwan, lectured at her school.
Jih was eager to ask him two
questions: When, or at what age,
should she join the order? And
how could she help her parents
accept her decision to become a
Buddhist nun?
Her parents ended up speak­
ing with Yun, and as she neared
her graduation from the univer­
sity, Jih went to a summer retreat
where she shaved her head and
joined the order.
“At first my family felt like
they had lost a daughter,” said
Jih. But after two years of study­
ing for a degree in Taipei and

the five years as the head of
a temple, her family followed
her into the Buddhist religion.
Although she is monastic, she
still sees her family members
and is not secluded to the temple.
They have celebrations at the
monastery, and every two years
her family is invited to come to
her monastery, where they share
their stories and participate in
activities. Jih said, “The families
feel honored [to be a part of the
experience}”
The’ humanities students
asked Jih the responsibilities of
Buddhist nuns. Jih explained that
they have the opportunity to

preach at weddings and funer­
als. It is at the funerals where
one realizes that “life is really
impermanent,” said Jih. “Once
we realize this, we realize how
precious it is.”
The nuns also have study
groups and meditation groups,
which she said everyone is wel­
come to attend. Jih, who has been
in San Diego since 1993, also
translates Chinese into English
for Venerable Master Hsing Yun.
The temple has programs that
it conducts for the community,
including an education program,
a cultural program, that uses
newspapers, magazines and CDs
to
inform
people
about
Buddhism, a charity program to
benefit society, and programs
that help orphanages and homes
for seniors.
A student also asked Jih
whether or not she thought the
Sept. 11 attacks were the result
of bad karma.
“Death is not the end of
life. We move on to another
house. They were innocent. It
was not Karma,” said Jih, “It is
not just an individual issue, not
just ill America or New York.
The whole world is concerned
and it is a tragedy for all human­
kind.” Jih also commented oft
the terrorists: “It was behavior
of hate, they didn’t consider the
value of life. The best thing we
can dp is to try to eliminate hate
in others.”

San Marcos Faculty Express
Grievances at Teach-In
» A rtic le cont. fr om pg. 1
background for each speaker.
Rossmann explained the intent of
the teach-in was to educate and
shed light on the complex issues
concerning the university, and
that it was up to each person
to make up their own mind.
Before turning the microphone
over to the other speakers, Rossman interjected that the univer­
sity community needs to “all
work together to ensure quality
education.”
“The notion that the CSU is
being run like a business, like
any business that’s in business,
is absurd,” said George Diehr,
CSUSM professor in the college
of business and CFA chapter pres­
ident. Invited to provide logisti­
cal facts behind the bargaining
process between faculty and
administration, Diehr introduced
himself as the “numbers guy.”
He distributed a pamphlet of
charts to help listeners better
uftderstand the complex uni­
versity data, including studentfaculty ratios, faculty salaries,
and tenure-track faculty. Diehr
warned listeners to beware of
politically manipulated statistics.
“They (the CSU) said we hired

2,300 tenure line faculty over this
period... they didn’t tell you that
2,700 people had left ... people
had retired and resigned,” said
Diehr.
“If the faculty are getting a
raw deal and staff are getting an
even worse deal, what are the
students getting, because you are
at the bottom of that order as
far as the administration is con­
cerned,” said Charles Goetzl, a
representative of the APC (Aca­
demic Professionals of Califor­
nia). Goetzl spoke about how
current system trends could affect
students in the future. He
explained increasing workloads
reduce campus morale and are
detrimental to the personal rela­
tionships between faculty, staff
and students. “I remember the
professor sitting down at the
coffee shop ... after class ... that
is where I learned a lot more than
in the classroom,” said Goetzl.
“Don’t let people fool you,
students come first,” said Tim
Jenkins, speaking on behalf of the
California Teachers Association
(CTA) and the National Educa­
tion Association (NEA). Jenkins
said that “CSU staff deserve a
raise” and that slashing quality

education because of budget
issues is “hogwash.” He men­
tioned that the CSU community
is forming from a worldwide pool
6f faculty, staff and students and
should focus on setting an exam­
ple for higher education.
“Be aware of you work envi­
ronment ... be aware of what
your rights are and exercise your
rights,” said Deborah Corey, a
representative from the CSUSM
College of Business Adminis­
tration. Corey spoke to address
misperceptions of the modernday union. She explained that the
educational unions represented
at the teach-in are made up of
“hard working, caring people”
and they are “people who want
to serve you, but the resources
aren’t there.”

Stanley Aronowitz
“The problems (of CSU) are
also the problems of the City Uni­
versity system of New York, the
State University system of New
York, and many other public uni­
versities abound the country, but
we should not go away from this
teach-in believing that the prob­
lem is confined to education ...
we have a problem in America in

terms of what we think our pri­
orities are,” said Aronowitz.
Aronowitz said that as the
needs of society change, the uni­
versities need to support the
changes and that “today a highschool education is just a begin­
ning.”
With the current trends in
budget cuts and administration
decisions, public universities are
increasingly pressured to look to
the private sector for funding,
explained Aronowitz. This under­
mines the freedom of public uni­
versities in what Aronowitz calls
“the corporatization of higher
education,” which adds to the
ability of corporations to manipu­
late the priorities behind research
and curriculum funded by the
universities. “The private sector
does not give money entirely
out of the purity of their heart.
They want our education to be
geared to their job needs. They
want our research to be geared to
their product development,” said
Aronowitz.
He concluded by emphasiz­
ing that the system will only work
in unity and that the students and
faculty need to focus on “under­
standing each other better.”

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�Fall Films Bring Drama, Mystery, and Thrill
to take a flying leap into the surreal, a suicidal ex,
Julie (played by Cameron Diaz), drives them both off
the road and leaves him disfigured. Kurt Russell plays
Dr. Curtis McCabe who gives David hope that, with
the help of surgery, his face can be restructured. This
film is based on Alejandro Amenabar’s 1997 Spanish
romance/thriller, “Abre los ojos” (Open Your Eyes).

By JOY WHITMAN
Pride Staff Writer

The

'L astle
astC

“The Last Castle” opened Oct. 12, and stars Robert
Redford as General Irwin, a three-star general and
military technician who is court marshaled to a maximum-security prison by warden Colonel Winter (James
Gandolfini).
Col. Winter can’t help but respect Irwin; however,
that respect turns to hostility when Irwin questions
the warden on his prison rules. Confrontation between
the two leads to war when Irwin organizes his fellow
inmates for a takeover of the prison. Dreamworks
Universal Pictures will release “K-Pax” last Friday.
Distribution released the film. MPAA rating: R
The film is a “12 Monkeys” meets “Cocoon” type of
film, starring Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges. This film
is about a man, named Prot (Spacey) who arrives in
New York’s Grand Central Station and announces that
Twentieth
Century
Fox he is from another planet called K-Pax. He strikes cops
released “From Hell” last Friday. as a slightly imbalanced individual, and is forced to take
This film is set in 1888 in London. the next train to the closest mental institution. He is
Robbie Coltrane plays Peter entrusted to a shrink, Mark Powell (Bridges), who finds
Godley, a Scotland Yard detec­ himself moved by his new patient’s strength. Powell also
tive who assists the physically gift­ begins to see other patients exhibiting interesting habits,
ed inspector, Frederick Abberline which! may have something to do with Prot’s planet.
(played by Johhny Depp). They are Iain Scotley directs “K-Pax”. MPAA rating: PG-13

K-Pax

From

on a quest to find Jack the Ripper,
who murders women living in the
slums of Whitechapel. Heather
Graham plays Mary Kelley, an
Irish prostitute who is on Jack’s
“to-do-list,” and is also Abberline’s love interest. This
movie is based on the novel by Alan Moore and Eddie
Campbell, and is directed by brothers Albert and Allen
Hughes. MPAA rating: R

Harry hotter
“Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” is a new film
directed by Chris Colombus and is based on the first
book of J.K Rowling’s best-selling series. Newcomer
Daniel Radcliffe plays Harry, a young boy who lives
with his Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon. Richard Harris
plays the learned wizard mentor Professor Dumbledore.
Hagrid, played by Robbie Coltrane (who also stars
in “From Hell”), is the school’s groundskeeper, who
befriends Harry and invites him to study at Hogwarts
School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. This film is the
tale of this owl-eyed boy wizard and his discoveries
of two worlds, which are the disappointing worlds of
the Muggles, and another magical and fantastic world
where he is destined to live. Heydey Films and Warner
Brothers will release “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s
Stone” Nov. 16. MPAA rating: PG

Vanilla Sky
Director Cameron Crowe’s “Vanilla Sky” will be released
by Cruise-Wagoner Productions Dec. 14. Tom Cruise
plays a vain womanizer named David Ames who finds
that his best friend’s girlfriend, Sofia, (Penelope Cruz)
has confessed her love for him. However onee he decides

Ml#photos courtesy o f IMDB.COM

San Diego’s Dost Halloween Haunts

Compiled By LISA LIPSEY
Pride Opinion Editor

Haunting Locations,

bands, street entertainment, food, beer,
and other bewitching drinks. The enterg
tainment line up, sponsored by Dick’§|
Last Resort, will include Loaf, The,
All-stars, The Disco Pimps, and Ki|
cover band Hotter Than Hell. G u ^ ^ J ^
must be 21 years old with proper j
enter.

things or people for power, wealth and
fame.

loween Productions
The National Comedy
illoween Spooktacular

Dia de los Muertos
Celebrations

Del Mar “Scaregrounds” and the
111 per person
Scream Zone at the Del Mar
we information: (619)
Cal State San Marcos
Fairgrounds
Time: Thursday at 9.'m. - 3 p.m.
Time: 7 p.m. - midnight
jCost: Free
Cost: $9.95 per person
gfor more information: (760)
Call for more information: (858)
BesTajsfcaafe. There taay tx |
H P WmMght”
and.........
792-4252 or (619) 220-8497
surprise.' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Playground”
Dia de Los Muertos on
The “Scream Zone” is a Northj
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haunted house full of 3-D
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Outside the haunted housJflB D ei Mar I Cafe $13pypersoS,-''v / : IS Playhouse } . '
and the presentation
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j U H H v t bh | l i l l l l Time: 8 pan. Ifoesdajr^ Saturday 2 pm
nival rides and gamesii
and Sunda^aad? p.m. %nday
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tumes andlhousands of
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and prizes. All those in attendance will
Escondido.
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Haunted Hotel
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Time; 4 to 9 p.ty^
Time: 6 p.m. - m|
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aged to dress outrageously and in red.
743-S4I2 ;* |
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how much time yc |^ S ;a n d ® W :much:
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$ ^ ^ W h n in g seduction and mesmeriii ■ ticna! dishes* a n lb l tisplay.
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Clubs, CostumlKontests
m « E o n te sts
and Dancing

cost: $25 per
Call for more information: (619^8

,

for children and
adults participating
contest (kids free).
4:3ft p :m | *?»| ^ H ^ H ^ r e information: (619) ^
16
Suadtoy ( fhk^red^
fourth annual “Dia de los Muertos”
j P^pmson
(The Day of the Dead) will feature elab­
Call for more information:. &lt; « i l B P ^
4
orate altars in Bazaar del Mundo res­
437*0600m
—
^Marlowe’s clas- taurants that celebrate the holiday. Sugar
skull crafting demonstrations and guest
555f5R *es the capability of giving up
&amp;
artist appearances will also be featured.

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Halloween Monster Bash ii
BashWI^^^ ^ . ,^he l5thatus»tal% ^^,H W ^^fe«i” .M Time: 7:30
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Time: 5p.m. - 11 p.m.
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^ ■ i ^ S ^ i g g y Shuffledost &amp; the ,% sdm ' |
Cost: $10 - $15 per person
iation: (619)
^ I m ^ s B l a d c Heart Procession,
Call for more information: (619)
233-5008
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9|

�Hop Gains Momentum
By VICTOR PADILLA
Pride Staff Writer
The title of The Cross Movement’s album, “Human f
Emergency” speaks for itself. There is a problem in
our society, and there is a cause for alarm, and the
lyricists that make up The Cross Movement have an
answer for the problem.
“The Light o f Christ is a blazin' one
There's a fight to live right, and it's major Son
B ut the grace has come so we praise the Son
A nd celebrate Him ‘
cause we know what
He saved us from''
Those words describe what I’m all about to a “t”.
The album is definitely on point and bangin’. The
Cross Movement has, once again, put out another hiphop masterpiece. The album, just as the two before
it, is filled to the brim with intense, thoughtful lyrics,
bold passion, and righteous fury as the entire crew
Cross Movement’ new album, ‘Human Emergency, ”shows
s
hooks up for the sole purpose of spittin’ the uiicensored, another side of hip hop. (Courtesy Photo/crossmovement.com)
unadulterated word of God.
The Cross Movement, which includes MCs Tonic, that scream “single ” and demand a spot on the radio
Earthquake, The Ambassador, Enoch, and The Phanatik, airwaves.
Tracks, like the southern influenced “Know Me”,
unite on this third album to deliver refined skills,
eloquent flows, and a shamelessly holy message that talk a lot about what the secular rappers (who yap out
the side of their necks about how much they love God,
will shake up even the most devout non-believer.
The styles on this album range from the Spanish when in reality their lifestyles speak otherwise) don’t.
sounds of “Live Agua”, to the floor thumpin’ east coast The Cross Movement is different.
“You got more dough than a pizza shop, showing all
project anthem “Who wants battle”. “The Light (The
them gold teeth ya got, you keep a glock in the front seat
Blazin’ One)” starts things off with The Ambassador
and Truth taking turns spitting aggressive verses over of the jeep ya got, and you keep it locked, ... you won’t
a bouncy drum track, laced with string stabs and riffs go to church till ya Easter shop, new suit and shoes and

the Easter top, people stop to say “yo he’s she shot!”
But God says no he’s not! ...”
There are a number of reasons why this gospel
hip-hop album by The Cross Movement is so much
more important and impressively different than any
of that other crap we are forced to listen to on the
radio or on MTV.
1. This album features many different MCs, not
just one. Diversity on the album makes for a beautiful
sound. I can’t lie though; the Ambassador is still the
tightest MC on there.
2. The production, compared to the top-selling
secular acts, is top-notch. This album is way ahead of
the competition in any genre of hip-hop and rap, as
far as I’m concerned.
3. The message on this no-nonsense type of album
is heard loud and clear, no tongue in cheek, no apology,
no compromise, no sell-out.
4. The styles of music vary on this album. While
this can often take away from an album, this one works.
5. The message on this album is like no other in hiphop. There is absolutely no talk of the very things that
unfortunately dominate the airwaves of today, which
are drugs, women, money, and cars. Instead of talking
about all the problems in the world and glamorizing
them like many other MCs do, The Cross Movement
offers an answer and solution. Now that’s something
our youth needs to hear.
“Human Emergency,” by The Cross Movement, is
out in stores; and you may also purchase it online at
www.crossmovement.com

excluding textbooks, computer hardware, Microsoft rentals, gift certificates and special orders,
j

—^

—-

I I , 01

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U N IVER SITY

STORE

�The Pride

Opinion

'

~~TF

Letter to the Editor: Student Poetry
Battle of the Sexes
By Ali Ahmed Khan
for The Pride

Dear Editors:
My disgust with the section
of The Pride called “The Battle
of the Sexes” has driven me
to write to you in hopes that
change will occur.
The Pride is not the largest
of student newspapers, obvious­
ly, but usually it does offer some
good insight as to what is going
on on campus.
I can appreciate its lack
of length, because after all, at
the moment the campus is a
“postage stamp” campus. What
I cannot appreciate is the section
called “The Battle of the Sexes”
or what I like to call the “The
Garbage” section.
Here at CSUSM we pride
ourselves in being at the fore­
front of thought and technology.
Our campus is but 10 years old,
but we put pride on the fact
that we are a liberal campus. It
has been my experience that we
are very open to ideas from all
different disciplines, including
feminism. I believe that this is
in hopes to show students that
all disciplines have value in our
world.
It seems that CSUSM is try­
ing to make a difference in the

thoughts and attitudes of its stu­
dents by offering opportunities
to study within different disci­
plines. For this reason, a section
like this can only be welcomed
with an emotion such as dis­
gust.
There is an obvious need for
change in attitude toward the
social structure that is in place
right now, and this is the genera­
tion that will be able to break
down the walls.
That being said* I cannot
believe that a section that is as
silly as “The Battle of the Sexes”
can even be printed. Not only
does it seem like a section that
screams, “Hooray! We are out
of high school now we can talk
about sex, so let’s do it in the
school newspaper” but it seems
to offend all those (that I have
spoken to anyway) that read it.
The section perpetuates
every social stigma that we, as a
campus, are trying to change. It
begs to keep women and men in
their respective places.
To make a section in which
two people are “arguing” about
something having to do with
relationships, but taking very
sexist stances, on both parts,
accomplishes nothing except for

Student Poll
Would you ever plagarize?

maybe a few chuckles (not for
being funny or true, rather for
being absurd) from those that
read it. If that is the intention of
this section theh WELL DONE !
This section has managed to
represent the male as a chauvin­
istic pig, and the female as a
loud mouth ... two stereotypical
descriptions of male and female
roles that have been intact since
the days of I Love Lucy. I feel
that I, as a member of the aca­
demic community, deserve bet­
ter.
The attitudes that are
expressed by these “sex battlers”
are neither held nor agreed with
by those with whom I have dis­
cussed this section.
This kind of stereotypical
garbage keeps resistance for
change strong. It is keeping Pre
World War I ideals intact when
we are on the verge of World
War III.
This space of the newspaper
would be better used for kin­
dling to start a fire than to read;
the only problem with that idea
is that then we would be burning
another, more valuable, part of
our already tiny newspaper.
Carlos Baladez/Student

Dark side o f
the moon
I walk in Endless valleys
o f despair
Pain is what you gifted
me with
You acted like a cannibal
in my life
Tearing my soul
Shattering my fantasies
You are the devil with in
You feed on naive souls
I will take my revenge now
You shall cry in vein
Defeat is your fate now
You are a living m isery
I will haunt you with my
thoughts
Death is what you will long
for
Until you are a living traum a

Reverence
Hold me as I drift away
Praise me as I go insane
□"I Hail me as I enter your

slowwie realm
Pinch me as I transfer the
pain
Scream as I slay your soul
Unveil your'sins be forth
You presented me with lies
to feed on
You’re the Antichrist which
lives with in me
You gave birth to death
The devil is around you

Sorrow
A tam pered soul sits and
await for the light
Loneliness his only friend
He ponders on his past
Confused about his present
Scared about his future
There’s a constant urge o f
soothness which he pleads for
M isguided by his friends
yet cheated by his love
He sits and waits for the time
The tim e when devil shall
grant him with 3 wishes
I f only he could turn back,
but it’s too late now
The apocalypse has began
“Dooms day is a blink away”

rE~

HAVE A N OPINION?
S UBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITORS TO PRIDEi ICSUSM.EDU
Letters should be submitted via electronic mail to The Pride electronic mail account, rather than the individual
editors. Deadline For submissions is noon the Thursday prior to publication. Letters to the editors should include an
address, telephone number, e-mail and identification. It is The Pride policy to not print anonymous letters. Letters may
be edited for, and only for, grammar and length. 300 words or less preferred Editors reserve the right not to publish
letters. Please contact The Pride i f you are interested in writing news articles.

I do it all the time.

. I have done i t , but would 1
d/8 never do it again.
3/8
If I was under lots of
,
'
stress.
R esults Or

0/8

Survey; from
csusmpride.com
I might.
2/8 Your environmen­
tally friendly Pride
No, I would never do it.
On-line Edition
3/8

The
Pride
Co-Editor
Melanie Addington
Co-Editor
Victoria B. Segall
Opinion Editor
Lisa Lipsey
Feature Editor
Claudia Ignacio
Graduate Intern
Amy Bolaski
Assistant Editor James Newell
Business Manager Victor Padilla
Advisor Madeleine Marshall
All opinions and letters to the edi­
tor, published in The Pride ; represent the
opinions of the author, and do not neces­
sarily represent the views of The Pride, or
o f California State University San Marcos.
Unsigned editorials represent the majority
opinion of The Pride editorial board.
Letters to the editors should include
an address, telephone number, e-mail and

identification. Letters may be edited for
grammar and length. Letters should be
submitted via electronic mail to The Pride
electronic mail account, rather than the
individual editors. It ts the policy of The
Pride not to print anonymous letters.
Display and classified advertising
in The Pride should not be construed as
die endorsement dr investigation of com­
mercial enterprises or ventures. The Pride
reserves the right to reject any advertising.
The Pride is published weekly
on Tuesdays during the academic year.
Distribution includes all of CSUSM cam­
pus, local eateries and other San Marcos
community establishments.

The Pride
California State University San
Marcos

San Marcos, CA
92096-0001
Phone: (760) 750-6099
Fax: (760) 750-3345
E-mail: pri4e@csusm.edu
http://www.csusmpride.com

Humanitarian Aid Kills People
By David J. Ludwig
for The Pride
Populations
increase.
Throughout human history the
global population has increased.
Exponentially.
Animal populations increase
exponentially, until they are
bounded by food supply, preda­
tors, or disease. There is no rea­
son to believe that humans are
any different. If there is a drought
that reduces the food supply, the
population dependent on it will
die. Death is the inevitable reality
of life, and it is wrong to think
that this can be changed.
We know that it is wrong to
keep populations of animals arti­
ficially above the ability for their
habitat to support them, because it
makes them permanently depen­
dant on handouts from people,
and any reduction in the handouts
will kill some of them. For exam­
ple, if tourists feed squirrels in
a park, the squirrels will eat the
food available in the park as well
as. the handouts. This increase in
food supply will allow the squirrel
population to increase beyond the
carrying capacity of the park. As

a result, any reduction in food
from the natural supply, or the
handouts from people, will result
in the starvation of squirrels. The
net result is that the feeding of
squirrels has the potential to starve
far more than would otherwise,
given the inevitable fluctuations
in natural food supply.
The realities are exactly the
same when it comes to humans.
For as much as we like to think
that we are different than squir­
rels or any other animals, we are
not. We eat, and if we do not,
we will starve. We reproduce, and
increase our numbers as we have
throughout history, and there is no
reason to believe we will magical­
ly archive global zero-population
growth without being constrained
by food supply.
For as tragic as it for there to
be starving people, it only makes
the problem worse to send food aid
to foreign countries. The “humani­
tarian” aid is decidedly un-humanitarian, for it allows populations to
not only continue to exceed their
natural limits, but also continue to
grow. This continued growth only
multiplies the damage that will be
done by the next drought, or the

termination of “humanitarian”
aid. It simply is not realistic to
believe that the countries sending
aid can forever send increasing
amounts of food to support grow­
ing populations. The “humanitar­
ian” aid will end at some point.
The policies or economics, or even
the food supply of the countries
sending the aid will change, as
things always change, and that
change will someday be a reduc­
tion in “humanitarian” aid for a
population that has become depen?
dent on it. People will die and
starve in greater numbers than
would have been possible without
the “humanitarian” aid.
Considering that populations
always increase to match the food
supply, the only way to justify
long-term “humanitarian” aid is to
believe that the eventual starvation
of people is good, and enabling
it is moral.
It would be nice to end world
hunger; however, it simply is not
possible, at least in the long term,
and it is not right to save one life
today at the cost of several in the
future.
Long term “humanitarian” aid
is wrong and will kill people.

�T he Pride

Food

Terrace Buffet Style
Is a Knock Out
By KEVIN HAWK
Pride Staff Writer
Indian gaming casinos have spread
faster than wildfire across San Diego
County/ Several of the casinos market
their “buffet” as the best in the county
in hopes of drawing crowds. I decided
to take the Terrace Buffet, inside Pala
Casino, up on its offer.
The fact that there wasn’t a line
for the buffet on a Saturday afternoon
was surprising. The buffet resembled
an upside down “U”. Chinese selections
loomed bn the left side; traditional Amer­
ican and colorful Italian food caught my
eye on the right, and seafood, salad, and
soup flowed from the middle.
When I eat at a buffet, I always
begin “Round 1” with the salad bar. I
filled my plate with cabbage and iceberg
lettuce. Clumsily; I knocked the lettuceloaded tongs on the side of my plate,
causing leaves of lettuce to fall between
the selections of food on the buffet table.
Immediately, an employee, armed with a
towel, appeared from behind the counter
and swept up the tainted lettuce. I topped
my salad with sliced red onions, severed
cucumbers, and quarter-sized croutons.
“Round 2” consisted of Chinese
and seafood. I chose two seafood selec­
tions^ shrimp scampi and crab salad.
I also included three Chinese choices:
orange chicken, beef and broccoli, and
fried rice. The shrimp required messy
peeling, which meant I had to get my
fingers dirty. I didn’t mind working for

my food. The shrimp tasted soft, as it
should. After my first bite of crab salad,
the rest crawled uncontrollably into my
mouth until it disappeared. The beef and
broccoli resembled play food, shiny and
plastic coated. But the entree tasted
better than it looked. Each bite released
a stream of warm flavor that trickled
down my throat. I mixed the orange
chicken with the fried rice; the combi­
nation formed an inviting orange glow.
Time for “Round 3.” I loaded
my plate with American and Italian food
and filled my soup dish to the brim with
turkey soup. Placed in front of me, my
combination plate looked more like a col­
lage than edible food. The tender rotisserie chicken fell off the breastbone and
tasted soft, but disappointingly bland.
The turkey tasted moist and smoked-flavored. The veal didn’t disappoint, and the
mashed potatoes stood alone without the
assistance of gravy. The judges’ score­
cards had “Round 3” going to the Terrace
Buffet, until the turkey soup buckled at
the knees. If I had taken a bite of card­
board floating in warm water, I couldn’t
have told the two apart. I ran to the des­
sert bar to extinguish the foul taste in my .
mouth. I grabbed the first plate within
arm’s length. I discovered delightful,
colorful, sweet green apple slices cov­
ered in cinnamon. This dish relieved the
aftertaste of cardboard from my mouth.
The Terrace Buffet is located at
the Pala Casino, located on 11154 High­
way SR 76 in Pala, CA.

New Store Opening in San Marcos!
Longs Drug Stores has a variety of part:time and full-time positions
available for bright, motivated people who want to work in a customeroriented environment. If you can pass a basic skills test and work flexible
hours, some of the benefits Longs can provide are:
* Medical/Dental/Vision Care
* Competitive Wages
* Paid Sick Days/Holidays/Vacation * Employee Purchase Privileges
* Profit Sharing * 401K Savings Plan
Applications will be accepted and interviews will be conducted at the store

Tuesday, October 30,2001 7

Time to Get Saucy
By DANIEL HUEY
Pride Staff Writer
The combination of work, homework,
and writing-papers leaves most students
no free time. A busy schedule forces
most students to.eat at fast food restau­
rants or nuke noodles in the microwave.
Stop. You can prepare a hearty meal
in 20 minutes with the following recipe.
You will need the following:
A large pot o f boiling water
One pound o f linguini
either dry or
fresh
6 tablespoons o f olive
oil
3 cloves o f garlic
2 tablespoons o f flour
1 cup o f whole baby
clams — use canned
clams and reserve liquid I f
An 8-ounce bottle o f clam m
juice
8 ounces o f sliced mushrooms—optional
1 teaspoon o f diced pimento—optional
2-3 tablespoons o f fresh minced parsley
A pinch o f oregano—optional
Salt to taste
One loaf o f French bread
Parmesan cheese
Directions for preparing the sauce:
Put enough water in a large pot to boil
one pound of linguini and set it to boil.
Prepare the clam sauce while the water
heats to a boil. Heat the olive oil in a
medium-sized saucepan, and add minced
or pressed garlic cloves to the oil. Gently
fry the garlic in the oil until it becomes
slightly browned. The garlic will become

sticky so keep stirring.
Remove the oil and garlic from the
heat and sprinkle this mixture with flour,
stirring it constantly until the oil makes
a paste without lumps. Only use enough
flour to make a thick paste, and add it
slowly, not all at once.
* Return the paste to the saucepan, and
continue heating the paste. Whip and stir
constantly, and add all the clam juices,
the 8-ounce bottle and the reserve liquid.
Heat the pdn until the sauce boils. At
this point the sauce will begin thicken­
ing. When the sauce thickens, reduce
the heat and add mushrooms, pimento,
and oregano. Let the pan simmer, and
keep it covered until
the mushrooms are
cooked about five
minutes, and stir occa­
sionally.
Directions for pre­
paring the pasta:
By now, the water
for the pasta should be boiling, so start
cooking the pasta. Follow the directions
on the package to cook the pasta.
Now add clams and simmer for about
two minutes. The clams will become
tough if they are overcooked. Add pars­
ley, Stir in the parsley and remove the
saucepan from the heat and cover the
pan.
When the pasta is cooked to the “al
dente” stage, drain the pasta and sprin­
kle it with a little olive oil. Serve the
clam sauce over the pasta, salt to taste,
and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese. Use
plenty of French bread to sop up the
sauce.

m &amp; n q a V ju u f S to n e a
Saturday, November 3 ,9am. to 3pm
320 South Twin Oaks Valley Road
in San Marcos

Great Student Airfares
available with your ISfC or IYTC

Amsterdam
Brussels
London
Paris
Milan
Frankfurt

424
382
312
335
376
418

Thursday, November 1,2001
4:00 - 7:00 pm
California Center for the Arts,
Escondido
Meet with over 90 employers with
part time and full time
job opportunities!
For a list of participating companies: www.csusm.edu/CAC
Co-sponsored by:

caundl

travel
Aistftca'siMttkt teStedei?T
ravsl

Located In the UCSD Price Center
La Jolla

858-452-0630
1-800-2COUNCIL
www.counciitravel.com

CSUSM AlymniAssociaticm
CSUSM Career and Assessment Center
North County Times

�Calendar

Events

Time: 2 p.m.
editing the Ah Quin Diary,
Location: University 451
a 10-volume, 1,200-page diary
written by a 19th century Chi­
nese immigrant to Sari Diego.
Included will be a discussion
about the importance of the
text, arguably the first signifi­
cant writing in English by a Chi­ Tuesday, Oct. 30
Careers for Math Majors
nese in America.
Time: 3 to 4 p.m.
Location: Craven 4201
Learn career facts and explore
your options with your math
major during this workshop.

Workshops

Oct. 17 to Nov. 20
“Open Space/Closed Space”
Photography Exhibit
Photography by Phel Stemmetz
will be on display in the Library
Gallery.

Thursday, Nov. 1
Dia de los Muertos Celebration
Time: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Location: Palm Court
CSUSM will host a tradition
Ufa de los Muertos (Day of
the Dead) celebration. The main
festivities will be held between
noon and 2 p.m., including
poetry readings, papel picado
(cut-paper) designs, folk danc­
ing, and the presentation of altar
offerings.
CSUSM Fall Job Fair
Time: 4-7 p.m.
Location: California Center for
the Arts, Escondido
For more info, contact the
Career and Assessment Center
at (760) 750-4900.

Tuesday, Nov. 7
Chinese American Literature
a nd the Ah Quin Diary
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: ACD 102
Part literary critic, part histo­
rian, part detective* Dr. Susie
Cassel, Literature &amp; Writing,
will speak about the interdis­
ciplinary nature of her work

Clubs

Tuesday, Oct. 30
PASA Meeting
Time: 2 p.m.
Location: University 451
The Pan-African Student Alli­
ance will hold its regular meet­
ing.

Wednesday, Oct. 31
Circle K International Meeting
Time: 4 p.m.
Location: University 442

Thursday, Nov. 1
Medieval Round Table
Time: 12 p.m.
Location: Craven Hall 6201
Love far-off adventures, ancient
weaponry or magic? Are you
interested in seeing and/or read­
ing old, forgotten stories? Bring
your lunch and share your
ideas and information. We’re
a fresh, new, innovative, and
merry group.
Progressive Activists9Network
M eeting

Wednesday, Oct. 31
Getting Ready to Register
Time: 2 to 3 p.m.
Location: University 440
Are you ready for spring 2002
registration? Learn the “insider
tips” for registering.

Time: 1 to 2 p.m.
Location: University 451
This workshop will also include
financial aid advising.
Respecting Diversity
Time: 3 p.m.
Location: Commons 206
This workshop will explore the
ways we can honor and respect
the diversity around us. Pre­
sented by Counseling and Psy­
chological Services.

Boze Demands
Jury Trial

» A rtic le cont. from pg. 1
claiming that she was
denied a promotion based on
her pregnancy. When Gomez
questioned why she was denied
the promotion, she was given
Thursday, Nov. 1
a new position with less pay.
Getting Ready to Register
CSUSM trustees and DovenTime: 5 to 6 p.m.
barger are also the defendants
Location: University 440
named in this
lawsuit.
Are you ready for spring 2002
Rick
Moore,
registration? Learn the “insider
CSUSM’s Director of Commu­
tips” for registering.
nications, could not be reached
for comment. President Alex­
Tuesday, Nov. 6
ander Gonzalez would not com­
Using MLA/APA Formats
ment on the issue, as he said it
Time: 12 to 1 p.m.
was a personnel-related issue.
Location: ACD 314
Boze is demanding a
Would you appreciate a review
jury trial and is seeking action
of the rules for MLA and APA
*from a judge to stop the “dis­
formats? If so, then this work­
criminatory practices,” accord­
shop is for you.
ing to the lawsuit. Court papers
do not state the amount of
Wednesday, Nov. 7
damages sought by Boze or
Study Abroad
Gomez.

Thoughts on

...

Different Strengths
Compiled by M. Addington
“A nation or civilization that con­
tinues to produce soft-minded men
purchases its own spiritual death
on an installment plan.”
- Martin Luther King, Jr.
‘•The tragedy of modem man is not
that he knows less and less about
the meaning of his own life but
that it bothers him less and less.”
- Vaclav Havel
“Courage is not the towering oak
that sees storms come and go; it
is the fragile blossom that opens
in the snow.”
- Alice M. Swaim
“Our greatest glory is not in
never falling, but in rising every
time we fall.”
- Confucius
“Far better it is to dare mighty
things, to win glorious triumphs,
even though checkered by failure,
than to take rank with those
poor spirits who neither enjoy
nor suffer too much, because
they live in the gray twilight
that knows not victory nor defeat.”
- Theodore Roosevelt
“The more a person analyzes his
inner self, the more insignificant
he seems to himself. This is the
first lesson of wisdom. Let us
be humble, and we will become
wise. Let us know our weakness,
and it will give us power/’
- William Ellery Channing

The North County
Higher Education Alliance

NCHEA
A Higher Education
Consortium of
MiraCosta College-Palomar
College-CSUSM
Seeks Student Representatives For Its
Board One From MiraCosta
What? The North County Higher Education Alliance seeks a student to represent
transfer students to CSUSM from MiraCosta.
Eligibility? Any student who completed the first two years of their college/university
education at MiraCosta and who at least one semester of work at CSUSM may apply
for this position.
Responsibilities? -The Student Representative to the NCHEA Board must be willing
and able to:

“
“
“
“

Meet monthly - the fourth Tuesday of the month from 3-5 p.m. (meetings held at
MiraCosta College - with the Board;
Represent to the Board the issues, concerns, and needs of transfer students as they
make the transition from the community colleges to CSUSM; and
Perform one of the following tasks:
serve as web weaver for the NCHEA web site @ www.csusm.edu/nchea, or
help with editing and publishing official NCHEA documents, or
'

Pregnancy tests
• Support programs
• Skilled, caring staff
• Medical, legal, financial referrals

some other task as arises during the year.

Compensation? The Student Representative will receive $250.00 per semester to
compensate them for completion of specific tasks such as those delineated above.

^

ALL S E R V I C E S FREE
&amp; CO NFID ENTIAL

To Apply? Please submit a Letter of Interest in which you explain - in no more than a
paragraph - why you want to represent transfer students on the NCHEA Board.
In addition, please submit a copy of your CSUSM transcript and your MiraCosta
transcript. Be sure to include your telephone number and e-mail address so that we
can contact you for interviews and/or information about the Board.

Submit to Vicki Golich, Member, NCHEA Board
CRA 1255 - Faculty Center California State University San Marcos

//

l

Everyone was pressuring me. Birth Choice helped
me stand up for I
Sheri
The one-on-one support was ju st what
I n eeded/' Liz

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