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https://archives.csusm.edu/student-newspapers/files/original/e9436c924dcaefe72e6bb55584e383a8.pdf
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Text
Frankly, to
be honest...
Cal State San Marcos' first
theater production proves that
performing arts are alive and
well at the new university.
Page 12
Volume 1, Number 5
A student publication serving California State University, San Marcos
Dome places
restrictions
on student
activities
PRESIDENT
Stacy 7
By Amy Glaspey
Staff Writer
g|§
cohstmetioii,
proposed raise
By Roman S. Koenig
Assistant BdMr /
'
Friday, December 3,1993
-',
Bill Stacy played the role of pjswer man
^ ^: Photo by Mary Szteipatoewicz
Tueklay during a student f o t ^ i p front of I R S B ^ K ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ B i l l i S f c i S '
Cal State San Marcos President Dr. Bill Stacy fields questions f rom students a t a
the Commons Building,
Stacy covered several topics ranging f orum GTu^sday fa f ront of t he Ctoinmons Building*
from campiis c onstroctioni^^
ings. That p M i>f the phase will take a year- tracing exactly where each dollar from
a proposed pay increase for California and^half to coraplete,$aid Stacy. Three • each source goes is 4 iflteult • /
State University presidents. Other sub- l^ixISdjUijgs
tltelntei>
jects included the possibility of develop- national Building, holding high-tech labs for
Stacy cited several possible reasons fpr
ing a nursing program, how the university laiypa®^ i nt^Ai^ai' education, the Col- the Aise; In order to judge whether a pay
is viewed by the San Marco^l^mmuriity :":lfege:of
Arts increase isnecessary, the Chajtollor-s Ofand future student r ecruitn^fe
• :and;HUm^
science labs,' •§§ee developed a coinparison list of 28
•
One of the major issues discussed was a
soccer universities nationwide* arid then comthe beginning of the university's second field for student teams also came up. Al- pared the average yearly income of a uniphase of construction. Initial y ds for de- though I Si&y^
be a possibility, versity president to what CStI presidents
velopment will be opened in January with financial restrictions cannot guaranteeitscre- receive, according to Stacy/The average
work to begin in February or March, ac- i^onjni^rio bi^ldlij^;=athletic, f ac^
pay found was $149,000, $20,000 more
cording to Stacy* ;
"f i f f i e ^
subject of a than what CSU presidents currently re"It's a matter of coming to life,M said p r o v e d pay-false for California State Uni-' ceive, •
C v -' *
Stacy, "Much of what is here now was
dreamed upfeypeople who are not sitting have vpiced doncem over such a proposed
Two CSU presidents have left their
:
here":
||3se-4tt ihe. midst ^of J&e, Jncreases, Stacy • positions for better pay at universities out
The next phases of planning and con- imsrtrcdiferf t te:m0j^#0Uld coirie from a of state, Stacy c o n t i n u e d M San Josfe,
struction presenta uniqueopportunityto $17 million pool already set aside specifi- the top candidate for university president
build a university based o n e x p e r i - caJlyforpay of alfftMversity system employ- declined because of the pay.
4
ences of pbc^&itbw
ees^ / ^ j'^v^;/ /elStacy,
p mbis already
Students who missed Stacy on Tuesday
•• The $12 million project will begin with
said that students do have a
Ihe^o^
Road toBarham >
teSi
sla- nledfrom 4
in Commons
:
Drive ami site preparation for new buildtogether, so
v
o>>>>>
The Dome. Is it a dining room? Is it a
study lounge? Is it a student center? Is it a
dance hall? Is it a lecture area? To find the
answer I took a drive along the frontage road
of Freeway 78 to the pink and green stucco
building which is the home of The Foundation.
There I found Marty Grey, who handles
requests for use of the Dome. When considering these requests, Grey tries to coordinate
a "unified effort" to help different organizations hold successful special events on campus.
"The Dome was designed as a dining hall/
study area," Grey said. "We are trying to
make it used for many things that it was not
designed for." The ever-present echo makes
the Dome an undesirable lecture site. The
inflexible lighting system (the lights cannot
be dimmed) makes it an inadequate dance
hall.
The question remains—if the Dome was
not designed to accommodate student events,
where did he planners expect the students to
hold their functions? Outdoors? Off campus?
Grey suggested that maybe "the planners
didn't think we would be so social." Meanwhile, the Foundation is trying to come up
with creative ways to use the campus facilities. Recently, Grey received a request for
the use of the Dome as the site of a dance party
in February. She's trying to find an alternative location, possibly outdoors.
If you are considering hosting an event in
the Dome, here are a few things to remember.
The Foundation holds the exclusive food
rights on campus. The Foundation has a food
See DOME, page 3
�This week...
• CSUSM Professor Honored. Page 4
•Volunteering at CSUSM. Pages 8 -9
• Writing Requirement Excessive Page 4
• Sankofa to perform. Page 13
CSUSM Makes A Big Impact on
Saving the Environment
Our recycling program started
in August and during the first two
months alone, we diverted 31,300
lbs. of material. That's an
excellent start for our new
program.
If we take a close look at what
this effort means to our environment, it becomes even more
impressive. We have been busy
recycling several varieties of
paper including newspaper,
cardboard and mix paper. The
more than 14 tons of recycled
paper means that CSUSM has
saved 294 trees, 3,920 gallons of
oil and 98,000 gallons of water!
The glass bottles that have been
recycled reduces the need for
mining sand, limestone and soda
ash. Making aluminum cans from
recycled aluminum reduces
related air pollution by 95%.
Why recycling just one aluminum
can saves enough energy to
operate a TV for three hours.
Let's keep up the good work..
Take that extra step or two, to put
your recyclables in the right
container. Together we have
made a difference and we can
continue to make a greater one!
(
CM&US n9tI T£® WO£Wm
iDonation
ifllto
*Bo?cLocation$:
Craven 6100 Wing,
College of Education Workroom
Student Resource Center,
Commons 205
Library
Human Resource Management
Academic Hall (under bulletin board)
Toy Drive
Food Drive
Clothing Drive
Monetary Donation
Children's Book Drive
Proceeds will be given to the Habitat for Humanity International For Information Call Michelle Lockyet at 752-4990 Commons 205
�DOME
PUBUC SAFETY NEWS
continued from page 1
Defensive
Tactics
Workshop
Scheduled
Photo/Mary Szterpakiewicz
Public Safety Officer Dave Ross stands near one of many house phones
on campus
Officer Mario Sainz will be conducting
the first in a series of three Defensive
Tactics Workshops beginning Tuesday,
December 7 ,1993.
WHERE:
TIME:
University Commons 207
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
The Workshop is FREE and open to
CSUSM students, faculty, and staff. Please
wear lose fitting clothes, i.e., sweat pants,
sweat shirt, etc.
The Workshop will be part lecture and
participation. Officer Sainz will be demonstrating and providing very practical
information and useful techniques.
If you are interested please call Public
Safety Administration at 752-4562 Monday thru Friday 8:00 AM - 10:00 PM and
ask to be placed on the sign-up sheet for
the December 7th Defensive Tactics Workshop. Class size is limited to 30 people.
Hope to see you there!
ASK DORA & DAVE
QUESTION: H0tJ§3£ PHONES, what
d o ihey look Kfce* whe*eare theylocafed,
and how do we use them?
A NSWERt T hehouse rphoi&s 'are, px?^
silverboxes with phones attached to them.
They cm jfce found m several locations
around campus: : j ^ .
Academic Hall, f irst f loor center stairwell next to pay phone; second floor north
side of buildingand center stairwell area
on the west wa!l; t hird floor north side of
building; f ourth floor north side of b uild- 4
f fh "y
::
f Science H all first floor east end of t hel
C ommons a rea north side of the
D ope m the hallway next t o the pay
phones, / ,
•A
>
only work f or on-eampu$
calls. The phones are f reeand are prcn
vided f or your safety and convenience.
When using house phones, all you have
i o do is push any 4-digit number oil"
|campu$. Remember, that 3111 is an
^ m^ge&y number direct to the Public
Safety dispatcher. If you have any questions about the phones or would like a
map, call Public Safety a t #4562 and we
Please send your comments, suggestions, or questions concerning Public
Safety matters t o the campus newspaper
i building by the vivarium; t hird f loor east Office locatedln ACD208, or call Public
- m^MMk'buildingin thehaHway ftextip Safety at 752-4562. Address all questions t o ASIC DAYB & DORA,
Get Your
The Accounting Society, trained by the IRs, will prepare
your taxes on campus — and — receive your return quickly.
Look for more information in January.
WE
OFFER
^ELECTRONIC
UK TAX FILING
service contract with Aztec Shops. Aztec
Shops holds the food-handling insurance.
You may bring in your own caterer by
asking Aztec Shops to subcontract with your
caterer. Just don't try to cater the event
yourself because no home cooked food is
allowed. Only licensed caterers are permitted on campus. These food handling policies help the Foundation achieve its goals of
"creating a coordinated effort" and assuring
"careful food handling."
Your next step is to fill out a "Request
for Space Form." These forms are being
tested right now since the University is still
coming up with a facilities policy. An
interim policy is now in place. Developing
this policy is a lengthy process. "The first
draft was 15 pages, now we've narrowed it
down," Grey said. The Foundation is testing
the Request for Space forms to see if they
flow well before it makes a formal policy to
be adopted by the University.
The goal of the Facilities Use Policy i s to
"identify the areas available for use and see
what uses the areas serve well and to help
determine whether the campus can meet the
needs of the event," Grey said.
Although the goal of the Facilities Use
Policy is sensible, some of us continue to
wonder how student unity can be a priority
at CSUSM when our campus facilities are
not conducive to hosting variety of student
events.
Office of Admissions
and Records Gets a
New Door
An automatic double door that opens
onto the Founders Plaza has been installed
in Craven Hall 5110, the counter area of
Admissions and Records. From now on,
this will be the public entrance to and exit
from our office for everyone. Please direct
visitors, students, etc. to use this door when
coming in to A and R. I ask that all staff
and faculty likewise use the new double
door. The former entrance to Admissions
and Records off the corridor will be kept
locked.
We hope to have a sign hung outside
near the new door identifying our office in
the near future.
�CSUSM Professor wins
Presidential Award
for Excellence in Science and Math Teaching
The White House recently
informed CSUSM professor,
Joseph Keating that he received the Presidential Award
for Excellence in Science and
Mathematics Teaching. Each
year, one math teacher and
one science teacher are selected from each state for this
prestigious award.
Keating said of the award,
"I am honored to have been
chosen as a recipient of the
Presidential Award. When
Congress established the
award, they made a statement
about the importance of science education for all Americans. I believe that science
should be an integral part of
our educational system and
as a f aculty m ember at
CSUSM feel very fortunate
to be given the opportunity to
make the connections between science and the training of teachers of science."
The Presidential Award
acknowledges the important
role teachers play in attracting students into science and
mathematics. The award carries with it a
grant of $7,500 from the National Science
Foundation and an expense-paid trip to Washington, D.C. The trip to the capitol in April
1994 includes an award ceremony, a dinner
at the State Department, and several workshops where awardees exchange ideas and
experiences
Keating joined CSUSM's College of
Education faculty this August. Said Steve
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^
T^^Jtayoiy^. i n'^^png the prog i l l ! A new structured p roj^m is • in ; gram going are i ayitiil^jOtfe «§visions,
'
an<J
f©napted IntegrMye Studies. According to
feat will still meet tewaivef ie$uire:
; ments
be ereitftd^peciali^ in areas
$ii^po^ais. f j :
Yanez says, ^student imputis
ain^ngl^tw^npc)gram members and the l iberal Studies
.i^so^adoini w i l l b e a n ^ in
W J fi^,jttfehoped that
t
S
This m e a n s O p t i o n s for courses :=jlS^iiiP^Gi^^
. would
waiver so*
will'
t
u
d
•
:
will ex- •
to ^migjsi/-at explicidy'
they will be able to attaia a Bachelor'*
^Tfe
Studies • pmgram will
Degree in Integrative Studies, Going
^'^iescpajBdM -to d ^ ' ^ ^ t d ^ n c e s Jpr
through a track system will enable the
wMb j^pi—' teacher tracks and w o p t i n g for
degree
other
cal emphasis" according to Dr. Fanes. . ^ jife^ibt^^
Tracks will b e made around a core curt h ^ ^ ^ ^ i f i a t will
riculum, but i tiias been proposed that
N o e xWcpfee^ will .
specialfields will be extended beyond
twelve ust& by
jreqmi^ed/
;
courses.
«
-'4 / Although Liberal Studies are t*emg < devised toj^i^ffippibdate; the
contains
I tis.
' a waiver program a t this time, there are i
^ ^ t ^ i l ^ i i e ^ b f all jS^M^^pfeportuniPhoto/Mary Szterpakiewicz inlefdiscipliiiary study tracks already in i
place. These include Women's Studies, ^ p i ^ a ^ y e n u ^ wiliscKp be made availGlobal Arts, and others. New proposals
Lilly, Dean of the College of Education, "Joe's
" "aiid opportuare being suggested t o include Cultural '
expertise in science education and his 25 years
Studies (including a Spanish and Bilinof experience of teaching made him an excelgual program in which courses would b e
lent addition to the CSUSM faculty. He is an
given in the Spanish language). There are BBIM^^
exceptional and innovative teacher, and I am
proud that he is part of the college and university. This is a major national award, and one
which Joe richly deserves."
CSUSM's Writing Requirement is Excessive
USD, SDSU & UCSD have no formal writing requirements
By Karen Foster
Staff Writer
Have you noticed that you've been
spending a lot of quality time with your
computer lately? The end of the semester
is quickly winding down and everyone
seems to be struggling to finish an endless
number of term papers. During this
stressful time, many students view
CSUSM's writing requirement of 2,500
words for each class with a great deal of
hostility.
CSUSM's writing requirement is unique
to our university. A survey of USD,
UCSD and SDSU was made to see if these
universities had any standardized writing
requirement. All of them expressed surprise
that CSUSM has a formal writing requirement, and added that their schools leave
writing requirements up to the individual
professors.
While there is no intent to diminish the
importance of writing, the need for a
formalized writing requirement seems
unnecessary. In an attempt to satisfy this
criteria, most professors assign a final term
paper. Students taking a full load of courses
usually find themselves struggling to
complete four or five term papers all due
at approximately the same time. This
end-of-semester crunch often results in
insufficient time to finish other class
readings and assignments.
While some professors offer creative
ways to satisfy the writing requirement,
others have reacted by assigning enormous amounts of written work. Some 300
level classes require more written work
than 400 level courses. Given the
excessive writing required in each class, it
is impossible to do a good job in every
class. Burnout quickly sets in.
Regardless of the minimum writing
requirement, term papers would probably
still be a requisite for most classes.
However, the pressure of preparing a
research paper for every class could be
relieved. Some professors could create
alternatives to written work that would
enhance different learning skills. For now,
we are left to deal with the writing load.
Keep pounding away at that computer, and
promise your friends and family that you'll
see them after December 18.
�<
PLANS .
;\
18 • 19,
a ga&^'l^ltaid
CSU Student
Research
Competition
:
scheduledftwfMarch
prior to the end of this
I.
^^t^oijp^e a^mtt
year, a s are other
and units. W e would
like to W t f t b e f itit o rganfeMonal meeting FRIDAY, December 1 0,1993 in ACD-4G4
' jB^ito. J
f
^
s ^iiS^jpp^et^^
wfil f omsubcominittees,
the j ob done
and
tavesomefundo^^
participation.
ISON^^
I h ave j ust been informed by Jane Lynch t hai
our e xterna f uiidin^
NORDSTROM is c omjnitedto being a
j ^ s ^ o t ^ i S ^ J ^ w - W ^ , , Success breeds success!H
D o you want t o work closely with a ^ f e s s o r ?
yioj^^
> -^
D o you want t o bfNinttee your potential and future career?
-> ,
please. ^n$i<te.-In-Course 3
have been
comp^
f M i a full-time faculty person t o
flf
'
Student i m t i a d v e i s h ^
The annual CSU Student Research
C ompetition will be h eld at C SU,
H aywardonMay 6-7,1994. The competition is held in order to promote excellence in undergraduate and graduate
scholarly research and creative activity
by recognizing outstanding student accomplishments throughout the 20 campuses of the CSU.
Please
develop Mi In-course Honors contract for any class you want
;.
pleas^ contact Brofessor Brooks Retd Director of Honors
:
ProgramtoCraven :6227
Cumculpn S|rvices in Craven 5210
sch
S tudent C M S cholarship 1994. The
Association is offering three •
$2,000 s chpla^hips ^
student C ^A inembers. T he criteria are a s follows:
': A . B e a
member of Student
B* B i t m c t m g preparatory j pro^^n^' :: •
' : ~: •
;:
JJ^M^S^t
<J£A; d e f a o p t r ? ^ i ftclvei^ntiii;and^ensiti^ty ' tb human, t
^ -scteMf ^ ab^o^q i ^sife;. c^artKrf^ t s such a sfcegpcMbiBty,^
integrity;
'Apg^
T he deadline f or submitting the completed application to the CTA Scholarship Commit1
• tee m l ^ ^ u ^ y ^
'
.
,'*:
S oroptomistlntemationalof Vistas T he Soroptrmjst International of Vista i s o ffering
of $ 1400 scholarship t o a senior-year woman majoring in English or Science. Applicant
vv
m ust meet the following criteria:
' v > • - v >,
A . Senior-year woman
i f-?'/' '
v<
;
v
of
e p ^ l ^ Ml^ii^
-^
'ffilr
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C . Demonstrates financial need" . r':;|§
Applications are available in ^ %jtolai^hip Room in the Financial Aid O ffice, CSUSM.
TFt^ ^e^SAto^
fe^ft^i^
1t4y 1993. /
Soroptimist groups
f or
WHO MAY APPLY
Undergraduate or graduate students
currently enrolled on any CSU campus as
well as alumni/alumnae who received
their degrees in Spring, Summer or Fall
1993 are eligible. The research presented
should be appropriate t o the student's
discipline and career goals. Proprietary
research is excluded.
The 10 categories are:
Behavioral and Social Sciences
Biological and Agricultural Sciences
Business, Economics, and Public Administration
Creative Arts and Design
Education
Engineering and Computer Science
Health, Nutrition and Clinical Sciences
Humanities and Letters
Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Energy
A campus may include up to 10 entrants in the first nine categories in addition to one or more entries in the ENERGY category.
Print A Copy
334 Rancheros Dr.
San Marcos, CA 92069
(619) 591-4000
HOW TO APPLY
Interested students should contact a faculty member in their discipline or faculty
members should identify potential student
applicants and encourage them to apply.
The application package shall consist of a
Student Delegate Registration Form and seven
copies of a written summary of the research.
Each copy must include: the name of the
student and the title of the presentation, a
narrative not to exceed five double-spaced
pages, and appendices not to exceed three
pages.
Students who are entered into the competition will present their work orally before a
jury and an audience. Students will compete
by discipline category and class standing.
Each student will have ten minutes for an oral
presentation and three minutes to listen and
respond to juror and audience questions.
Registration forms and papers must be
submitted for consideration at the systemwide
level by March 21,1994. In order to meet this
deadline, we are requesting that campus submissions be submitted no later than March 7.
Should there be more than 10 entrants, the
appropriate Academic Senate committee will
review and select C SUSM's entries.
For a copy of the procedures and guidelines, please contact Diane Johnson Martin at
X4052. Application packages should be submitted to Diane Johnson Martin in Academic
Affairs (Craven 5210-B) no later than March
7 ,1994. (The VPAA will cover 50% of the
student's registration/travel expenses up to
$200.)
^
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�H I i g i f c e . F i r s t S emester
Itff? I
I
-
T o d o t his, y o a i i i ^ t
r ecord t o S tudent H ealth
Photo/Carlos Mariscal
Whooping
cough
doesn't last that long. Therefore, adolescents and adults frequently are susceptible.
This certainly puts college-age students at
risk because they either have children or
frequently work with children.
Whooping cough in adults is frequently
By Joel Grinolds, MD, MPH
thought of as a "bad cold." Commonly, the
Unlike measles which I recently spasmatic cough that persists for longer
wrote about, Pertussis or whooping thanfiveto seven days leads people to seek
cough is making a comeback. Accord- medical attention. Fortunately, standard
ing to the Centers for Disease Control antibiotics and symptomatic medications
and Prevention, reported whooping can cure this disease and serious complications such as pneumonia don't usually occough cases will double in 1993.
Whooping cough is a highly conta- cur in adults. Still, before treatment, adults
gious respiratory disease caused by bac- can transmit the disease to infants and young
teria that live in the mouth, throat and children as well as other adults at work or in
nose. In children, it causes severe cough- the classroom. No one at this time is recoming spasms that can interfere with eating, mending adults be vaccinated; however,
drinking and breathing. Pneumoniacom- health experts feel all efforts should be
plicates this disease in children 10% of made to keep infants and young children
immunized.
the time.
Since the "cold and flu" season has arIt is usually prevented by a vaccine
rived (just in time for finals), and since
that most people received during the first
two years of life and hopefully a booster there is no magic potion to prevent you
around age five. However, the vaccine from becoming ill, I hope you stay well and
does not protect people that well and enjoy the holidays.
Immii^^
o r m edical
H all, till o ut t he
a ccessary f o r m i o ^ r eturn t lie c ompleted f o t m t o A dmissions a nd
Recor<fs. '
^
./
>fl
Q I f yo*i s tead t o r eceive a b ooster, y ou m a y d o s o a t S tudent
" Y ou w ill n ot b e a llowed t o r egister u ntil t his i mmunisation
SHE THOUGHT SHE MIGHT BE PREGNANT...
and turned to a trusted friend to confide her
anxiety. "First, you must get a pregnancy
t est," the friend suggested, " and I know
where you can have the test free. The place
is BIRTHRIGHT."
" I know someone who was there recently
and she said they have wonderful, friendly
counselors. And she told me all of their
services are free. I'll tell you what . . . I'll
get their telephone number and check to
see when the office is open. Then I'll go
there with you. So, don't worry, everything
will be OK."
Birthright
277 S.Rancho Santa FeRd.
cw
™
San Marcos, CA 92069
744-1313
150-A N. H Camino Real
Wiegand Plaza
Encinitas, CA 92024
942-5220
�How t o Handle Difficult People
By Mary Szterpakiewicz
Editor-in-Chief
Dr. Laura Schlessinger, licensed psychotherapist and popular talk show host recently spoke at the Hotel Del Coronado.
Her topic—how to handle difficult people.
According to Dr. Laura (as her radio listeners call her), "when dealing with difficult
persons, always remember 99% of the time
the other person is not going to change. No
one likes to* give up control and power.
How do we normally react when someone makes us angry or upset? We hide. We
deny. We wish the upset would go away.
We d on't want to deal with it. We become
miserable. Life is tough enough without
voluntary misery, so we want to protect
ourselves. We d on't want to admit our fears
or our pain. Nothing you do or say is more
powerful than fear—not sex, not love, not
food, not money.
Why does anyone act like a jerk intentionally? Because they are in the self-protection mode. How you perceive it, how you
react to it are important. People are basically different. You can't change their behavior, but you can only change how it feels.
The main point in dealing with difficult
people—stop being the victim. "Don'town
it and you can handle it," says Dr. Laura.
Changing your behavior (how you deal with
the situation) will help you take control.
The five most common types of difficult
people are:
1. The Ranter and Raver. Their anger
makes you feel hurt and scared. You are
convinced you must be letting them down.
The issue is acceptance by a parent. You
need to look at your history. Did your
family show anger? Was anger discouraged
or suppressed? Was there a lot of denial and
avoidance in your family or an explosive
parent? Yourreaction to the ranter andraver—
you become terrified.
If you do nothing, it is perceived as passivity and permission. How to deal with an
angry person? When someone screams, pretend they're under water and say a mantra.
Tune out. The anger is about them, not you.
Use humor. Find ways to deflect the anger—
picture the screamer sitting on a toilet. This
helps to put you in an objective place. What
can you say to an angry person? "Stop, I
don't appreciate being talked to like this."
Keep saying it over and over again. It helps
to keep your integrity in place. Or use naivete—"Excuse me, I 'm having a hard time
understanding what you're saying, can you
repeat that to me more slowly?" This will
generally take the sting out.
Use reverse psychology.
Tell the person to keep yelling, and say you'll wait till
they calm down. All these
devices help to put you in
control of the situation and
no longer make you the victim.
2. The Manipulator.
These persons don't give.
They are only in the relationship to get what they
want. They lay guilt on
others. They are too scared,
too afraid to change. They
pretend to be caring to get
what they want. They are
afraid to give in return.
The manipulator is very
seductive and a charmer.
You want to believe it. You
know each other 20 minutes and you know i t's 'real.' When a woman
has sex with a man, she thinks it means the
same thing to the man. But she doesn't ask—
it might mean something totally different to
him. We don't ask because we d on't want to
know. You are still hopeful. You feel used
and unhappy. ' There is risk in any relationship," cautions Dr. Laura, "so don't donate it
,too quickly until you see signs of a reciprocal
relationship." You can't buy love, not with
money, sex, or affection. It happens over
time, not in one night.
3. A Flake/Space Cadet. They don't
commit to anything. You end up feeling
angry and used. "Flakes are unreliable and
hard to pin down, so stop trying," reminds Dr.
Laura. These people tend to marry control
freaks. You end up with a relationship where
only one person is paddling the raft on the
river of life. Be less upset by it, because you
can't change it. If you are involved with a
space cadet, you will end up being in control
of the relationship. These people don't try
and are afraid to take risks or try new things.
If you choose to stay in this relationship,
maximize the positives. Even flakes do something well. Get enthused about that, but don't
push. If you push or criticize them, they
withdraw and it reinforces their defenses.
4. Hypercritical/Negative Type. This
type of individual is unhappy and insecure.
They don't want to be wrong so they're on the
alert for anything wrong and are looking for
people to blame. Look at these people with
pity. Use humor. If you're always surrounded by negativity, get a second opinion
to get some objectivity. You can teach the
nitpicker realistic f eedback. Someone
nitpicky or critical is rarely specific. If they
say "This house sucks!" Ask for specifics.
"Which part of the house sucks?" People
won't stop being that way, but in time it will
be tempered. The only way a critical person
can get to you is if you are hypercritical
yourself.
5. Ignorer. This type of person couldn't
care less. They keep doing the same routine,
and you tend to overreact. You feel rejected.
Ten times out of ten, you know why you are
being rejected. Have a heart-to-heart talk
with the ignorer. Tell this person you feel
hurt. We pay a high price for negative feelings.
When dealing with difficult people, look
inside yourself. You are the container for the
pain you experience. How you perceive it
will help you deal with it. Dr. Laura
Schlessinger can be heard Monday-Friday on
KFI-AM 640 from noon till 2 PM.
CSUSM Signature
Quilt
by the Quilting "Bees"
This "work in progress" is being done by
an informal group of CSUSM faculty, staff,
students and community members.
We will be quilting it on campus in the the
Dome, every Wednesday at Noon.
Please join us for fun and conversation as
we complete this project and plan for the next
one.
Photo/Mary Szterpakiewicz
Three Quilting Bees busy at work (L to R): Leslie Zomalt, Lora Coad and Pat Worden
�VOLUNTEERS DO GOOD
Plaza Nov 8 and 9.
Volunteers Robert Wortmanand
Ann Garman
By Marilyn Ribble
"More people should volunteer.
The world would be a better place,"
said Robert Wortman, president of
the Accounting Club, last week at
the recent Service-Learning Volunteer table in the Plaza. Wortman
has been a volunteer in such diverse
areas as Boy Scouts and Volunteer
Research for the State Board of
Equalization. Wortman is a Business/Accounting major and will participate in the VITA project to assist low income people with tax
forms this spring.
Yvonne McCarty, a Liberal Studies major, found personal satisfaction in her volunteer hours with the
Red Cross, fundraising, as the Art
Club treasurer and says about the
field of volunteering, "I recommend
it to everyone. It is a wonderful
professional and personal growth
experience." In addition, Yvonne
is president of SCTA and the Liberal Studies Ckib vice president.
CSUSM is very committed to
building a service-learning base and
has begun by initiating several
events to call attention to what is a
progressive and new element in
education. Over 100 students
stopped by the table in Founder's
"I truly enjoy volunteering. It
gives me self satisfaction knowing
that you have made someone
smile," said Ann Garman. Garman,
an Accounting major, has an impressive list of volunteering in her
background. Ask her about it sometime, or, in brief, here's a few of
the areas Ann has chosen: Special
Olympics, Best Buddies Club,
President of Circle K at CSUSM,
Christmas Angel Project for kids
this Christmas. And in Ann's f uture she sees herself in Kiwanis
Club and continuing with Circle K
as an advisor.
Richard Molloy, a Psychology
major, also has contributed his time
as a volunteer. Molloy gives his
past experiences as helping with
the Indian Fair in 1992 at CSUSM,
organizing the first Associated Student Endowed Scholarship. Currently Molloy is a volunteer at the
International Festival and an Associated Student Council president.
And what does he see for himself
in the future? Molloy says maybe
the Peace Corps, maybe in the field
of migrant labor.
Service-learning is proud of the
accomplishments of everyone who
took the time to speak with us.
Achievements and the inner growth
attributed to volunteering marks
CSUSM as a campus with a heart.
As we read and reflect on each of
these profiles, a remarkable thing
comes to light, that "it's more rewarding to give than to receive." It
definitely appears that CSUSM has
lots of students who agree with
Robert Wortman's statement that
volunteering is a way to make the
world a better place.
Bertha Walker, Estela Beccera and Amanda Kimpel donating their time at the Volunteer Table
Do you
volunteer in
any capacity,
large or
small?
The Service-Learning Office
would like to meet you and
hear what you do.
Contact Claire Langham,
752-4057, Craven 2212.
YOUR
CONTRIBUTION
DESERVES
RECOGNITION!
Uaire Langham, Service-Learning Coordinator
�Profile of a CSUSM
Student Volunteer
By Claire K. Langham
Service-Learning Coordinator
"In my new start in life, volunteering
opened the doors to my career path as a
computer trainer and consultant," explained
Linda Amor, a senior in the College of Business Administration. "Volunteering directly
resulted in my current employment and has
provided immeasurable opportunities. The
directions at this point are unlimited for me"
she elaborated. "Absolutely no one makes it
alone in this world. Everyone at some time
needs help. Likewise, everyone has something to offer other people. It is for this
reason," she stated, "that everyone should be
willing to give as well as to receive support."
After living for several years in Hawaii,
Linda returned to San Diego in the fall of
1987 as a newly single parent of three young
children ages 1, 7, and 9. She had minimal
resources, four suitcases, and virtually no
computer experience. Determination and
vision are the "inner resources" that have
been key to Linda's survival and success.
It really all started because of Linda's own
need to improve her skills. She analyzed her
situation and decided that mastering computers would be the key to security and opportunities for herself and her family. Linda's
natural interests are in people, their warmth,
and the creativity found in the visual arts,
music, and writing. She also finds sciences
fascinating. However, computers were her
logical, rational decision for study.
Initially, to implement
her decision to develop
computer skills, Linda arranged to barter for the use
of a computer in exchange
for her services as a personal and business manager for an individual who
was living outside the US.
85% of the year. Naively,
Linda initially thought she
could learn the computer
within two months. She
had not realized the magnitude of her decision, nor
the academic journey that
lay ahead.
Photo/Claire Langham
Linda enrolled in a self-paced ROP (Regional Occupation Program) computer class
in Escondido. She taught herself Word Perfect and other programs. "Actually, I have to
admit to playing stupid in the lab so I would
not be rotated after learning the software
basics." Her goal was to master the entire
computer system. Apparently, Linda had a
hidden talent, but she was also driven. She
worked extremely long hours, 12 to 16 hours
a day at a computer studying or writing manuals. She was so unhappy with the existing
computer manuals, that she began writing
many of her own. Linda's mastery soon
exceeded opportunities through ROP, so she
expanded into other programs and began networking.
Linda encountered many others who were
experiencing the same frustration with lack
of good manuals or instruction. She began
helping others as a volunteer in small groups.
In the process, she discovered really early
that she had a great propensity to help other
people. Thus, as she was learning new skills,
she was teaching them to other people. This
lead to requests for her to give training lectures to a variety of businesses and special
interest groups. Through this exposure, she
was offered her first credentialed teaching
position in a computerized desktop publishing class for the San Diego Community College Adult Education Program. Ironically,
Linda had found an indirect means of expressing her interest in art through practical
computer applications.
Why is Linda a business major? Her decision to return to school was based on the need
to understand the principles of the computer
applications that she was teaching, and the
needs of the businesses being addressed. For
example, she was teaching spreadsheet applications and needed to understand basic accounting principles.
Volunteering continues to be important to
Linda. "I routinely offer my time and services to others. One of the most rewarding
experiences is when people I have helped
come back later and thank me for having
opened a door for them."
Volunteers—Creating a Better Community
The following is a list of
v olunteers w ho c ompleted volunteer profiles
at the Volunteer's Table
last week. W e look forward to meeting more
C SUSM volunteers at the
next Volunteers Day, Feb.
2 6,1994.
Mercedes Aguilar
Raschel Ammons
Linda Amor
Gary Andrade
Jeff Armstrong
Ollie Aspinwald
Vikrum Bagai
Gina Baldocchi
Bruce Baltis
Estela Becerra
Maura Bell
Evie Bennett
Tanya Boaz
Pam Brooks
Frances Browne
Michelle Bula
MaryCahill
Grace Carson
Alisa Coakley-Forby
Diane Coffin
Brad Curtis
Melva Dudley
John Dundle
Kelley Dykes
Jennifer Elbert
Lee Estes
Bernardo Estrada
Maureen Farmer
Pamela Farrel
Wendy Fimbies
Naomi Fink
Janet Fiorello
Linda Franson
Ann Garman
Mari Goodman
Annie Hall
Genevieve Hayden
Gloria Huffman
Dina Johnson
Susan Johnson
Katherine JohnsonLeVesque
Ritchie Kelly
Kevin Kilpatrick
Amanda Kimpel
Cristine Klopp
Dale Kohler
Mary Lane
Cherry Lasho
Roy Latas
Joanne Laviolette
Jon Lenzi
Troy Lewis
Ed Lim
Gina Macklis
Ruth Martinez
Yvonne McCarty
Dorinda McCombs
Diane McDonald
Katie McKenna
Judy Mead
Erin Michals
Shelby Millican
Dhamenah Mingo
Duane Mitchell
Katie Miyazaki
Richard Molloy
Eric Neesby
Heather Nemour
Lynn Nusbaum-Haines
Rick Nystrom
Gary O'Donnell
Angela O'Roerdan
* Mary Orthel
Jon Paino
Mark Palac
Lawrence Pandes
Micki Pease
Doug Perkins
Sharon Perna
Rebecca Pool
Kathleen Primising
Brenda Rios
Jeanette Ruiz
Sabrina Sanders
Jeanine Sciano
Scott Sherillo
Retha Sokel
Kristen Straeter
Tracy Thomas
Crystal Vanderwork
Kathy VanPelt
Cheryl Viertell
Sharen Wahl
Bertha Walker
Danette Watland
Ginger White
Denise Williams
Dolores Williamson
Robert Wortman
Kevin Youngdale
�No being i s s o i mportant
t hat h e c an u surp t he
r ights of a nother.
— U nknown
Beavis and Butthead—
True Americans
By Thomas Lee Huntington
Staff Writer
The United States Congress recently conducted high-profile hearings about the inordinate amount of violence on television.
Present at these hearings were executives
from all the major networks, gallantly confessing their evil ways and promising oodles
more family programming and far less of the
adult- oriented, sexually explicit, violent
shows that have made them all rich. Illinois
Senator Paul Simon, the lead crusader in the
Clean-Up-Television battle, seemed very encouraged at the network promises, presumably convinced that his actions were having
a significant effect on the moral character of
the entertainment industry.
Not long after the hearings, a small child
playing with fire was responsible for the
death of his little sister. The child's mother
blamed the death on overexposure to MTV's
animated Beavis and Butthead, a crass, vulgar series detailing the exploits of two teenage morons who gain great pleasure from,
among other things, setting various animals
on fire. There was a huge public outcry,
complete with veiled threats from various
elected officials, that immediately lead MTV
executives to discontinue the 7 PM showtime.
There is a disturbing trend taking shape
here. Politicians and community activists
hungry for publicity and in search of an easy
target have turned their sights on the entertainment industry. Indeed, it seems as if
every artistic medium has recently come under attack for in some way contributing to the
decline of Western Civilization. Conservative radio mouthpiece Rush Limbaugh has
been accused of-gaspl-bias in his daily political harangues and there has been talk
among elected officials of invoking something called the Fairness Doctrine that would
presumably f orce ideologues such as
Limbaugh to "balance" their tirades by representing different points of view. Rap and
Rock music now come complete with "Parental Advisory" stickers warning of foul
language or depictions of graphic sexuality.
The well-documented prosecution of rap
group Two Live Crew on obscenity charges
is an extreme example of the growing governmental willingness to cater to a vocal
minority of self-styled moralists bent on controlling the content of American art.
That's not to say that there aren't legitimate
crises of morality and values in American
society. Indeed, it takes only an occasional
viewing of not Beavis and Butthead but CNN
to see what a mess much of American society
has become. It is unfortunate, then, that
basically well-intentioned people waste valuable time barking about the actions of fictional characters instead of attempting to solve
the real problems of crime, illiteracy, poverty, drug abuse, AIDS, alcoholism and the
countless other ills that plague our society.
Art is now and always has been a reflection of life; television does not provoke behavior in otherwise innocent viewers who
had never before considered such mischief.
It is the purpose of all art to, in the words of
Shakespeare "hold a mirror up to life." We
have become a society obsessed with shouting at our own reflections, convinced that if
we can somehow change what we see on
television, we will change what we see on our
streets. That is a tragically misguided notion.
In fact, it is often what we see on television or
hear on the radio that opens our eyes to what
is happening on our streets. Art is an incredibly powerful force, and it is the power of art
to outrage, sadden or shock people into action
that serves as one of the strongest arguments
for a free and open society.
Certainly, young impressionable children
should not have open access to material obviously unsuited for juveniles. In that respect,
it was a responsible decision for MTV to
move potentially offensive material to a later
time slot. It is a sad comment on the state of
American parenting in general, however, that
corporate executives and elected officials are
forced to take on the position of a mother or
a father. The breakdown of family values is
a real problem not solved by cheap sermonizing or potshots at Murphy Brown that serve
only to further divide society. It is a problem
that goes far beyond what children are watching on TV, and until everybody realizes that,
little will be accomplished.
It is unfortunate that Beavis, Butthead and
Rush Limbaugh have become the primary
spokesmen for the First Amendmentrightsso
central to the continued functioning of our
republic. But let them raise their collective
voices loudly, triumphantly in defense of
freedom until every last potential censor is
too annoyed and offended to-continue his or
her efforts.
Letters
to the
Editor
all campus activities, but we d o not have 1
a crystal W i ^V . * - ^
Thornton
i
IkkrSdm
• Dear E ditor:•
• J would like to respond to the editori- Elevator Etiquette Lacking
als Written by Brittany Crist and Gina
H & M m i f or the lack of attention of
Frwikly: to be honest
p ear Editor:
*x
Speaking as someone with several ! |
i f Sj years off journalism experience, I* a s wellj loading and unloading procedures 1$ long
a s everyone else on The Pride* knows
overdue for the students, faculty, staff
how difficult it is to please everyone. It and administrators of this school ,
,
^ difficult to b e In several places at
•: ^ gvery day w henJcomeph c amptfcl;,
once, and it is difficult to know everyr
take the elevator from the entrance of
thing. All these things are compounded Craven Hail up to the fifth floor to get to
by staff writers who also attend school, , myjoh* I t's inevitable that someone, at
work and generally have their own fives any time,- on any given day, male or
to lead. v*,/\
v
female* will try to walk onto the elevator
+ ^ T o M ow the existence o fan event
to step o ff Why does this
, that is newsworthy* we try.takeep onr
bug
It irritates me
eyes and ears Sprin,but we are not
to no end when the doors open and, ^
i nf^iibl^ and we cw o t do it alone.
withoutlCK>king, s omeorie : Siij^s:ite me.
depend heavily on notices andnotes " as l a m trying to e xit j •
from those who doknow things we may
to ask? If you are going to get on an
elevator and someone is attempting to get
OverlooMng Fm«it/y: to be honest
off, the person exiting the elevator has
was
plaunined> iiialicio^s attack on
the right of way and should be given a
all the students and faculty who dedimoment to walk off before you knock
cated many Hours to it. Personally, I
him or her over trying to get on. Why
attend r ^ i n g s , lecttiifes, seminars, and - does die person exiting have the right of
way? Well, if f ou were getting onto a
certainly would have attended Frankly:
train, bus plane or car, you would
tdbefwnesi if I had known about it. But* logically wait f or passengers who were
I don*fc recall anything inundating my
d ep^ing toleave. Train conductors^ bus
>i ^ S f a s ^
drivers and flight attendants restrict
v
A s f or Ms. C ost's questionsof why •:— passengers from boarding until everyone
Arts ^ > • who is leaving has stepped off. An
vF^cul^^
write a v elevator is a small transportation device
reviews? Take the initiative! Obvi- + • ^ it is, and when people are trying to exit
I j &Jp^
important --J:
and board at the^ame time, it makes for a
atCSUSftf
J
;
faiew about it. And if you have time to
to
a performance '
not!ce.Aiert the media toour activities.
'
f C ^ p ^ j O t kill you to take a few
s mmMio s^e i f anyone is g ating o ff;
laatter bf common courtesy ,
- ' > toy l^rsfoe;:'J
Services. • •
:
W
�Tim Hinchliff—
up c lose
By Debra K . Lane
Contributing Writer
There is currently a very special and
enlightening art exhibit on display at the
CSUSM library. Twenty-two "yarn paintings" by artist Tim Hinchliff and a poem with
each piece describing the meaning in that
creation. Each symbol in the paintings has a
specific message or purpose. Mother Earth is
shown in many of them. The symbol of
woman is depicted often as essential to the
life spirit of the earth, sky, and universe.
Tim Hinchliff is a native of San Diego
county . At the age of 14 years, Tim took a trip
to Mexico with his mother, a Cultural Anthropologist, and was introduced to Huichol
yarn art from Nayarit, Mexico.
DL: Even though we live in a high-tech
society that does not include hunting/gathering, do you see a relationship between ancient
beliefs about nature and our modern world?
TH: I see modern society as hunting
and gathering even today. W e are j ust look-
ing for different stuff to survive on. It may not
be corn or buffalo but the hunt for money
through careers etc. will have the same effect.
Eventually, it will be used tooput food on the
table and clothes on our backs.
DL: Can you tell us more about accompanying each piece in the library?
TH: I create sonnets as a love song that
I express f or a greater understanding of the art
presented. "Courting the Earth," the work I
am presenting at CSUSM this month is an
attempt to show others that we areallpart of an
original family indelibly tied with the earth
and its personality. I am a poet, and after a
painting is finished, I write about how I see
that painting and what it means to me.. Because I live with the painting while creating it,
writing about what I have created is a process
that gives me closure, as well as assisting the
public in understanding my work.
DL: How do you see yourself, past,
present, and future?
TH: I have been extremely fortunate to
have had a life that has allowed me to take the
Photo/Debra K. Lane
time to create. Over the last 20 years, I have
been able to grow with my art and obtain an
understanding of the levity of what I am
creating. But I have also been fortunate to
have had the time to hang out in those avocado groves in Fallbrook and play with the
idea of art. I began by drawing, sketching and
writing poetry. I was encouraged by my
family and friends. And I was lucky enough
to have met a woman to share my life. I have
a home, love, children and a career. It really
is incredible luck.
Students create
multicultural quilts
Students in the two sections of
Education 390created two very beautiful multicultural quilts. The quilts
are being used as a class servicelearning project by collecting donations and giving the proceeds to three
local non-profit
organizations.
Proceeds from one class will go
to the Latino Boy Scout Troop 669 to
sponsor a wilderness camping experience focusing on self-esteem and a
science/ecology
component
The other proceeds will be used to
sponsor at least two students' participation in Leadership 2000 and to
assist in the efforts of a local senior
citizen playwright which serves to
eliminate myths and
stereotypes
about aging.
These students are "no nonsense"
when it comes to business and it was
decided that each student would seek
donations for $1 per ticket
Each
class is striving to raise at least $ 1000.
We would appreciate your support
and donations in this endeavor: The
quilts will be on display in Founders
Plaza for the next few days. I appreciate your support for the students
efforts and wish all participants
the
best of luck in the drawings to be held
Dec. 6 and Dec. 8.
For more information,
contact
Charolette Bell at
752-4313.
THE PRIDE is a free publication, published every two weeks, distributed on Fridays on
campus and the surrounding community.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Mary Szterpakiewicz
ASSISTANT EDITOR: Roman S. Koenig
BUSINESS MANAGER/ADVERTISING: Sheryl Greenblatt
COPYEDITORS: Donald Beran, Jan Cooper, Roy Latas, Anita Williams
LAYOUT DESIGN/GRAPHICS: Roman S. Koenig
LAYOUT EDITOR: Krista Thornton
PHOTOGRAPHY: Carlos Mariscal, Mary Szterpakiewicz
STAFF WRITERS: Karin Foster, Amy Glaspey, Peter Gorwin, Thomas Lee Huntington,
Roy Latas, Claudine Scott
CONTRIBUTORS: Claire Langham, Dave Ross, L. Rene Fooks, Debra K. Lane, Marilyn
Ribble
Charolette Belle exhibiting completed quilt
Photo/Claire Langtem
THE PRIDE, CSUSM Student Newspaper, San Marcos, California 96096-0001
Located in ACD 208 Telephone: (619)752-4998
�A Perfect World—not so perfect
By Thomas Lee Huntington
Staff Writer
Mouie
Reuieiu
Kevin Costner achieved fame by playing
nice guys. Whether performing a little revisionist history by showing the world a softhearted Elliot Ness in The Untouchables or a
politically correct Union soldier in Dances
with Wolves, Costner has repeatedly epitomized the very 90s, very Hollywood aes-
thetic of the Sensitive White Male.
At first look, his new role as an escaped
convict in Clint Eastwood's A Perfect World
seems a bold step away from this cuddly
repertoire. Butch, as tBe Costner character is
called, is a cold-blooded murderer and kidnapper seemingly capable of any violent and
sadistic act. Upon further examination, however, Butch proves in many ways to be a
typical Costner character; a misunderstood,
ultimately kind-hearted product of a dysfunctional family—Robin Hood with a .38
and a pack of Lucky Strikes.
A Perfect World is a mess. A surprising
mess, considering the collective artistic talent assembled, but an ultimate disappointment nonetheless. Directed by Clint
Eastwood and co-starring Eastwood and Laura
Dern, this story of an escaped criminal who
inadvertently kidnaps a young Jehovah's
CSUSM's First Production
Frankly, to be Honest...
By L. Rene Fooks
Contributing Writer
Theatre is alive at CSUSM! Frankly,
to be honest.,, an Evening of Student
Generated Theater was directed by
Marcos Martinez, faculty member of the
Visual and Performing Arts department.
This, the first CSUSM student-based
production, was the resulfcof Theater Arts
499C-Production Workshop. The
production was student-generated theatre.
Just because the word "student" is used,
doesn't necessarily mean the quality is
low. Three performances were given last
month, November 6-8, and if you missed
them, too bad. It was well worth it. The
play was a series of monologues and short
scenes that depicted certain attitudes in
society regarding class, race, and gender
that perhaps some of us were not aware
of; or we have become so de-sensitized by
its occurrences that we ignore it. One
such idea was the monologue of an
overweight female who described how
valuable she was as a human being in
spite of her obesity, and how society has
set unwritten standards on women based
solely on their appearance. That was a
real eye-opener. As a male, I can honestly
say I have changed my pre-judging sexist
attitudes after hearing and seeing this
particular monologue. I even took the
'sorry no fat chicks' bumper sticker off my
car.
Another interesting scene showed a
method in which attitudes and ideas are
shaped. Like father, like son; you' ve heard
the cliche. This scene showed a bitter,
divorced man instilling aggressive,
demeaning ideas about women and their
true function (from his perspective), to his
teenage son, who has developed that same
pleasure-seeking, hateful attitude towards
his girlfriend.
I personally could not find any entertainment value in the profane language used.
They were not kidding when they advertised the program as not suitable for
children. I didn't get the impression that
the profane language was used to "boost
the ratings" but maybe to show us what
we've grown accustomed to in our everyday lives.
The theatre has a way of showing us who
we really are as individuals. If all the
world is a stage as one man wrote, and we
are the players, then the theatre is you as
well. Don't miss the next show!
Witness boy and is pursued across Texas by
a gruff ranger (Eastwood) and a psycho babbling beaurocrat (Dern) starts out fairly strong
but is quickly saddled with an annoying subplot and predictable dialogue and situations.
Costner summons up the proper menace in
the early scenes when breaking out of prison
and kidnapping the child. There is a strange,
unpredictable connection between Butch and
the boy that is balanced with strong tension;
the audience isn't sure where things are going, whether or not the criminal can be trusted
That tension is ruined soon enough, as we
discover that Butch was a product of a broken
home and has never killed anybody who
wasn't trying to harm someone he loved. We
find this out because Dern's character delivers a poorly written speech to a trailerful of
The
Texas rangers emphasizing the importance of
understanding the Why of criminal behavior,
not the What if you really want to catch your
man. It is the worst scene in the movie and
serves to almost single-handedly destroy all
possibilities of creativity or originality left in
the film. The entire Eastwood-Dern subplot,
in fact, serves as nothing more than an annoying distraction.
The film takes place in Texas a week
before President Kennedy was shot, and
Eastwood plays with some interesting symbolism about martyrdom and a loss of innocence. But nothing is fully developed, and by
the time the drawn out, predictable ending
comes, all the potential shown in the f ilm's
opening moments has been squandered. It is
unfortunate that such talent was wasted on
such a mediocre project.
A S. Programming
S oard
P resents . .
Associated Students are about to make history
here at CSUSM with the first Rock music event ever.
Conceit is to be held in front of the Dome Cafe,
around 2:30pm on December 9th.
*
�Sounds ofSANKOFA
SANKOFA is an AKAN name for
the mythical bird that constantly looks
back as it flies forward. The name
means 'Go and retrieve the past', and
to the AKAN people of Ghana, West
Africa, this behavior symbolizes the
need to develop a sense of continuity in
our everyday life by linking our present
and future to the past
The musical style of the group,
SANKOFA, succinctly represents the
concept expressed in the name. From a
socio-historical perspective, this group
traces the development of unique
musical expressions as the slaves
began to transform, adapt to and adopt
the diverse life-styles in which they
found themselves in the diaspora.
SANKOFA represents a unique blend
of the music of South, Central and
North America as well as the music of
the Caribbean as reshaped by the
dynamics of slavery and other forms of
cultural diffusion andacculturative
processes.
In SANKOFA, one could easily
identify the characteristics of Jazz*
Reggae, Funk, Calypso, Salsa, Blues,
Gospel, Spiritual, Traditional and
Contemporary African music, Country
and Western, Samba and the Classical
tradition, all of which are fused together to underscore the homogeneity
of the sources of acculturative processes that have guided the changes
through the years. The ever-present
polyrhythmic and complex melodic
structures, the call-and-response vocal
styles, the functionalism of the music
and all other attributes that have stood
the test of time are the basis of the
SANKOFA style.
This group is a capsule of the
reactions that current socio-political,
and historical transformations
throughout the world are generating.
World music has been melded by
Photos of Sankofa/Carlos
Mariscal
advancements in technology while
exclusiveness of remote cultures has
become a thing of the past.
The members of this amazing
group include a well-selected cadre of
musicians who have been dedicated to
the various representative styles. They
include Jim Storey, guitar; Gunnar
Biggs, bass; Brad Steinwehe, trumpet;
David Murray, trombone; Jason
Hahn, drums and percussion; Roy
Gonzalez, timbales and percussion;
Eyi Omaraji, percussion, vocals and
dance and Komla Amoaku, congas,
percussion and lead vocals. Dr.
Amoaku is also a Professor of
Ethnomusicology at CSUSM. The
ensemble sometimes includes traditional African dancers: Gelsamina
Merritt, Shoshanna Cordes and
Chantale Damas.
CSUSM sees the world increasingly
becoming a global village, and wishes
that this be expressed in its art and
cultural programs. SANKOFA is the
institution's demonstration of its
perception of the 21st century.
SANKOFA will be performing on
Thursday, Dec. 9 at 12 Noon at the
Commons Stage.
�T
1
ATTENTION POETS
Wfwf
Open Poetry Contest
/ ••ByAmjeje;:;-
/
^ h f m ^ yoi* treating me this
way*
proclaim to love me, ' ^^vfe - I ^ V ^ i i i g - s u b t l e :
•:
s ^tetd g ^ :• •
•'
this does not seem like love to me. I iags.
have provided you with everything ; your atfeRtkm. You continue to use.
me aSthoughI were unimportant,
don't you even m aliB^^li^w are
y
alt of - doing, dotft ymwmk cam?
^ ^ ^ v e always
the time that wehave spent together,
is true t£<yo0 '
I would think that by now you know j loved
me well enough to know what I like
how much
% %&'4< to be treated ^ ti
Y j ^ j l ^ S ^ ^ b s ^ ^ i y m would
'
c happy, and take
tog very dramatic in order to get
taken care of
your attention. fftie subtle things
you, bBt what l see is that you don't .
t^^ymmdh
I
seem to care anymore about me,
wdnf to ^Aways
1
yoii that
your survival depends on me, all that - want yoti % be able to tago^itt that j
yob am depends on me, and yet you Ihaveto offer, but if things keep
they are, l am not
[
f^j^eaaU '
,
that will I^ppen* Stop treating
do to get
those
y oiirjaa^^
beginning of ~
* ihin^
,
were so very'
jfioc^e^^f
ttpport
of
concerned about me. You always
you, o rl prp^ise you I wilt become
n^ad^jure thatlwas never exhausted. You didto't want me to do a i ^ ^ d l wpt do s otohihi&t'
J • ^'tc^n^l^'li'^v^^'are^'' You kept
4
our life exci&g and meaningful by you, W SMfiW^/ff^ • ' •
Donl thinkthatbecause Ihave
something happened, I
for ^
but, I :^=^o
^Mfi nothing,
I know what happened, you got
because!
V p ^ y f ^ p m ^ ^ ^ I did, it was thought atsome point you would
not enough, at least, you did not see
l tt'^^still havehope, I want
l it as being enough. You became
$0 much iter you to understand me;;
[obsessed with havinginoreandnie. m t ^ ^ p i ^ ^ i b i m ^ and %
¥ w begat* to forget about me and
love you,
my faaiings, son^time, I don't think I am only wi|Iin| to
touch
L jwoSa considered my feeling.
iN^
me
»; maybe you didn't think that 1 had
the only
home you have.
A \ \ >?: |
\'
*'*
jj S
i
The National Library of Poetry has announced that $ 12,000 in prizes
will be awarded this year to over 2 50 poets in the North American Open
Poetry Contest. The deadline for the contest is December 3 1,1993. The
contest is open to everyone and entry is FREE.
Any poet, whether previously published or not, can be a winner. Every
poem entered also has a chance to be published in a deluxe, hardbound
anthology.
To enter, send O NE original poem, any subject and any style, to The
National Library of Poetry, 11419 Cronridge Drive, P.O. Box 7 04-ZT,
Owings Mills, MD 21117. The poem should be no more than 2 0 lines, and
the poet's name and address should appear on the top of the page. Entries
must be postmarked by D ecember31,1993. A new contest opens January
1 ,1994.
++
E E Y H RM
VR T U S Y
INS _ A T
C OLLEGE IGHT
C LUB A CAPULCO
S AN M ARCOS
$2.00 DRAFT PITCHERS
$2,50 ICE TEAS
N O C OVER W ITH
C OLLEGE I D !!
8 :00PM T O C LOSE
V*
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*
Ido,andlambecomingtiredofthe |
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WmSmMmrt 11
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++
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¥
+
�20
It's not too late
to take advantage of the Writing Center
Things you may not do
when taking a standardized test.
Sweat.
Tremble.
Cry.
Palpitate.
Moan
Chew off a perfectly good fingernail.
Dread the future.
Dread your parents.
Kiss grad school goodbye.
Envy the brainy wimp next to you.
Spit at the proctor.
Turn to drink.
Wonder why you were ever born,
Scream.
Panic. V
Develop amnesia.
Fall asleep.
Blank out.
Karate chop your chair.
Swallow your pencils.
We're strict. Strictly for you.
MCAT GMAT LSAT GRE PREPARATION COURSES
FOR MOR INFORMATION, CALL US AT (619) 558-0500
By Roy L atas
Staff Writer
A campus writing center usually reflects
aplace where remedial writers work through their
writing problems, but the CSUSM Writing Center provides a friendly environment that serves a
hub for the All University Writing Requirement
Project. The tutor corps of the Writing Center is
a skilled group of students whose foundation in
writing theory and practices comes from English
494 (Theory and Practice of College Writing).
The tutors aim to foster quality academic writing
from the painless perspective of a good friend
who is interested in advancing meaningful analysis. Students at any phase of an assignment are
encouraged to come to the Writing Center.
How do you use the Writing Center?
The tutorial staff of the Center recognizes that
writing is always a messy business—writing never
advances in clean, concise, well-rounded or logical steps. Academic writing involves a process of
false starts, misdirections, confusion, and many
times frustration. The tutor offers another set of
eyes to assist writers while they navigate their
"writerly" course to meaning. The phases of
writing: brain-storming, editing, revision or final
draft inspection are all part of the tutorial s taffs
field of experience.
Who uses the Writing Center? During
the 1992-1993 academic year, the Writing Center
DISPLAY
ADVERTISING
conducted over 1,334 individual writing conferences. The heaviest student populations
came from Liberal Studies, English, and Business Management/Accounting majors, each
accounting for approximately 20% of the
students utilizing the Center. The significant
population of English majors reflects the attitude that even those who may perceive
themselves as being skilled writers recognize
the need for revision and recognize potential
profits of a trip to the Center. The notion that
only students with serious writing problems
avail themselves of this service was dispelled
by discovering that the average GPA of students using the Center was 3.25. This statistic
indicates successful students at CSUSM use
the Center to enhance their writing and produce high caliber papers.
The tutors at the Writing Center
want to assist all students who wish to improve and advance their writing skills. Center tutors are involved in an educational dynamic which provides them an exceptional
teaching experience with other students. The
tutors, by helping others, will in turn improve
their own writing skills.
CLASSIFIEDS
Rates for standard size ads:
Bus. Card $20
1/8 page $60
1/4 page $90
1/2 page $150
Full page $275
SURFBOARD FOR SALE: 6'3"
Sunset, 17-3/4 wide x 1-7/8 thick.
6 weeks old. Rides insane! Only
$199. Call 439-3069.
ROOMMATE
PREFER FEMALE Non-Smoker to
share 3 BR home in Vista. Own BR
w/private bath, furnished. $300
plus 1/3 util. $100 Dep. Eves. 7278393.
Discounts are given for prepayment and for multiple
insertions.
FURNITURE Dresser $65, wood, 3
drawers. Desk $75, secretary-style
w/pull down desk. Bookcase $25,
wood, 3 shelves. China cabinet,
rustic wood $125. 273-3505.
PREFER MATURE FEMALE
$270/month plus $50 Dep. Only 5
minutes from campus. Call eves./
wknds. 591-4391.
Deadline for next issue:
January 24
REAL ESTATE
For more information,
contact Sheryl Greenblatt at
(619) 752-4998
FOR SALE
PROFESSORS, STUDENTS &
EMPLOYEES at CSUSM. Live 2
miles from campus. For Sale by
Owner, 4 BR, 2 BA home. Golf
course view!! 471-6153.
WANTED
VOLUNTEERS needed to help
build affordable housing. Habitat
for Humanity. Call Debra Miles
630-6228.
FREE CLASSIFIEDS
F or s tudents o nly—25 w ords o r
l ess. E ach a dditional w ord, 5 0
c ents.
REGULAR
CLASSIFIEDS
2 5 w ords o r l ess—$10.00.
E ach a dditional w ord, 5 0 c ents.
Classified Ads can be dropped
off at ACD 208 or mailed to
THE PRIDE, CSUSM Student
Newspaper, San Marcos, CA
92096-0001
�On-Campus
Events:
Nov.5-Dec.23
Tim Hinchliff, a local artist from Ramona, will have his colorful tapestry-like yam paintings
with narrative sonnets on display in the Library.
Nov. 16-24
CAMPUS FOOD DRIVE
Friday, Dec. 3 ' * •
First Friday Foreign Him fetivaL
"Yojimbo" Akira Kurosawa's 1961 samurai film. Japan. 7 PM, ACD 102.
Ticketed Event
Sunday, Dec. 5
Holiday Open House. 3-5 PM. The Dome. Open to everyone.
The Silver Shield
SOA
Brotherhood and Excellence
m eets e very W ednesday
C all S ean f or info: 5 9 1 - 0 5 7 0
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
MEETING
Dec. 6*11 HOLIDAY FILM SERIES
Monday, Dec. 6
African Ensemble. Performance of traditional West African music and dance under the
direction of Dr. Komla Amoaku. 12 Noon, Commons Stage.
Tuesday, Dec. 7
Personal Safety Awareness Workshop, 5:30 PM, Craven 5205.
Wednesday, Dec. 8 v
Andean Ensemble. Performance of music from Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru on original
instruments from the region directed by Dr. Don Funes. Noon, Commons S&ge.
f
l liursday^Bec.^ ••••'••.
\
•
: -\
Sankofa plays both traditional West African music and North American jazz, funk, and blues,
at Noon, Commons Stage.
Saturday, Dec. 11
Handel's Messiah. The San Diego Master Chorale will perform selections from Handel's
master work. 5 PM and 8 PM, Dome Cafe. Ticketed Event.
Dec. 1 347
V
i /iv.
Registration f ol Winter Schedule. 8:30 AM-4:30 PM, Craven 5110. Pick up form in Craven
5110 after December 3. . - •
' ,.•
r # 41;
• J Z .; S)••••>•. • Ifc
TICKETS FOR TICKETED EVENTS MA Y BE PURCHASED AT THE UNIVERSITY STORfe OR AT THE DOOR. Concerts: $3fordsUSM students, $5,00
General Admission. Filnti Festival:
A dtibr,
sion.
'
.
:. ^-y . vK
For more information, call the University Store at 752-4730.
Off-Campus Events:
Nov. 27 - Dec. 26
A Christmas Carol: The Musical Gospel According to Dickens. Directed by Sam Woodhouse
and Osayande Baruti. San Diego Repertory Theatre. For info call 231-3586.
D ec.3,4&5
'v
Jazz Unlimited Dance Company presents "An Evening of Blues and Other Moods " City
College Theater, 1313 C Street, San Diego. Dec. 3-4 at 8 PM, Dec. 5 at 2PM and 7 PM. For
further information call 632-5340.
Saturday, J an.8
.
'
.
~^ ; — ^ > ? '
^ i ; - t Jv
Martin Liiiher King jfr. Dream Day, "living the Dream/' Workshops, speakers, marketplace,
a ctives, cultural/att exhibit, festival rfdpms. Palomar College, J140 W . Mission Road,
5205 Craven Hall
Tuesdays and Thursdays
12 Noon - 1 PM
CAMPUS SUPPORT GROUP
Adult Children ofDysfunctional
Families
Stress from papers, exams, family
friends...you
aren't alone
5205 Craven Hall
Wednesdays, 1:30-2:30 PM
SEE YOU NEXT YEAR
NEXT ISSUE OF THE PRIDE
WILL BE—JAN. 28, 1994
Good Luck Finals Week!
&
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<h2>1993-1994</h2>
Description
An account of the resource
The fourth academic year of California State University San Marcos.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Sort Key PR
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
newspaper 11 x 13.5
Cougar Chronicle
Yes
The Pride
Yes
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Pride
December 3, 1993
Subject
The topic of the resource
student newspaper
Description
An account of the resource
An interview with CSUSM President Bill Stacy is the cover story of the Vol. 1, No. 5 issue of The Pride. Volunteering is a featured story inside the paper.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
The Pride
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
University Archives, California State University San Marcos, Kellogg Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1993-12-03
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Lezlie Lee-French, Library Archives Support
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The information available on this site, including any text, computer codes, data, artwork, video, audio, images or graphics (collectively the "Material") are protected by copyright and other intellectual property laws. Parties other than California State University San Marcos (”CSUSM”) may own copyright in the Material. We encourage the use of this Material for non-profit and educational purposes only, such as personal research, teaching and private study. For these limited purposes, Material from this web site may be displayed and printed, and all copies must include any copyright notice originally included with the Material. Additionally, a credit line must be included with each item used, citing the article or review author, title or article or review, title of the database, sponsoring agency, date of your access to the electronic file, and the electronic address. Copyright 2015, California State University San Marcos
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Type
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Text
fall 1993
President Bill Stacy
quilts
recycling
student research
The Dome
volunteering
writing requirement
-
https://archives.csusm.edu/student-newspapers/files/original/a213b56b5a62cd49b4f6263e4ab9feee.pdf
6d65cd18f6ca334e0fd2cd42f0e7e67d
PDF Text
Text
—
..J
,-•
mi
Volume VI, Number 3
Campus security
chief replaced
s
raises many questions
By Alex Woodia
P ride s taff w riter
Two minutes after the
clock tower chimed a quarter
passed the noon hour, a 23yearold CStISM student decided it was time t ofeudher
life*
f V ' S heHimbed u ptmto a'
f ourth-story l edge i n t he
^Clock T bwer, t he west&rn •
w ingof AcademieHall^ Then
she jumped*
A s she fell, students ate
iuucii and chatted just a few
• feet away in the crowded com• mons area, oblivious to what
w asabout t o unfold before
The student survived, but
the 30#K>t fiall onto the sec• ox*d~sfcory concrete walkway
I c ^ ^ i ^ her pelvis and damaged her spine. She will never
be physically normal again*
(The Pride is respecting the
wishes of the student's fam*
November 12,1998
C ALIFORNIA S TATE U NIVERSITY S A N M ARCOS
s ay, " That's w here it happened/
*Y<m hear about that happening at Ivy League schools,'*
^ id ^ theiiike KJamer,
a 2 ^ye^-old juiiior who decsdedtocfa&kthe tower out
for herself; *Butriothere. It's
m b ^ ^ i back h ere/
Klamer5s frieiid, Carley
Eaoliu, a 23-year-old junior,
^ reedthat the attempted sufc^
cide seemed oiit of place here.
"If someone was going to do
it, Ihis an odd place to do
k ," s ifc-.^d^ i "
giii. Caftpps psychologist Fritz
foeislgr said traumatic events
| Mke | y eiy public attempt at
suicide can change students'
perception of the campus forBridget Craven-Baily
ever* ^ 'f ^r:' *
rI
sea page 4
t
"Nothing like this has happened b efore/ Kreisier said.
was the talk of the campus "When something like t his
and topic of many rumors. happens, it really shakes them
Students walk past the Clock
-Fall, Page 4
Tower now and point and
The suicide attempt has
h ad a b ig i mpact o n t he
school as well. For weeks after the O ct 26 incident, it
She didn't
know that
she hurt
more than
^tlist falL
| Chief Arnold Trulillo's sudden resignation and Lt. Alicia
Smith's reassignment opened the door to a great deal
of curiosity and speculation
By Richard Mauser
Pride staff writer
JL
/^k
JJL
mid printed re
ports of an inves
t igation into f a
v oritism in t he
j L m - ^ C S U S M p ublic
safety office, veteran campus
police chief Arnold Trujillo resigned last week.
Trujillo, who has headed
campus security since 1992,
was replaced on an interim basis by Capt. Tom Schultheis,
second in command of the police department at San Diego
State University.
As part of the public safety
shakeup, Lt. Alicia Smith was
reassigned to another position.
Trujillo's resignation came
on the heels of a report in the
North County Times that California State University officials
had launched an investigation
into the department. The paper
reported that Susan Garcia, a
dispatcher for the CSUSM department from January 1996 to
N ovember 1997, h ad b een
questioned by CSU investigators in October concerning favoritism within the d epartment.
Garcia, currently a student at
C SUSM w ho c ould not be
reached by The Pride, told the
investigator that certain officers and dispatchers were given
choice assignments and weekends o ff, a ccording t o t he
Times. She also told the investigators that Trujillo did not
show respect to some of his officers, including Smith, the paper added.
^Trujillo, Page 6
Dome's popularity gives rise to further development
By Scott Bass
Pride staff writer
Build it and they will come. At least,
that's what the CSUSM Foundation
is hoping.
The foundation, a non-profit organization administered separately
from the university, is constructing
a new outdoor terrace at the southwest corner of the Dome.
The Dome Terrace, as it's called,
is being built in direct response to
the popularity of the Dome as a
study/social area. "The Dome is the
most popular hangout on campus,
said Marti Gray, executive director of
the CSUSM Foundation. "The expansion meets the need for more dining
and study space."
The new patio will include 3,325
square feet—of which more than
2,000 will be shaded, according to
Gray. The roof of the terrace will be
made of a sturdy canvas-like material similar to that atop the San Di-
ego Convention Center. The awning, green in color, was designed
to meld into the campus decor.
"We worked closely with the university p lanning c ommittee t o
make sure t he design c omplemented, rather than contrasted
with, the design of the existing
buildings on campus," said Gray.
The floor will be concrete slab,
consistent with the existing slabs
-Dome, Page 2
Golf team plays in first tournament
Recognition and treatment of depression
page 3
p age 4
M - IfH
Mmmmmm
What is the future ^
p age 6
I H IV H! H1 V H 1V |! < 11 11Mpi
I
I8
11 1i Hill
�-NewsShuttle offers relief for parking-weary students
By Alex Romo
Pride staff writer
How many students have
even noticed the shuttle van on
campus?
It's not all that difficult to
spot. It's white with a CSUSM
parking services emblem on the
side and is usually parked in a
convenient location on campus.
Sometimes, its side sliding
door is propped open, beckoning you to enter.
Originally, the van was introduced to help alleviate parking
congestion caused by limited
parking. But, although the
shuttle service will continue,
the parking woes have eased,
according to Dora Knoblock,
CSUSM parking coordinator.
Dome
outside the Dome.
There will be seating for approximately 180, with 60 new
tables, according to Gray. Since
the area is a magnet for strong
cold winds in the winter, Gray
said, it will be equipped with a
wind screen. "It will be 75 feet
in length and made up of brick
and tempered glass," Gray
added.
Though no heaters are
planned for the Dome Terrace
at present, Gray said, some can
be rented from party supply
companies easily.
The CSUSM Foundation operates the bookstore, as well as
the food concession inside the
Dome.
Funds for the project came
"The new student lot, No. 4,
has not filled to capacity this
fall semester," she said. "There
has been sufficient parking on
campus."
But that doesn't mean the
shuttle service is unnecessary.
Initially, the program offered
pickup and delivery to and
from the Palomar/Pomerado
Health Services facility, across
Twin Oaks Valley Road from
the university.
But it was expanded last
spring to include pick-up
points at Chavez Circle, Student Lot No. 10 and Craven
Circle.
Knoblock, who said her department is doing an analysis
to determine if the service is
cost-effective, said the shuttle
has helped the parking situation simply by encouraging students to use more distant spots.
It will remain in effect at least
until the analysis is completed,
she added.
According to Tom Weir of
Facility Services, using data
provided by the van drivers, the
number of people who use the
service has varied during the
semester.
Peak usage occurred during
the second and third week of
school, 541 and 338 passengers
respectively. Since then, weekly
ridership has averaged 202students.
Student reaction to the service has been mixed. While
some students say they'd rather
walk, others say they enjoy the
shuttle, particularly since it is
still not all that easy to find a
parking space.
Jose Perez, a history major,
said, "If I'm running late, I need
to use it because professors
take points off for being late to
class. Sometimes if I'm running
late, I'll purposely park where I
know the shuttle will be."
Ian Malone, a history/Spanish major who says he never
uses the service, suggested that
the only people who should use
it are those with illnesses, injuries or disabilities.
According to Knoblock, student comments range from
"Thank you for providing us
this service," to "I have been
waiting for over five minutes
and you guys are always late."
She adds that the parking
service is a "self-supporting
operation" which does not receive any money from the state.
Revenues from the sale of parking permits must cover its operating expenses along with the
repayment of revenue bonds
sold to construct parking facilities.
As a future goal Parking Services plans to build an information kiosk next spring to assist
students and guests.
continued from page 1
from within the foundation's
own coffers. No student fees
will be used for the project.
The terrace, along with the
existing indoor seating area,
will be available to student
groups.
Interested groups can pick
up a facilities use form from
Kay Cowan at Curriculum Services (ext. 8888).
The terrace is scheduled for
completion on Dec. 4. "As of
now we are ahead of schedule,"
said Gray. "But we know that
there is a waiting list for lighting fixtures due to the intense
growth going on in our region.
The builders are doing their
best to get them as soon as possible."
YOB ape cordially invited
to become a lewyen
Join us i t our Sehool of Law Open Hoose
on S a M l y , November 2 1,10:00 a.m.
If y ouve ever t hought about b eing a lawyer, t hink
about attending our O pen House.
You'll meet our faculty, our staff and our students,
participate in a mock class, a nd a ttend i nformation
sessions on
You'll see tbefuHirt home admissions, financial aid, student life a nd
of our «w
School of law bcareer services.
uilding.
We're now accepting applications for Fall 1999, so call us f or
more information or for a reservation.
As important as your choice of
law schools is, this is o ne invitation
y ou s hould d efinitely a ccept.
SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER
21,
f ^ Q C H A PM A N
HMUNIVERSITY
M W S C H O O L OF LAW
^ao-cks** La^n opportunities.
, 88-242-191 3
la8 w adm@cbapman.edu
1993,
10.00
A
M
Chapman University, 333 N. Glassell Street, Orange, CA 92866
Please reserve your space by Thursday November 19
This new outdoor facility will provide much needed space for students and/or groups that may require a convenient meeting space
Chapman School of l aw graduates may sit for the bar in any state. Chapman University's Sch™1
by the American Bar Association. American Bar Association, 550 West North W ^ i ^T
f T * * p r o v , s , o n a l l y approved
ortn btrcet'todianapohs,IN 4 2 2 3 72 48 4
6 0 , 1- 6 - 3 0
�San Marcos facility
supplements school
athletics
By J ohn Cedres
Pride staff writer
]gflti
Though CSUSM m a0im l l^emuch in l e y l ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ g W : by a foiffllr player
:a
the way of its ow$ sports fedHBtiessofar* n ^ ^ ^ t t ^ i p roft^^fflRolleyball
that doesn't m lpi iMl|iidprts have no?
$45 for San Marcos resiopportunity fiaf a ttmSH^H^tiqti.
dents, $50 for non-residents.
There's always
Smith
in indoor sports? "No
Courts and Sports
head- . p ^ p ^ ^ l ^ Sag| Marcos Sports Diquarters for just a bo^^^^he; recre-1 Crec^^^^^fcompson. "We have had
ational and he
pro- a well^^^R^ed sdttball program for
grams for adults M S ^ M^ri^s. This over
plus a good arena and
26,ooo-square-footf fa^H^ i l 1^74 Pico1 o utdp^^^l^r program for over 12
Ave. has four full
courts
which also can be
one
I ^ ^ S ^ I l l l city's most developed
indoor soccer arena Siidl|ii§efe^6lleyball
is divided into six cocourts.
ed ^il^c^fecmsisting of 36 teams and
It also has a snack ^ ^^H%tunnel 12 nit$n^ ^Jf^sions consisting of 72
room,'' for events
and teams. ' V
Though there is no women's-only
gymnastics.
Its "operi-play'^^M^^^pB 6:30 league, mainly because of lack of interp.m. to 9:30 p.m. Ip&idaj^ foi^volley- est, Thomj^|ctt si^s he is trying to get
ball, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. OpiS^llifer bas- one moving^ ;; :;:
ketball, and 7 to 9:30 p*m* Fridays for
Teams feesfor the softball leagues are
soccer. Admission costs are $2 for those $240 for thoge with San Marcos resi21 and older, $1 for those aged 16-20 dents and If^|||||p>r those with non-resiand 50 cents for those 15 and under** \ dents.
-MK
The a ^^Koccer league has three
Gymnasium staffer DanieUe Calumplt
says, "We get a pretty g^pd crowd m "over-ip^^K's divisions with a total of
here for our adult open-play prografisC 18 t eam^He "over-30" men's division
There are about 15-20 people who come with i ^^fcis, three "over-18" women's
for volleyball, 30-40 people for baskl|f chvisi|fof|vith a total of 18 teams and
two ( f e d divisions with a total of 12
ball, and 15-20 people for soccer."
For those interested in a more than teaislffrees r®^e from $287 for resi"open-play,* the facility has basketball dent teams to $337 |or non-residents.
leagues for Hen over 18 and men over j |The out||jbr s(^p^r-l&^ieconsists of
30. Entry fees range from $200 for ^fc.men's^avePiS^ league' with nine
teams composed of San Marcos resi- \j fffllis and a women's "over-30" league
dents and $240 for teams of non-resi- w ffi six teams. Fees are $232 for San
Marcos resident teams and $282 for
dents.
In addition, the facility offers a vol- non-resident teams.
Rough going for intramural sports
GSUSM Golf team plays
in first tournament
By Debbie Henke
Pride staff writer
A s the fledgling CSUSM golf team ciation of Intercollegiate Athletics
y LV began its inaugural season, (NAIA).
With their first taste of competi^ ^ coach Fred Hanover
tion behind them, the CSUSM
made his goal clear -a national championship. Maybe
golfers traveled
not in.the first year, or even
to Bakersfield
the second, but eventually.
for the Roadrunner InvitaAnd even though, in its
tional Nov. 1-3,
first
tournament
in
where they faced mostly
Northridge, the team finDivision II schools.
ished 15th out of 17 schools
competing, it wasn't a disapAnd, the team fared better,
pointment, Hanover said.
finishing third behind Cal State
Stanislaus and Grand Canyon UniMany of his players had no
versity.
previous tournament experience, he added, and were
The squad was led by freshman
pitted against players from
Brels Solomon, a transfer student who
mostly National Collefollowed Hanover to CSUSM from Cal
giate Athletic AssociaState San Bernardino. Solomon-shot
tion Division I
223 (76-72-75) over the three rounds.
schools.
San
Next up for the team is the Santa
Marcos isn't even
Clara Invitational on Nov. 9-10, which
part of the
concludes the fall season. The team
NCAA,
but
then hits the links again in Bakersfield
rather the National Assoin thefirstweek of Januaiy.
ft** 2? • Hriftit: 5*r* • UlrifKt: 110 • Habitat: Vatt
ft is my job to fly>
His myjob to
trim risks*
Amf tm not wtmng
to risk m
By John Cedres
Pride staff writer
T A T ith only soccer, basketball and
V V dance to choose from this fall,
CSUSM's intramural sports programs
are sparking little interest among students.
Danny Martinez, head of the program,
concedes, that "intramural sports programs at CSUSM are still in the developing stages," and adds that the lack of
attendance has made "creating a base"
for the program a challenging task.
Cost of the program is $12 for basketball, with Monday games starting at 6
p.m. and 7 p.m. at the Palomar College
gymnasium; $10 for soccer with Tuesday and Thursday pick-up games from
4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the grass area by the
campus parking lot; and $5 for dance,
which is.held Tuesdays and Thursdays
from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the student
lounge.
The intramural staff has advertised
the programs withflyersand signs, but
they have drawn little student response.
There are only four teams in the basketball league, and an average of 12 participants in the soccer program, and
only six or seven dancers.
Martinez, who came t o t he program
at t he beginning of t he fall semester,
says h e will introduce more sports programs next semester, including volleyball, Softball, flag football, salsa dancing and golf.
Neither should you.
its your job.
WHY m m THE RISK?
Comfort of knowing thmt i rn
protected from the most
common vaccine prwent&tig
sexuMty transmitted disease
Contact your schools health center
about the hepatitis B vaccine.
�Recognizing
depression a first
step in treating it
Illness takes
its toll on
one woman's
spirit
By Bridget Craven-Baily
By Alex Woodie
Pride staff writer
he stmdent who tried to kill herself by jumping
from the Clock Tower suffered from a malady
called depression.
Although periods of gloom strike everybody from
time to time, it doesn't have to be a debilitating illness
that leads to suicide, said John Segoria, interim director of CSUSM's Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS).
The key to preventing incidents like the one Oct. 26
is identifying depression and providing help before a
student reaches thefinalstage of depression, he added.
"If someone sees a student is more withdrawn in class,
or if they are exhibiting this type of behavior, call
CAPS," Segoria said, adding that a counselor should
also be alerted to the student's signs.
T
"Everyone needs to be aware that (suicide) is a possible avenue for some students to take," he said.
feel the university should address the at
Signs of depression among students include:
tempted suicide more deeply and closely. That
doesn't mean it should be glamorized in any
- A shy student suddenly becoming extroverted or^
manner. It concerns me not just as a student
outgoing.
• J^^ of this institution, but also because the woman
- An outgoing student suddenly becoming shy.
who fell happens to be my sister-in-law. She suffered
- A normally well dressed student appearing sloppy
serious injury... her pelvis was crushed and her lower
or unkempt.
spine bent up into her back. She will never have a nor- A sudden change in weight, either loss or gain.
mal life physically again.
- A student looking like he or she hasn't been sleepBut she didn't have a normal life to begin with. She
ing.
suffers from depression.
- A sudden drop in academic performance.
It is a terrible, overwhelming illness that must be
-Themes of death in a student's work or art.
battled on a day-to-day basis. That doesn't mean that
'A W •:• •
<•
f•
it was okay for her to do what she did. But what does
her jumping say about the human spirit when the
prospect of death or permanent physical injury is betcontinuefrompage 1
ter than life?
When I first met my sister-in-law, she had a beauti- i ^ C A e '
in crisis mc^e^ Ifreisler said* a ^ e h
likfe^: jfl^^ - wfc^^
kind
ful promising future. There was a brilliant light shinhappeng,;:.itichimges ihMr
ing in her eyes.
The: attempted suieide a l ^
to
school pameption ^
ridrmaDyfeel
the
Over the past few years, I watched that light blow a t o t o ^
"major ^^ rt^ps ^
v^hte^lM^
tihait
hapfout. She was, and is, a veiy gifted and talented woman. gptrt, • One day after the jump,
still pens is bad grades." § | |
But with all of her gifts, she still had many personal were issomg veiy MMe
to students or me<%er m e m b e r
rt^ht
obstacles to face.
ffiabeyorida short ptfess
h zm seen more students for Counseling if th^ tSVPS
She wasn't doing poorly in her classes. She had rePrancine Martinez, vice president for student affairs, office W t f t b e e n n i o ^ f t e ^
mM
covered from a head-on collision the year before and
under met. '""
had returned to college with realistic expectations of the national Student Privacy Act* Martinez did send
^Stqdents get stressed a&diifcey don't want to wmk
herself.
e-mails t o
ac^sing them to tell
W^^^teS^i^ic^^
iilkl^liiiP
Depression is an invisible illness, not always appar- *achers to let students know that if t h^
counent to the eyes. But it is very real and, for some, it fol- s e l ! ^ they could use e ating semcesi available miBut Segoria stressed tiiat CAPS* move offcampiis
lows like a cloud of despair wherever they go and whatU^^fhrnmyh^mng
on the attempted m icidi
ever they do.
crogram, located o ff campus at the PalomarW ^ f i t e e are no s mmatm
Some people suffer only a temporary depression, Pomerado Health Services buildings
%•
a person
with the onset of a tragic event or a series of disturbhat
ing events. As people, we all react differently to our to students through the faculty in order to lessen the
environment, so some of us have better coping skills
than others, while others are in desperate need of help
from their families, friends, support groups and doc- P *But because of it j ^m^lpb^^
tors.
sue, wh want to dferass l^y^pm^^m^k
an apAs students and teachers, we need to be more aware propriate vehicle within their comfort zones."
••••PB^
.. • • • • • • ( • • • • e n of the signs of depression and what we can do to help
couraged byget-well cardsandmessages of
someone in need.
days after the jump to console those faculty member^ from -fellow students, i ncludkg - many who d id]®
My sister-in-law doesn't know why she jumped, nor
j p f w h e r ideatity-Maitinez hasvolunteered totake
is she aware of the impact she has had on her family, by the incident,
.
..
*
*
f§31||§
fellow students and faculty. She doesn't know that she
Later, John Segoria, director of Disabled Student
hurt more than herself in that fall.
Services and interim head of CAPS, arranged to have te anything t h ^ a a i j ^
She has six beautiful nieces and nephews who love g ^ m 4410 in Craven Hail set aside for students who
and cherish her. But they're not allowed to see her wantedtotalk to a counselor. It v nUl&sMMibrst^
anymore. Jumping from a building doesn't sit well dents between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m.fordrop-in counselwith their fathers, who feel it sends the wrong mes- ing through Nov. 13, and between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.
v ftflng, profliepitt^jig^ m^olfic^vwll be
sage and can be very confusing for young children.
fe^pytoac^tthfis^ items and ensure that f & y ale
They don't understand the concept of death yet.
Though few students have made use of that room,
In her suffering, we all suffer. I think we all need to
.
a-;!* j ^ ^ ^ r ^ f c ' ^ ^ ^ r g
become more aware that sometimes life can be just as
at Barham and
difficult as the most challenging college course.
Fan
I llltl^W
�•C ^ p i ^ J i i i i i ^
•
*
A lesson in
guidanceanger...and
pain
Th# C APS program, h eaded b y Dr, Fritz Kreisfer, provides a v alyabte rpaQPfsa for s tuderts.who may feet
overwhelmed by feelirtgs related t o s tress and anxiety
T
;
B y D an L a B elle
M die s taff w riter
By Debbie Henke
Attending a California State univerplease, talk to someo&e —
sity by itself can be stressful For those if not 111 our office,then someone e lse/
students who also have toffies and
Since the suicide attempt last month,
who work, the pressure can quickly j a new resource has been made available
wear down even the most energetic per- to
Propria counselr
ingisnowavaiIableinCmvenH3$4UO>
CSUSM*s Counseliugand Psychologi- between the hours of 11 a.m. and2 p a
cal Services (CAPS) offers several stressl liough CAPS encourages students to
relieving programs to help students who make an appointment in advance»stuare having difficulties in their das^esi dents can also drop in for a brief, unrelationships, family lives or other per- scheduled session with a staffpsychologist in its main office, Suite 108 in the
sonal matters.
Palomar-Pomerado Health Services
sis* We help students with whatever building across Twin Oaks Valley Road
problems they are having/* says Dr, [ from the campus, ,
Fritz Rreisler, CAPS staff psychologist, j
This simple convenience can prove
These sessions are private. *Oonfi~ - i^valimble with t oday's t ime condentiality is really important t o m . Yo&r straints, serving as "time outs" to help
visits does not appear on amy records,
Students
CAPS also offers many workshops
says. Kreisler,, J
each semester covering topics such as
study skills, stress management, test
attempt was shocMitg, Kreisler says, it anxiety, math anxiety, women's issues,
was
of sui- men's issues, assertiveness and probcide occur to a lot of people/ he adds. lem-solving skills. For dates and times
call CAPS at (760) 750-4910.
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I wish my brain came with an on-off
switch. When I needed it most, I could
kick it into high gear. And when I didn't
want to think, a flip of the switch and
I'd be a perfectly content couch potato.
How wonderful that would be.
But, of course, it's not that simple.
The mind has a cruel habit of wanderare^t^^wi^
w^i
ing into places you'd just rather it not
gists. Visits are limited tofiveper senses- go. Especially lately.
You see, try as I might, I've had a
jllli^^
termined between the student and a tough time not thinking about what
i - g ^ ^ t e i s to sari* happened here on campus when a
ous need of help, we can help them find young woman felt that suicide was a
solution to life's problems. And her accommunity resources * said Kreisler.
• Bttt
hnj^rtait^he added, CAPS tions have forced me to think about a
suicide in my own family this summer.
Up until the last few days, I've done a
•hot afford ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ he
pretty good job of not thinking too much
about my aunt's death. My anger at her
. - inaddition to
prevented me from feeling sad. I could
barely speak her name without wanting
to place an expletive in front of it. How
could she do such a thing? Be so selfish? Cause my family such pain?
So, instead of feeling grief, I got mad.
And that seemed to get me through the
day. I managed to push aside thoughts
of my aunt's suicide into the furthest
The Arts & Lectures Fall Series concludes with two big events —^ •
recesses of my mind. Now, suddenly, a
both presented at the
young woman I don't even know has
forced me to think about it all over
again.
So I did something I thought I never
would. I asked for help. I went to see one
of the counselors on campus.
I wasn't alone. Tracy Norris, a psychologist with CAPS (Counseling and
Psychological Services) said she has
seen more students in the wake of the
attempted suicide than she can count.
People are expressing a variety of emoThe legendary Mississippi Delta blues singer/songwriter
tions: anger, sadness, guilt, disbelief. All
Monday, November 30 — 8;00 p.m.
of these feelings are normal.
tickets: $10.00
I wish I could say everything is fine
now, that I don't feel anger or even sadness anymore. But that's not true. Grief
is a slow, gradual process.
Just like the family of this young
woman, my life was forever changed by
A new musical comedy based on the Brer Rabbit tales,
what my aunt did. There is rio switch to
written and directed by a CSUSM Professor of Visual &
make the feelings go away. But talking
Performing Arts
about it does help.
So I'd like to encourage anyone afFriday, December 4 and Saturday, December 5 — 8:00 p.m.
fected by the campus suicide attempt to
tickets: $12.00
do what I did: Ask for help. It's comforting to know there are people on campus who truly care.
It's a shame the young woman who
tried to take her life couldn't be helped
sooner. But perhaps someone else c an.
California Center for the Arts.
Escondido—Center Theater
Mose Allison
Loni Berry's Brer Rabbit
for tickets call (800)98TICKETS
�M
Tec
h
no
Page 6
Io
g
M
'
The
Pride
y
Tech. fair serves up bits of the future
By Amber Lewnes
Pride staff writer
with a variety of laptops. The modem is
Are you driving on the information
a credit card-sized device with two ansuper-highway?
tennae. But its capabilities are limited,
CSUSM students and faculty had a
chance to answer that question when Jacobson explained, since it only prothey got a peak at the latest bit of fast- cesses at a speed of 3 megs/sec, slower
lane devices at the Nov. 5 Annual Tech- than the more recent modems.
nology Fair on campus.
The tech fair was initially intended to
demonstrate how teachers used grant
money to develop technologically efficient ways to teach. But, explained
Theresa Macklin, director of academic
computer services, now it is used to
"raise the level of consciousness as to
what's available."
Instead of just teachers presenting,
representatives from Apple and WIND
Systems demonstrated their products.
Tim Ryan of Apple displayed the new
Imac computer, a colorful, translucent
The card also is not compatable with
unit with the modem, CPU, CD ROM,
and monitor in one unit. This reduces some computers and reception is not
the number of wires and plugs to just reliable But students could use it to acone plug for the entire unit. Though the cess the net in any of their classes.
In another area, CSUSM instructors
Imac might not enhance teaching styles,
it would be efficient for students to use Mikiko Seyller Imamura and Rika
Yoshii shared their language software
in computer labs.
Another convenience for students is programs. Both are designed to give stuthe wireless modem. Scott Jacobson of dents more comprehensive studying
WIND Systems displayed his product techniques.
SUCCESS.
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you could become eligible
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plus the Army College
Fund. That means you could
earn $26,500 for college
with a two-year enlistment
And the Army will give
you another edge, too. YouTl
develop the self-discipline,
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you'll need to succeed in
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Find out more about
how you can get $26,500 for
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call
760-747*6510
ARMY.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE:
www.goarmy.com
Imamura's program helps Japanese
students learn characters while they off t ^stt^-f^;^!
perfect their pronunciation. Yoshii de- • CSUSM Exeeu
veloped the DaRT program to help for- Ernie Zomalt said o
eign students learn to use the correct mmts use&variel | ®lfef%t 'Ittafifc
articles in sentences. For every answer,
the program gives feedback regarding
why an answer wasrightor wrong.
l^tijpted*;
Several other faculty members presented multimedia websites they had meat of file 4epa|
developed to help give students more ducted this snont
exposure to the subject material at their
leisure. Many of them already have incorporated this technology in their tktni m^mot to-.if^jillbw: .^i^^t^e^dSr
classes.
mated fer^Mtotot p^a^&wWdbt^
These programs are also used as a tool gin memly
to efficiently instruct a class. Teaching
children in fine arts, for example, is amicable, adding, ?We l ^lh agreed on
much easier with the help of the Voices
A CSUSM
release said Trujttto
and Images software from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Amy had stepped dowii "to return to his home
Hull, a fifth-grade teacher and CSUSM
alumnist, demonstrated this informative resource. "With this software the
kids can recognize the social impact of I g l l ^
1992, y & m CSUSM
$1d
art," she said.
Hull is conducting a workshop on
Nov. 19 from 6 p.m.-9 p.m. in Univ. 217
to instruct anyone interested on the capabilities of this software.
Extended Studies offers unique
By Miguel Reyes
study alternative
Pride staff writer
Cuernavaca, here we come.
Interested in a chance to fulfill part
of your language requirement while on
vacation this winter?
CSUSM's Extended Studies Department may have the answer for you.
Every year, Extended Studies offers
students a chance to spend three weeks
in Mexico while learning Spanish and
completing part of CSUSM's foreign language requirement. It is an opportunity
to travel, meet new people and places
and practice what you learn. You'll stay
with a Spanish-speaking family in
Mexico, and participate in different activities in and out of the classroom.
This winter, the trip will be to
Cuernavaca, and classes will be held at
the Chac Mool Institute. Classes available are Spanish 101,102,201,316, and
Education 364.The course lasts three
weeks, Jan. 6-27.
founded the North
lean Pfcaee Officers \
a good citizen am
Attendance is limited, though, to 40
students.
The cost of the package, which includes transportation, Chac Mool regMad?
istration, insurance, administrative fee
and room/board, varies depending on
the classes and units taken.
pSm; tpi^ato^
Those interested in participating
must attend one of two orientation days
rational aspects of
where cost and deadlines will be determined. The meetings are at 3:30 p.m.
Nov. 10 in Commons 206, and 3 p.m.
PIPI
atlefflpt&j I
Nov. 18, also in Commons 206.
. "It is a lot of fun, and some students
decide to stay longer because they have met ^ p r i f i ^ i ^ l
such a great time," said Janet Jubran,
assistant to the dean of Extended Studare
ies.
mpi ffifiw
For more information, call Extended i f e ^ i ^ ^ ^ ^ i ^ i ^ ^ b i ^ ^ a J s t u *
Studies at (760) 750-4020, or visit the
department's website for schedule updates at: www.csusm.edu/ies.
Students need to be reminded of the following important information:
Registration fees are due and payable at the time of registration. Students will not be billed. Failure to pay fees at time of registration
may result in disenrollment from class(es) or assessment of additional fees. If disenrolled, any partial payment will be forfeited.
Check or Visa/ MasterCard may pay fees through the SMART system. Fees may be paid with cash, ATM debit card, or money order
in person at the University Cashier's Office located on the 3rd floor of Craven Hall, 3107A. A drop box located in the breezeway just
outside the Cashier's Office is also available for check, money order or credit card payments. All payments must be received by 4:00
p.m. on January 8 ,1999. Payments received in the Cashier's Office after this time will be considered late and subject to additional
fees.
Returned Check Polity: Please be aware that writirig a bad check is against the law. Placing a stop payment or closing the account
does not release a student from their financial obligation, nor does it automatically withdraw a student from enrollment. A bad check
will result in a $20.00 dishonored check/credit card fee, plus $15.00 administrative late fee, and a financial hold will be placed on
the student's records.
are 5,000 student
m a campus, it M
an educational pc
forward to the ec a
fu
�———^—
Profiles
—
Prof, responds to students' requests...in German
By Leiana Noholowaa
Pride staff writer
uten Tag! That's Ger
M
^
man for "good day!"
•
Danke schon is
•
"thank you" and bitte
^Bl
I
is "you're welcome."
^^^^
Thanks to A strid
Ronke, simple German phrases like
these are now being heard on the
CSUSM campus, along with a lot more
complicated German sentences. Ronke
is not only the only professor currently
teaching German at the university, but
she also is the German Department's
founder.
It was not easy, either. She initially
approached CSUSM an<J asked why
there wasn't a German program. The
answer, "We don't have requests for
German," wasn't a good enough excuse
for her to accept.
So she collected 540 signatures from
high school students and high school
teachers in the area requesting that the
language be taught and, with the support of the German Goethe Institute and
the German Consulate, made a presentation to CSUSM's Foreign Language
Department.
Though the department heads were
impressed, it still took almost a year before the German program was started.
In spring 1997, though, Ronke taught
her first class, German 201. She says she
believes in a creative and progressive
learning atmosphere.
"I love to share my German heritage from the Freie Universitaet of Berlin and
and culture," she says. "It's not just Ger- a second Master's in European Lanman grammar, but German culture that guages and Literature at the University
adds to the foreign language experi- of Hawaii at Manoa.
Ronke looks fondly back on her life
ence."
in Hawaii. In
Born and raised
1989, the year of
in Berlin, Ronke
the reunification
grew up in a diof Germany and
vided
nation.
the tearing down
"Berlin is an interof the Berlin Wall,
national and lively
she worked as an
city where anyinstructor for the
thing is possible.
German DepartIt's a lot like New
ment at the UniYork, but with less
versity of Hawaii.
c rime,"
says
She was also the
Ronke.
department's coShe first visited
ordinator
and
the United States
handled many
when she was 19,
study-abroad prospending
f ive
grams. Cornelia
months working
Moore, the current
as a " mother's
Dean of LanAstrid Ronke, founder of the CSUSM
helper" for a Gerguages, LinguisGerman Dept., will teach three
man f amily in
tics, and Literacourses next semester.
C onnecticut. In
ture at UH, Ronke
1980, she atsays, "was a very
tended the Unieffective person. If there was something
versity of Tennessee on a Fulbright
Scholarship for a year where she got in- you needed, she did it right away, using
the phone right there in her office. She
volved in theater.
She later taught German to U.S. sol- never procrastinated.
"It was because of her that I learned
diers and officers for the City College of
the English term 'resourceful.'" Ronke
Chicago in Berlin. She received her
first Master's degree in Education 1987 had wanted to be a teacher since she was
6 years old. She often was the organizer
of, and the speaker far, her classmates
in school. Ronke's teaching philosophy
is grounded on what she calls "communicative competence."
"I believe in dynamic and motivating
classes with student-centered activities," she adds. Her classes are filled
with role-playing, projects and dramatic
language exercises. Ronke believes her
students must be involved. She wants
talk, input and dialogue.
In Hawaii, Ronke, whose father was
in the entertainment business, worked
on a number of theater productions.
Her hobbies include sports and photography. In 1993, Ronke moved to California with her husband, a marine biologist, and son Benjamin. She has
worked as a coordinator for the German
Department at University of Southern
California, and has taught at East LA
College.
She also spent a year at Pepperdine
College's International Business Department where she taught intensive
German to business managers. Ronke
t aught ESL at San Diego State
University's American Language Institute before taking on the German program at CSUSM. Along with three
classes at CSUSM — German 101, 102
and 201, Ronke also teaches at a German school in San Diego that she coowns and operates.
Professor measures communication on a different scale
By John Cedres
Pride staff writer
T
var A ntonsen is a s uccessful com
poser and music w riter. But his
J L mission at this moment is to help CSUSM students develop an understanding of, and appreciation
for, a wide variety of music.
A native of northern Norway, Antonsen — who was
inspired by the sounds of an accordion played by a
neighboring farmer — migrated to the United States
in 1985.
A successful pianist who has appeared on broadcasts throughout the world, Antonsen taught at San
Diego Community College for four years before going on to compose for, and performing with, several
local bands.
After performing at CSUSM two years ago with one
of his bands, Stereo Dogs, he says, a teaching position here practically fell into his lap.
For the last year and a half, he has been on the university faculty.
"Many musicians don't teach and many teachers
don't play," he says.
"It is important to communicate in many ways the
phenomenon of music."
Even though he is an experienced composer and
writer, he still considers himself an "eternal student"
who lends an ear to peers, colleagues and anyone else
who can enhance his ability.
In his music class at CSUSM, a substantial part of
the curriculum is based on studying the music of different times and different cultures.
Antonsen admits that some of the music may be a
little difficult for some students to understand, but
stresses that it's important to learn to appreciate the
"uniqueness" of all music.
"Good music is good music, wherever and whenever it's comingfrom,"he says.
Antonsen's six-year study in composition and piano at the Norwegian State Academy of Music earned
him scholarly and professional recognition.
While teaching in several European conservatories
and universities, he made countless appearances on
radio and television broadcasts, performing with such
musicians as Art Farmer, Jimmy Heitch and Joe Morello.
Ivar Antonsen, performer and instructor,
strikes up a chord with CSUSM students
�Book Review
Novel reveals Eastern tradition
By Amber Lewnes
Pride staff writer
With only two CSUSM classes on the culture of Japan, most students have limited exposure to this Eastern society.
"Memoirs of A Geisha" by Arthur Golden is a tale
that reveals much about this foreign culture.
The story takes place before, during, and after World
War II in a prosperous town called Gion. Gion was
once famed for its successful geishas. The book exposes the world of geisha that most people, even most
Japanese people, never knew.
The story begins when Chiyo-chan is sold by her
father to an okiya (a geisha house). Her mother falls
deathly ill and the aging father does not believe he
can take care of Chiyo-chan and her sister.
Ripped from everything she had ever known, Chiyochan is forced to face life as a servant to a temperamental geisha named Hatsumomo. Just when she is
resigned to face an unhappy life of servitude, Chiyochan finds a way out and becomes a geisha herself.
Arthur Golden spent years in Japan researching life
at an okiya. After interviewing former geisha of that
time he began writing this historical novel.
This story not only includes psychological issues
facing a young woman, but it informs the reader of
the political and economical system the geishas developed.
Geisha were entertainers, but they were also business-women and political diplomats.
Golden titillates his audience with vivid descriptions
of the beauty and wealth geisha were accustomed to
before World War II.
Both conservatives and feminists may be disturbed
by the social and economic structure of geisha. Most
geisha would sell their virginity to the highest bidder.
Later in life, they would be financially supported in
exchange for a sexual relationship with a married man.
Golden does examine this conflict of Eastern and
Western values when the heroine finds herself being
shunned by socialites in New York at the end of her
life. They see her as nothing but a kept woman.
Men may have a hard time identifying with the main
character, but the political and economical overtones
will interest those who couldn't care less about a
woman trying to find herself.
Out on Video
Love stoiy offer more than just romance
Cage. Ryan plays Dr. Maggie Rice, an no-nonscense
surgeon. When a patient asks to meet her before his
operation, she rolls her eyes, giving the impression
that she doesn't have time and goes into his room
wearing her surgical mask. But, when their eyes meet,
hers exude compassion.
City of Angels
Ryan has the ability to make us feel emotion withStarring Meg Ryan and Nicholas Cage
out speaking and this film displays her range of acting abilities without reverting to the cutesy character
she often portrays. Ryan has matured—Nicely.
Cage also gives his soulful eyes a workout in this
By Melissa Brunner
film. He plays Seth, a messenger from God, who with
Pride staff writer
his angel associates escort the recently deceased to the
"other" side.
Helping Maggie deal with the concept of God sideThe premise of "City of Angels" — recently released
tracks Seth, who faces the decision of becoming moron video — is found on television dramas and movies: Young surgeon considers the possibility of a higher tal to be with Maggie or living an eternity as a messenger. Cage uses only his face to show how falling in
being after failing to save a life.
love can ache so good.
Though television explores such angles weekly, it
Director Brad Silberling does a good job of mixing
usually lacks the credibility of Meg Ryan or Nicolas
different thoughts about life, death and eternity, and
an excellent job of making the actors convey intense
emotions without uttering a word. His camera angles
are worth watching.
Dennis Franz ("NYPD Blue") gives a fun and memorable performance as a "fallen" angel, and Andre
Braugher ("Homicide") rounds out the supporting
cast with a solid performance.
"City of Angels" is a film that promotes conversations other than "What did you do last night?" or "How
about that game!" It is a film that both genders can
appreciate. It is rated PG-13 so the language and nudity aren't intense. Fast-forward through the love
scene if there are children or pre-teens around.
Since you've saved a small fortune by waiting for
the video, treat yourself to the soundtrack. The songs
are relaxing and the lyrics have meaning. Featured
artists include Alanis Morissette, U2, Peter Gabriel,
Eric Clapton, Sarah McLaehlan, The Goo Goo Dolls
and a jazzy song by Paula Cole called "Feelin' Love."
T hePride
C^USanltecos
San Marcos^CA 92096
760.7504998
" e m a i l n s : *" •
p ride@mailhosti.csusm
Editor
David Johnson
Faculty Advisor
�
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<h2>1998-1999</h2>
Description
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The ninth academic year of California State University San Marcos.
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University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Sort Key PR
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newspaper 11 x 13.5
The Pride
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The Pride
November 12, 1998
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student newspaper
Description
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Vol 6, No. 3 of The Pride reports on student mental health.
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The Pride
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University Archives, California State University San Marcos, Kellogg Library
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University Archives in the CSUSM Library
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1998-11-12
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Judith Downie, Librarian and University Archivist
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newspaper 11 x 13.5
campus security
campus shuttle
Extended Learning/Extended Studies
fall 1998
mental health
The Dome
-
https://archives.csusm.edu/student-newspapers/files/original/9e08ddfda628dea6b10347a6acff3642.pdf
4453b6220f83eb6a92d1fe6cfa1deeb3
PDF Text
Text
IV V® II n ItL rU L/v Il Ii -\ J L
I
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L
^(j^v
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY SAN M ARCOS
TUESDAY,SEPTEMBER 10, 2002
wvvwxsusm.edu/pride/
HIGHLIGHTS
News
Cai State San Marcos Student
Missing
Alex Zingaro, a CSUSM student, is missing since Sept, 4.
page 12
CSUSM Says Goodbye to a
Member of its Founding Faculty
Dr. Baker from the Sociology
Department retires.
page 7
Refund Policy Changed
Starting this semester, students
who ask for a refund will receive
a prorated refund.
page 3
Dome Upgrade
Over the summer, the Dome
had kitchen upgrades and expansion.
page 3
Arts
I ntroducing CSUSM's Two N ewest V enues
Introducing CSUSM's Two
Newest Venues
By AMBER ROSSLAND
Pride Staff Writer
On Thursday, Sept. 5, the
students and faculty of CSUSM
celebrated the grand opening of
the two newest additions to the
campus, the Arts and the Science buildings. The celebration
began in Chavez Plaza at 11 a.m.
with the annual CSUSM student
picnic and was followed by a
ribbon cutting ceremony led by
President Alexander Gonzalez.
Former department chair Bill
Bradbury took a moment to
share his excitement about the
new Arts building and reflect
back on the beginnings of the
Arts program at CSUSM and the
efforts of the late Don Fuentes,
who is remembered for his work
early on in CSUSM's history.
Bradbury hopes that this is the Arts students at CSUSM.
beginning of a bright future for
See RIBBON, page 6
page 4
Sports
Mammoth Training for Mammoth Results
Women's and men's cross
country traveled to Mammoth,
CÀ, for a training session to get
ready for the semester tournaments.
page 8
Sullivan Strides
Feature article of cross country
runner: Brian Sullivan.
page 8
Opinion
"Walking: Is it Really so Hard?"
and "Feminine Composure"
Students' letter to the editors about previous letters and
campus issues.
page 10-11
CSUSM President Gonzales and ASI President Jocelyn Brown.
Pride Staff Photo by Martha Sarabia.
D
BARCA
Today's Q and A on Islam JrideESMONDditor
P j Design E
Guys and Dolls
Review of musical theater.
page 4
Halo Low Down
Video game review.
VOL.X NO.II
Professor Salah Moukhlis, Photo by Desmond Barca
Today, Professor Salah
Moukhlis will be giving an
informative lecture, followed by
a question and answer session,
on the world of Islam. The lecture will begin at noon in Commons 206, and is scheduled to
run until 1:15. Dr. Moukhlis
intends to spend approximately
15 to 20 minutes discussing the
historical context of Islamic
culture and it's relationship
with the west; afterwards he
will host a question and answer
session in which he will field
questions and attempt to present
an accurate image of Islam based
on his experiences.
Dr. Moukhlis is in a unique
position to promote cultural
awareness having spent much
of his life in the predominantly
Muslim country of Morocco,
where he earned his B.A. degree
in English. Dr. Moukhlis went
on to study in England where
he attained his Masters degree
in British Literature, and then
Comparative Literature in New
York where he earned his Ph.D.
See ISLAM, page 3
M B A P r o g r a m Ir r e g u l a r i t i e s
Present Since 1999
By GAIL TARANTINO
Pride Staff Writer
In the fall of 2001, after
learning of irregularities m the
Master of Business Administration (MBA) program, CSUSM
President Alexander Gonzalez
requested that the chancellor's
office conduct an investigation
into the program. However,
some of these irregularities are
not new and go back to 1999
when, in a statewide audit,
problems and potential problems regarding the extended
studies program were brought
to the attention of the adminis-
tration. The chancellor's office and procedures" Some of the blended both state and private
released a report of their findings charges made in the report are funds. Auditors claim the way
this past July. The report covered that there has been an inappro- fees were charged violated legal
the investigation of the financial priate accounting of $300,000, requirements and CSU policy.
records for both the college of that MBA program instructors The MBA program had one fee
business and extended studies were paid twice as much as their for summer and winter and a
from January 1995 through Feb- peers within the CSU system, different fee for fall and spring.
and how money from the gen- The report charges that CSUSM
ruary 2002.
eral fund, which is meant for officials were using funds from
Besides being critical of the the entire campus, was used for the state supported business coluniversity for ignoring the earlier faculty salaries in the extended lege to supplement the extended
studies. Colleen B.entley-Adler, a
audit, the report also charges that studies program.
spokeswoman at the chancellor's
the MBA program operated in
"obvious disregard of laws" and From its inception in 1995, office, said "I have not seen
was "not only poorly managed, the university's MBA program this at another university" and
but often administered with was a blend of both the college^
an obvious disregard of laws, of business and extended studSee MBA, page 9
regulations and CSU policies ies in a hybrid program that also
�THE PRIDE
2 Tuesday, September 10, 2002
New Systems and Where Our Old Computers Go To Die
By ALYSSA FINKELSTEIN
Lead Editor
New shipments containing a
total of 664 new Dell computers
and 164 new Apple computers
might have been seen by anyone
on campus over this past summer.
The new Science Hall (Science
II) was recently equipped with
180 new Dell computers, and 100
new Apple computers have been
installed in the Arts Building.
According to Bill Ward, directqr of Telecommunications and
Network Operations at Caí State
San Marcos, "The system adds
were divided up by department
except for one general student
lab [stocked with PC's] that IITS
manages in Science II. (The new
Science Hall] has several new
labs for computer science, math,
physics, [and] biology.". Bill
Craig, (we need his title here),
was unavailable for comment as
to the exact numbers of computers connected in each of the
new labs. The remainder of the
shipments was used to refresh
the current systems on campus
and to replace some of the older
model computers in Academic
Hall, Craven Hall, and Science I.
The older systems that were
replaced by the new shipments
have been retired and returned
to the campus materials management for storage. One of three
things can happen to the old
systems. Materials management
University Services Building
located at 441 La Moree Road.
occasionally holds a surplus auction, the last of which was last
Saturday, September 7. Otherwise, computers can be donated
to elementary and/or high
schools or campus departments
can buy the rights to use them.
Old computer systems can
also be donated to any school
that wants them. Ward said, "If
a school wants a donation of systems, they can [submit a] request
to the Property department here
on campus. We do not specifically target any schools."
A new lease contract through
the help desk for a hew system use state funds can purchase the
carries a one time cost of $1380,
to u a computer. W do
which covers, according to rightacceptse ersonal funds. e his
not
T
Ward, "network connection, means thatpall current software
access to a networked laser ill l
ITS makes
printer, new software licenses, wure beheoaded and iIs working
s t system
and virus protection." The lease properly. The buyer can use this
itself carries a price tag of $1320 ystem for
t want,
per year, which covers "the tshen returnas iltong atsheheyampus
to
c
computer itself, network main- property department when they
tenance, server and email access; are done."
and administration and software Quamdiisquam menatra que
maintenance," Ward said. This contus conessupplis teribus
means that for the initial setup* o f signa, consus linatqu rfecut
a new system, a department has atum
to pay a total of $2700, and then Ciliam suam ia inos conostret
es
$1320 for every year following. vt vide abemus pnarid meueri
e
din ace ublissid f
When campus departments imodit. fatorus; nos orunum
Turn
need additional systems, this is omniu menatam omaiondem
another option to them. Accord- patum abut dessimu ingultor
ing to Ward, "Old computers are
ra?
not actually purchased because iignat. qNihil videsi publi, pnos
na uostus nostilina,
they are still state property. acienin Itaiji ignostius ve, nemus
However, anyone wanting to intempl.Quam
A 11
All
In,
Out
By TERESA MC NULTY
Pride Staff Writer
"All in, all out!" cried
auctioneer Emilio Lemeni
closing another sale at the
Cal State San Marcos Fourth
Annual Surplus Property
Auction on Saturday. The
preview for the auction
started at 9:30 a.m. and the
actual selling began at 11
a.m. Over 150 people gathered for the annual event
where items were sold on an
"as is, where is," basis. The
auction took place at the
v
For sale at the auction were
computers, desks, chairs, TVs,
VCRs, and a lot more. Over all,
there were 400 items for sale.
At the beginning of the auction, a Pentium Processor sold
for almost $180.00 reported Cal
State student, Ben Arnold but
he said, "Later, I saw people
walk away with computers for
as little as $20. There were a
lot of great deals. We bought a
desk chair for $30."
Robert Aguilar, another
auctioneer, commented that
the auction had a great turn
out. "We had 100 lot sheets,
listing the items available for
sale, ready for the people, and
ran out of them right away. I
believe a lot of people have
walked away very happy. This
is different from what I usually
do. I usually do car auctions. I
am here to help Emilio conduct
the auction and this is more
fun." He also added jokingly,
"Yes, it's true... if you scratch
your eye at thé wrong time, you
might wind up buying something!"
The auction, conducted by
Abamex Auction Company,
was very successful. The
cashier replied, "I am too busy
to know how much money has
been taken in, but everything
seems to be selling."
A f t e r O n e Y e a r , C a l S t a t e S a n M a r c o s i s M o v i n g On
By CARLOS BALADEZ
Pride Staff Writer
As the one-year anniversary of
the World Trade Center Attack
day approaches, Cal Sate San
Marcos is making efforts to
remember the day in a way
that brings people together as a
community. "A Year of Living
Dangerously," a roundtable dis-
Calendar
of Events
Tuesday, September 10
Library Reception for Students
Time: 10:30 a.m.
Location: Library Courtyard
Students — Learn how to get
research help through The
Library. Attend a reception at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday, September 10. Enjoy refreshments,
participate in a drawing for
a $20 Starbucks card and a
$10 Dome Card. Learn how
you can contact librarians for
research help. Info: Yvonne
Muelemans, Librarian,
cussion featuring some Cal State
San Marcos's faculty members
was held Monday in ACD 102,
from 11:30 a.m. through 12:45
p.m.
The panel explored "the effects
of September 11 on American
life, the continuing threat and
the war on terrorism in order to
put the past into perspective and
to help us think clearly about the
future," as described in the event
brochure.
This discussion featured members of the faculty from varying
disciplines, ranging from Political Science,- History, Physics,
and Visual and Performing
arts. The members of this panel
exchanged ideas about the new-
ymeulema@csusm.edu
<ymeulema@csusm.edu>
Q and A on Islam
Time: 12:00 pm-1:15 p.m
Location: Commons 206
Dr. Salah Moukhlis, Literature and Writing Studies, will lead a question and
answer session on Islam.
Wednesday, September 11
September 11 Observance
To remember those who lost
their lives on September 11,
2001:
—At 8:46 a.m., a moment
of silence will be observed
across the campus, followed
by a ringing
year as it rapidly approaches.
Vicki Golich, a CSUSM
professor, was one of the guest
presenters for the conference.
Golich said before the event,
"My presentation will look
at the world and the state of
international relations a year
after 9/11. What has— has iiot
— changed with respect to the
of campus bells for one
minute beginning at 8:
48 a.m. From 10 a.m. to 5
p.m., bells willringfor one
minute, every hour on the
hour.
- A t 11:30 a m. to 1
p.m., President Alexander •
Gonzalez will make a brief
opening address at an open
forum where students,
and others in the campus
community, may speak
about their own experiences
during the past year. Student
volunteers will read some of
the names of those who died
during the attacks on Sept.
11, 2001. This event will be
held in thefreespeech area.
way nations interact with each
other? How have our notions of
security changed? " said Golich
before the discussion. Golich
also addressed how the events of
Sept. 11 changed key structures
and processes that govern global
relations in political, economic,
cultural, and other exchanges/
business. She also addressed the
problems with airline security.
Announcements
SENIORS--Have you
applied for graduation?
Attention seniors! You
cannot graduate unless
you apply! The deadline
is Friday, September 20.
Applications are available in the Enrollment
Services Information
Center, Fifth Floor,
Craven Hall, just off
Founder's Plaza.
Community Service
Scholarships Available
Ten $1,000 scholarships
are available for students
interested indoing community service. Visit the
Financial Aid Office,
Craven 4204, for more
information and an application.
Research Assistants
Wanted
The CSU Foundation
office is hiring research
assistants for its Latinas
Vida Project! Applicants
must befluentin Spanish
and English (read, speak
and write). Need qualified applicants for data
collection. PT positions •
available and reliable
transportation is required
$12/hr. For full job posting and to apply please
visit the Foundation website at <www.csusm.edu/
foundation> or visit the
Foundation.
�More Ways for the Administration
Keep Your Money
By MELISSA REED
to withdraw from the university
after the first day of classes for
Pride Staff Writer
that term will receive a prorated
Students who drop their refund of nonresident tuition and
classes and are still expecting a mandatory fees.
full refund of tuition and mandatory fees now that classes are This new policy will not affect
in session may be in for a big students if they change their
surprise. Effective Fall 2002, status from full to part time, as
the refund policy at CSUSM has they are still entitled to the full
changed to comply with Title 5 100% if the changes are made by
of the California Codes of Regu- the add/drop date, but this policy
will affect all students wishing
lations.
to withdraw from the university
Under the previous refund altogether.
policy, students had up to the
add/drop date to change their Although not receiving a
classes and status with no finan- 100% refund for a timely withcial penalties.
drawal may aggravate some students, the new policy may benefit
As long as they withdrew or others.
dropped classes prior to the add/
drop date they were reimbursed Under the old refund policy, in
the entire amount they invested. order to get any of your money
back, students had to decide and
With the new refund policy, withdraw by the add/drop date,
however, students who decide which usually falls within the
ISLAM from page 1
This is Dr. Moukhlis' first
semester at CSUSM where he is
teaching Global Lit. 410: African
Literature. According to Dr.
Moukhlis, when applying for a
faculty position, CSUSM was his
first choice, and that after
he met with students last week
he felt assured that he had made
the right decision. In the future
Dr. Moukhlis hopes to establish
a study abroad program with
Morocco, as well as seeing the
Global Lit. Program here at
CSUSM expand.
to
first few weeks of the semester. The add/drop deadline this
Fall is 09/17/02. Under the new
refund policy students will be
given up to the 60% point in
the academic term (11/07/02)
to receive a prorated refund.
This means that if students
bomb their midterms and want
tt> withdraw, they still have
a chance to get back some
money.
If students find themselves
in a situation of having to
withdraw from the university
and wanting to get all registration fees back, there are some
exceptions to this policy.
Although severe medical
conditions did not make the
top ten list of acceptable reasons for withdrawal without
penalty, the excuses that made
it to the top are:
a) fees that were assessed
in error
b) course for which fees
were assessed was cancelled
by the campus
c) a delayed decision
made by the campus regarding student's eligibility for
enrollment and
d) compulsory military
service.
It May Not Look Different, but
the Dome has Gotten Better
By JENNIFER ACEE
Pride Staff Writer
Although basically hidden
to customers, many changes
to the campus food court, the
Dome, took place over the
summer.
As Aztec Shops employee
Debbie Curtchianti said,
"Most of [the renovation that
took place] was behind the
scenes/'
This included an expansion
that enabled renovation and
upgrades. Asignificantamount
of space added to the kitchen
area, as well as advancements
in the technological equipment
systems used by the food
services, makes for a better
experience for customers.
While things appear
basically the same as they
did last spring in the Dome's
cafeteria and convenience
store, in spite of appearances,
customers may be pleasantly
surprised.
in the mornings and stored
for the day's sales. However,
now meals are cooked in small
quantities throughout the day.
Consequently, as Curtchianti
promised, the food served in
the Casa Del Sol Grille, Nana's
Pizza and Subs, and the House
of Tsang will be fresh, sometimes even made-to-order.
Along with the positive
changes, prices on some items
have been raised, but only
slightly - $0.25 at the most.
Curtchianti says this is to
accommodate ' for "increasing
minimum wage rates" and any
other increases in production
costs.
The Dome staff now claims
that customers can enjoy
fresher meals at what are still
considered descent prices,
and Curtchianti optimistically promised that more good
things are yet to come to the
CSUSM Dome.
The selection of food items
offered in the Dome has not
changed or expanded greatly,
but cooking methods have.
Prior to the renovations, the
food was cooked first thing
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fJF I ç ìa e1n^
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CSU Office of the Chancellor
�By DESMOND BARCA
museum honoring Lawrence
Pride Design Editor
Welk, "America's Music Man."
Among the memorabilia and
For those of you who have exhibits there is a three-quarternever heard of Guys and Dolls, scale reproduction of a few
I suggest you put down the of the rooms from Welk's
Chicken McNuggets, turn off childhood home. The exhibit
your TV, drag yourself out from is weird, musty-smelling,
whatever rock you have been and gives you the feeling that
hiding under, and expose your- you're in some sort of creepy
self to some culture.
theme park. The entrance to the
seating space is decorated with
That's exactly what I did this an equally creepy fiill wall
weekend, and .I have to tell you mural of an elderly Welk, tooth(from the safety of my home ily grinning as he holds an infant
under that rock), it was well above his gaping maw, in a scene
worth it. I'm not ashamed to eerily reminiscent of "Night of
admit that I like a good musical, the Living Dead." Once you get
whether it is afilmsuch as Willy past the horror show going on in
Wonka and the Chocolate Factory or Trey Parker's Cannibal
the Musical, or an animated
feature by our dark lord
Disney. Musicals, especially
American musical theatre, are
a lot of fun.
But before I go into Guys
and Dolls, I would like to
describe briefly the Welk
Resort Theatre, which is presenting Guys and Dolls from
Sept. 4* through Nov. 9 .
The lobby of the Welk Resort
Theatre is like a miniature
the front lobby, the theatre itself is performed live), the dancing,
is very nice indeed; it is intimate the songs, and most importantly
and very comfortable.
the acting were all flawlessly
/—
m
...whether it is afilmsuch as Willy Wonka and
the Chocolate Factory or Trey Parker's Cannibal
the Musical, or an animatedfeature by our dark
lord Disney. Musicals, especially American musical theatre, are a lot offun...
/
Guys and Dolls is a period
piece taking place in New York
in the 1950's and deals lightheartedly with gambling, sin,
and immaturity. The production
stars Jeffrey Rockwell, Ann
Winkowski, Elna Binckes, and
Barry Pear as 'Nathan Detroit,'
among others. This play is incredibly polished. The music (which
executed. Having a live orchestra
accompanying a musical show
makes and incredible difference.
I can't stress enough how amazingly perfect the show came off;
as far as I could tell there wasn't
one missed step, fumbled line, or
missed key. The dance routines
were some of the best I have ever
seen to the credit of director and
choreographer Ray Limon.
th
Actor, Elna Binckes
48
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And on a side note, the
food at Mr. W's Restaurant was most excellent
and the service likewise.
All pictures courtesy
of the Welk Resort
Theatre.
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This play is more than just
entertaining or amusing, it is
actually very funny. There were
a number of parts that made me
laugh long and hard, the kind
of laugh that makes your upper
body do that thing that's like a
convulsivefit.Many of the actors
have had notable and
frequent appearances on
television and in movies
as well as long lists of
stage productions, and
a few of the players are
locals of Escondido. But
again I'd like to stress
the fact that though the
song and dance were
brilliant, it is on account
of the superb acting that
I strongly recommend this
"Musical Fable of Broadway" to anyone with time
enough for theatre.
Too often in our fastfood culture we opt for
the convenience and ease
of watching performers
on a screen rather than
in person. As a result we
miss out on the human
connection of participating as an audience with
the actual performers, and
that is sad because there is
something intimate and
special about being present in person for this form
of storytelling.
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�T he L ow-Down O n H alo
The Low-Down On Halo
BY STEVEN ZAMORA
Pride Staff Writer
Those who are avid video game
players should give thought
to playing Halo on XBGX,
Microsoft's video game unit.
This game is raw and unedited
for mature game players who
want to participate in preventing Earth's destructionfroman
alien invasion that lasts for many
heart-pounding levels.
How well the player can aid the
Earth lies within their videogame skills and how well they
use those skills to master the
many weapons that Halo has to
offer. These weapons are: assault
rifles, pistols, shotguns, sniper
rifles, grenade launchers, alien
plasma guns, and a gunner auto-
mobile. Players who use these players can also duel each other
weapons effectively in battle Will in interactive multiplayer games.
successfully complete the game. Five different multiplayer games
challenge one's ability to maneuThis game should not be played ver his or her player and use of
infrontof children because of weapons to kill.
the many instances where Halo
displays blood, gore, and kill- Another bonus within Halo is
ings, and my be inappropriate that before players gp into battle,
a
for children to view. So please they can pick the color and also
label the name of the players
take precaution of children
used throughout the game. When
around you when choosing to
play Halo, and also beware of players kill theirfriendsin the
multiplayer game, the screen
addiction to this game.
signals that they have been killed
by the player's name. Anyone
One great aspect of this game
is that as many as sixteen play- who thinks they can play this
game well are welcome to battle
ers (only when they link four
me, the halo champion.
XBOX's with cable cords) can
play together and try to defeat
the alien onslaught. This game is
awesome for players as well as
theirfriends.In addition to the
mission that the game provides,
OBVIOUSLY T HIS I S THE WORK OF
A VERY DISTURBED INDIVIDUAL,
AND PROBABLY SHOULD HAVE BEEN
DESTROYED
RATHER THAN
PUBLISHED HERE.
PLEASE ACCEPT
OUR SINCERES1
APOLOGIES
FOR
SUBJECTING
YOU PEOPLE TO
T HIS TRASH.
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�N ew C SUSM L ibrary t o B e N amed A fter T he K ellogg F amily
Kellogg Library will serve as a
perpetual reminder of the kind- The generosity of the KelBy RIA CUSTODIO
ness, generosity, and gracious- loggs dates from 1992 to present
Pride Staff Writer
ness of two of the nicest people time. The Kelloggs give gracious
you would ever want to meet." donations to many aspect of
Gal State San Marcos president
CSUSM. As a golfer, Keith KelAlexander Gonzalez announced
The proposition of naming of logg II donated funds to form a
a major event scheduled to take
the Kellogg library will be taken strong Cal State San Marcos golf
place pending the approval by
into consideration during the program. In addition, the Kelthe CSU Board of Trustees. The
CSU Board of Trustees Septem- loggs made the campus student
library on campus, currently
ber meeting. Funding, from the union a possibility with their
under construction, will post
Kelloggs, of the library began contributions.
the name of generous supportèrs
in 1996-1998 through private
Jean and W. Keith Kellogg II.
sources.
The completion of the library is
Moore also said that the Kelexpected for completion in 18 to
loggs donated charitably to the
Campus Public Relations Rep- President's Discretionary fund
24 months.
resentative, Rick Moore said, to support a veritable combinaRussell Decker, Director of Gonzalez emphasized, "The "Approval is expected."
tion of key projects. One project
Planning, Design and Construction emphasized that the completion of the library is sooner than
quoted. An increase in private
funding made for a higher priority of the library on the projects list. The Kelloggs remain
instrumental in ¡pushing the
schedule of completion sooner
than expected. The philanthropic
Kelloggs remain influential in
the support of donations surpassing millions of dollars to campus
projects. The Kelloggs continue
to be devoted supporter and
donators to CSUSM.
Tenth Southern
California Conference
on Undergraduate
Research (SCCUR),
hosted by California
Institute of Technology,
invites participation by
the faculty and students
of California State
University.
The conference fosters
appreciation of the valuable
role hands-on original
work plays in enhancing
undergraduate education.
SCCUR aims to develop
a multi-disciplinary and
multi-cultural community
of researchers, scholars, and
artists linked by a common
enthusiasm for learning.
Saturday, November 23,
20002
For more information:
http://www.sccur.org
SCCUR
promotes
awareness of undergraduate
research and scholarly and
creative activities as they
exist in various disciplines
and types of institutions.
Got Health?
Faculty, staff and students are invited to attend the Cal State San Marcos annual
Health and Wellness Resource Fair on Wednesday, September 25th, 2002 from 10
30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Palm Court.
Representatives from health care providers, CalPERS Retirement Services,
and other health and wellness oriented organizations will be there to provide
information and answer your questions. Stop by to see the verldor displays and
receivefreesamples and informational handouts.
This year HR&EO collaborated with the Associated Students Inc., Student Health
Services, Environmental Health & Safety, University Police and the CSUSM
Foundation in order to provide health related information and resources to the
entire campus community.
For more information, contact Yasuko Shirakawa at 750-4425. :
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Framing a nd materials provided,
$20 to $30 p er o ne hour class.
Some e xperience
858*505*4880
M o d Science
S choolhouse C hess
being, the creation of the Kellogg Endowed Scholarship and
Cal State San Marcos. The vast
donation that the Kelloggs gave
to CSUSM opened the doors
to many possible projects. The
Kelloggs contributions offer a
glimpse the kindness of such
honorary people. The proposed
naming of the library honors
the devotion of two kind-hearted
people who care about the future
of Cal State San Marcos.
According to future chair,
Steve Welch, the new Science
building "is the Ferrari of all
undergraduate science labs in
the country" and features cutting-edge scientific equipment
and computer technology with
over 72,000 square feet of labs,
classrooms, and office space.
The smaller Arts building consists of almost 59,000 square feet
of new learning space with room
for over 1,000 students. The Arts
building also features a digital
audio recording studio, art studios with natural lighting, and a
250-seat lecture hall.
Enrollment at Cal State San
Marcos has increased by nearly
10% Discount
19 percent, with well over 7000
CSUSM Students
students compared to last year's;
approximate 6000. As the stu& Faculty
dent population increases, the
TRANSPARENCIES & PRESENTATION FOLDERS
university also plans to build
several new buildings in the near
Fax Services ~ Shipping Services (UPS, FedEx, etc.)
future. The new Library, Student
Packaging Services - Postal Services - Freight Shipping Services
Union, and On-Campus Housing
Mailbox Services -'Shipping, Packaging, and Moving Supplies
are all expected to open prior to
Office Supplies - Printing Services
Fall 2003. The administration is
SPECIALIZING IN COPY SERVICES, STARTING AT SIX CENTS
also currently working on plans
PER COPY, DOWN TO 3 1/2 CENTS FOR VOLUME (BLACK & WHITE)
for the business building, which
COLOR COPIES ALSO AVAILABLE
will be located behind University Hall, expected to be open by
j
MII 1|M
11M 11
i/I M H H Is. mm
H NmäämmSfSi9aM-5pM ¡¡|||||pps||i| early 2004. President Gonzalez'
m HHRI
Telephone: 76051QM5Q
goal for CSUSM is to be the
"jewel" of this region.
310 S, t win Oaks Valley Rd, Suite 1Ô7 San Marcos, CA 92078
* Located Inside the Ralphs Shopping Center *
�CSUSM
Says
By ALYSSA FINKELSTEIN
Lead Editor
On the afternoon May 23, the
College of Arts and Sciences,
along with the CSUSM Sociology department, hosted a retirement reception and said goodbye
to one of CSUSM's founding faculty, Dr. Therese Baker-Degler.
Goodbye
to
CSUSM, after 25 years of no
new campuses." Since the opening of CSUSM, two new CSU
campuses have been opened, but
both of them, Channel Islands
and Monterey Bay, have been
built by refurbishing prior facilities and buildings, according to
a
Member
of
Its
of 1990, Dr. Baker served as
the first Chair of the Academic
Senate. She recalls, "There were
approximately 30 faculty here at
that point and all of them came to
Senate meetings which were very
When CSUSM first opened testy." When asked to elaborate
its doors to students in the fall about what made the meetings
Rick Moore, CSUSM Director of
Communications. He also said,
"CSU San Marcos is the only
campus to be built in recent years
entirelyfromthe ground up."
According to her campus
homepage, Dr. Baker spent
18 years at .DePaul University
in Chicago before coming to
CSUSM, six of which were spent
as Sociology department chair;
She also worked briefly within
the administration at Stanford
University.
Faculty
unpredictable and highly-strung,
she denied further comment.
Baker said, "I was the only
full time sociologist here until
Bob Roberts joined me in 1992,
but we had a number of terrific
adjunct faculty who joined us
early on so that by the time Bob
Roberts came on board, we were
teaching about 15 Sociology
classes each term."
In the spring of 1992, CSUSM
awarded thefirstof its Sociology
degrees to 13 students. By 1995,
CSUSM had developed its "innovative master's degree program:
Master of,Arts in Sociological
Practice (MASP)," according to
Baker. She said, "This program,
which continues the focus Q
n
social problems, human service
agencies [and]fieldresearch has
been very successful in attracting
students, having students complete the degree, and move on to
relevant careers or in some cases
to Ph.D. programs."
In 1989, Dr. Baker came to
San Marcos to help with the
planning of the new University.
She designed and launched the
Sociology program in the fall of
1990, according to her homepage. Baker said, "I have many
memories of CSUSM in its earliest days. I was very active in faculty governance at both CSUSM
and the Statewide Academic
Senate in the earliest years."
Baker said that she is "very
pleased to have been a part of
[the effort to provide students of
all backgrounds the access to a
Sociology degree]." She added,
"Joining the effort to found
CSUSM, and in particular the
Sociology program at this university, has given me a chance to
make a difference."
As a member of the Statewide
Academic Senate, Baker said
she "learned a lot about the CSU
system, and the other senators
gave me an earful about what
they thought about the CSU
starting a new campus, namely
Cl a s
Founding
Dr. Terry Baker-Degler, Courtesy of her CSUSM Home Page
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�Mammoth T r a i n i n g for Mammoth R e s u l t s
By CHRIS MARTIN and
JESSICA A. KRONE
Pride Staff Writer and Sports
Editor
Cal State San Marcos men's
and women's cross country
teams traveled to Mammoth
Lakes, CA, for a high-altitude
training session from -Aug. 24
through the 31 of this year.
The reason behind this type of
training was to increase the lung
capacity of the runners. In doing
so, they increased their stamina
making it easier for them to
gompete at lower altitudes. "The
thin air and less oxygen forces
the body to produce more red
blood cells, which increases the
oxygen in your blood," senior
Brian Sullivan explained.
th
st
The course length that the
women's team, runs for each
event is five kilometers and the
distance for the men's team, is
eight kilometers. With half of
the women's team, and nearly
half of the men's team being
returning runners, there is no
reason for Cougars fans to think
that this year will be anything
out of the ordinary for this
exemplary program.
Returning runners for the
women's team include seniors
Lanele Cox and Camille
Wilborn; and juniors Katherine
Niblett and Felisha Mariscal;
and sophomores Samantha
Delagardelle and Manal Yamout.
New to the team include, junior
Megan Katlinger a transfer from
U.S. Military Academy at West
Point andfivenew freshman who
include Ann Marie Byrne from
University High School Yolanda
Carillo from Temecula Valley
r
Sullivan Strides
By JESSICA A. KRONE
Sports Editor
Cross Country runner Brian
Sullivan is a 22-year-old senior
majoring in psychology. This
team leader was born in Spain
and has lived in New York,
Virginia, Georgia and Florida.
From the ages of 10 to 14, he
went to school on an American
military base in Rota, Spain.
He tried out for the cross country team at St. Augustine High
School in San Diego. Sullivan
promptly made the varsity team
at his high school during his
freshman year. He never competitively ran before high school;
however he was a natural and it
showed.
How
to
High School, Carissa Marin
from Canyon Springs High
School, Sara Dates, a transfer
from George Fox University in
Oregon and Carey Sperry from
Simi Valley High School.
With these ¡six returning
women and the six new members
that are added to the squad,
making Nationals, which is the
goal of the team according to
Coach Steve Scott, will be no
easy chore. This would be due
to the fact that the team will be
running in what is thought of as
a very competitive and talented
region. Last year's team did not
qualify for Nationals, but in 2000
theyfinished2 0 overall. Hopes
are highfora return to glory.
in the nation within the preseason National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA)
polls. "We have a good shot at
being top five and could even
win the National Championship,"
said Sullivan.
The men's team has seven
returning members who include
seniors, Kris Houghton, Robby
McClendon, Brian Sullivan and
Omar 'Zavala; and juniors Mike
Shannon and Justin Lessel.
Sophomore Rene Reyes rounds
out the returning lettermen. Ten
new team members have joined
which include, Jesse Armijo,
a junior who transferred from
Saddleback College; Tony
Herr, a sophomore transfer
from California Baptist
University; Andrew Lewis, a
On the other hand, the men's sophomore transfer from Alliant
team has been ranked ninth International University; Marco
th
He enjoys running to areas
that have beautiful sights.
Sometimes, he will run to the
top of a mountain just to witness
the setting sun. Other times, he
will get up really early in the
morning in order to run along
the beach and watch the sunrise. Running allows Sullivan
to think. " Running is a mental
escape from reality, no matter
what is going on," he said.
fdk
favorite thing to do in his spare
time is to have fun with friends
in Pacific Beach. He works at
. a shoe store called "Running
Center." He is also a private
tutor in all subjects for two
junior high school students, with
whom he has developed a great
relationship.
Alvarado, a freshman from
Don Bosco Technical Institute;
Wes Bryant, a freshman from
Upland High School; Kevin
Knight, a freshman from Arroyo
Grande High School; Richie
Gray, another freshman from
Upland High School; Apolinar
and Eduardo Mariscal, two
freshmen twin brothers from
Chula Vista High School; and
Matt McCarron, a freshman
from Terra Nova High School.
With the experience of the
returning runners and some new
talent, this season promises to
be both exciting and successful
for the men's team. "I feel really
strong about this season, we
have a big group of guys with
real talent. If we stay together
and focused we will succeed,"
Sullivan insisted.
Brian realizes that his cross
country career will not last forever. " I just want to qualify for
the Olympic trials in 2004 then
get on with my life. Running will
always be part of my life and I
will never give it up," Sullivan
explained.
In the future, he would like
to possibly pursue a career in
abnormal psychology and is
keeping his options open for any
According to Sullivan, his career that might interest him.
to
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�MBA from page 1
that mixing state and non-state
money isn't done, "you keep
those pots of money separate".
Apparently the college of
business and extended studies
developed the hybrid in order for
the university to be able to offer
a competitive MBA program,
as competition for graduate
students in MBA programs has
increased because ofnon-accredited programs and the Internet.
And while some students have
expressed their concern that
the program problems might
devalue their degree, Gonzalez
has assured both students and
the business community that
"the quality of the program was
not affected." Since May 2002,
the MBA program is running on
state money only.
Gonzalez explained that those
involved in starting up the MBA
program, one of whom was Dr.
Bill Stacy who was president of
the university at the time, were
"entrepreneurial" and "creative"
and focused on trying to get an
MBA program established. The
report claims that the program
problems were worsened by the
high turnover in its administration and faculty. In the last 10
years, the college of business
has sustained a loss of "at least
10 faculty members", and there
have also been eight permanent
and acting deans.
President Gonzalez assured
the media during a press conference in July, that "there was
not any fraud involved" and the
procedures and practices causing the problems have been corrected. The chancellor's office
report did not name names and
Gonzalez has suggested that the
people who may responsible are
no longer with the university.
Former program director George
Diehr said that from the beginning the auditors seemed focused
on reaching conclusions that supported President Gonzalez.
and act on the recommendations made in the report, and to
determine if the problems in the
program were caused by "errors
in judgment" or if anything
illegal or unethical was done
and by whom. The committee
was expected to present their
recommendations and findings
to Gonzalez within 60 days.
The following CSUSM staff and
faculty members make up the
committee: Chair Marion Reid,
Jackie Borin, Silverio Haro, G.
H. "Bud" Morris, Norm Nicholson, Sandra Punch, Miriam
Schustack, Laurie Stowell, and
Rich Vanderhoff.
George Diehr, former director
of the MBA program from 1995
to 1999, and current head of the The CFA has questioned the
campus chapter of California effectiveness of a committee in
Faculty Association (CFA), which a few of its members rely
insists there has been no misuse on Gonzalez for budget approvof funds and all the "expendi- als, promotions and pay raises.
tures and activities in question Lillian Taiz, CFA vice presihad top CSUSM administrative dent, believes the committee
approval." However, the report should be mtfde up of "outside
claims, "necessary presiden- experts" rather than a committial approvals were not always tee that "is stacked with people
properly obtained" and that the who are close to the president."
program's money was handled in The CFA is concerned that an
a way that benefited faculty and internal committee will absolve
administrators. Diehr and Jack high-level administrators of any
Leu, a former program director responsibility for the problems in
from 1999 to 2001, are adamant the program.
in their claim that neither faculty
nor administrators at the business According to the North
school made money as a result of County Times, in a letter Taiz
the blending of the programs and recently wrote to Gonzalez, she
funds. Diehr pronounces these claims that the charges made
charges "reprehensible."
by the chancellors office will be
shown to be "simply fabrications
As a result of the audit, Presi- designed to destroy the reputadent Gonzalez has organized a tions and careers of respected"
committee to investigate charges teachers. Taiz also wrote "the
creation of this in-house com- within this article.]
mittee puts [Gonzalez] out of [The San Diego Daily Transcript,
sync with the public's demand
San iego U
for openness. At its worst, your tthe NorthDCounty nion Tribune and
he
imes contributed
reluctance to establish an inde- to this article. In Tddition, informaa
pendent investigation suggests tion used here was taken from the
you have something to hide."
1999 and 2002 audit.
Special thanks to San Diego[The pride will continue its cover- Union Tribune reporter Lisa
age of the CoBA MBA investigation Petrillo for her cooperation.]
in future articles.]
[The 1999 statewide audit and
the 2002 chancellors audit can be
viewed by visiting www.csusm.edu/
pride and clicking on the audit links
^ XLUB SPOR
mm,
TIME: 12:00 PM
PLACE: FouiÉerlWaia
DATE: S p ^ l o i l l
1. CAL STATE STUDENT
2. PARTICIPATION FEE
3. PROOF OF INSURANCE
Contact Information: koon002@csusm.edu
cgaHego@csusm.edu
S ign u p e arly f or
C al S tate S an M arcos
S urf T eam T ryouts!
Date: Saturday, September 28, 2 002
Time: 8:00 a.m.
Location: North Ponto
(north end of Carlsbad campgrounds)
Cost: $ 10.00 early sign up fee or
$ 15.00 s ign up fee at the beach
Contact Valerie Cuevas at ASI for entry form
*
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This v<-<\ ispmkd
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Eseondido/Del Norte - 326-C W. EI Norte Pkwy.
San Marcos - 295 S. Rancho Sante Fe Rd.
�W alking: Is It R eally So H ard?
By KURT B.MAYER
Pride Staff Writer
Why is it so hard for everyone
to walk around campus? It is
true that there is a parking situation underway at this university,
and that there is such an abundance of vehicles that the main
entryway is lined with cars from
end to end. In this congested
state it would seem logical to
simply park wherever there was
the least amount of confusion
and the most available space,
even if it was a further walk.
Yet this does not seem to be
the case..
Like many students, I myself
have fallen prey to the "vultures"
which scavenge our parking
lots looking for the closest possible space. The feeling of being
stalked is quite clear when it
happens. An ominous presence overcomes you, like you
are being watched. You slowly
turn your head and see a blue
Honda civic trailing you, pacing
you. You can try to dodge the
scavenger by cutting through
Indeed, the campus has
needlessly delayed in constructing an accommodating
parking facility for both students and staff, thus allowing the vultures to multiply
and run rampant through our
parking lots.
Perhaps the funding is
simply not yet present for
a five, level garage. Yet the
campus still decides not to
blacktop one of the neaiby
vacant fields, if only for an
immediate-term solution.
I have paid my $62 dollars for
a parking permit Yet to spite thè
game and avoid the vultures, I
proudly display my red token
ASI and its Rules
Recently, ASI asked one of the
student representatives elected
last spring to resign.
Evidently, she did not attend
a "mandatory" ASI retreat over
the summer because of family
obligations that required her to
leave California.
I understand the reason for the
retreat was to provide the new
officers with information they
will need as student representatives.
I believe, however, the ASI is
not acting in the student body's
best interest when it adheres to
average, I find it takes less time
to hike the distance than to hunt
for a parking space. Despite
-this simple reasoning, as I hike
up Craven Road I see countless
others foolishly wandering into
the vultures' lair, and I shake my
head in bewilderment.
Once again, I ask you: why
is it so hard to walk? Walking
is good exercise! In addition to
doing two hundred repetitions
on the- built-in California State
University Stair Master, the
extra twenty to forty pounds of
books each student carries offers
a slightly more extensive workout — and that's great for your
heart and lungs! Plus, we have
more time to talk on our cellular
phones and bask in the warm
September sun.
to the next aisle where your
car is really parked, but the
scavenger will quickly circle
around the bend and be there,
waiting for you. Only when
you reach the safety of your
car and vacate your parking
space with immediacy will the
vulture back off — slightly.
The instant you are clear the
vulture dives in and seizes the
precious parking space.
rigid
rules instead of applying
common sense when conducting
business.
Although she ran for a relatively minor position, the student
in question received more votes
than any other candidate did. If
she resigns, her post will remain
vacant until it can befilledby an
appointee.
In other words, someone who
did not run for office can replace
someone elected by the students,
although neither attended the
retreat. Where is the logic in that
kind of thinking?
from the parking lot of the "P"
building on the far western edge
of Twin Oaks Valley Road. I
then proceed to hike up the
And whose rule is this mandatory retreat anyway? If ASI made
the rules, then our elected leaders
can certainly make exceptions.
If the school is making the
retreat mandatory, then I believe
a serious conflict of interest may
be occurring.
Try to follow
my logic on
this point.
Raise your $62 dollar parking permits high, and climb the
Cartoon by Desmond Barca university mountaintop. (Just be
sure to watch out for the preying vultures.) Many of thé most
mountainside and two hundred intelligent individuals I have
odd steps to whatever third floor e
t
classroom I must presently be uver met work and study naottthis
niversity. Certainly it is oo
attending. I do not mind. On hard for us to walk.
university counterparts.
If the school foots the bill
for the retreat, that would place
the administration in a position
of paying our student government leaders to act in a certain
manner. The ASI would then
lose its autonomy to
the university that
places restrictions
on who can run for a
student government office.
LETTERS
The school tells the students
running for office that if elected
they must attend a mandatory
retreat. The retreat indoctrinates
the students on how the school
operates so that the student
leaders can interface with their
the student could have served in
her position without attending
the retreat. She and the people
who voted for her deserve better.
I would appreciate a response
from the ASI on this point.
Steve Compian
Graduate Student
The student, the top vote getter
in last spring's election, would
lose her elected position to a
flawed system. Had she not run
for office and simply applied for
an appointment tofilla vacancy,
The Pride
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 is the policy of The Pride not to print
Lead Editor
Alyssa Finkelstein
anonymous letters*
Lead Editor
Martha Sarabia
Display and classified advertising in The Pride should not be construed as
Design Editor
Desmond Barca
the endorsement or investigation of commercial enterprises or ventures. The
News Editor
Pride reserves therightto reject any advertising.
.
Opinion Editer
The Pride is published weekly on Tuesdays during the academic year. DisSpanish Editor
Martha Sarabia
tribution includes all of CSUSM campus, local eateries and other San Marcos
Feature Editor
community establishments,
Arts Editor
Sports Editor
Jessica Krone
The Pride
Graduate Intern
Leiana Naholowaa
Cal State San Marcos
Business Manager Alyssa Ftttkelstein
333 Twm Oaks Valley Road
A dvi m
Madeleine Marshall
San Marcos, CA/92Ö96-0001
V }; '
,
Phone: (760) 750^6099
j
All opinions and letters to the editor, published in The Pride represent E-mail: pride@c$usm.edu
the opinions of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views of The htt(i://www csttsm*edii/pride
Pride, or of California State University San Marcos, Unsigned editorials represent the majorilyopimon of The Pride editorial board.
Letters to the editop should include an address, telephone number, e-mail
;
A
�F eminine Composure
By KENDRA GOODALL
Pride Staff Writer
Though I am not involved
in any clubs or extracurricular
k activities, I would like to
\
get to know more of my
fellow CSU students
S f c ^ J ^ ^ V beyond the class^
room. In fact
V
V
last
\
JMSLjustmonth
Aj ^roiOK. I
\X
V\ \ j
«k
m id
f
^S^W^ 3
^/MPI
wf
m
was
m
discussing
this subject
* with my friend,
who graduated from
SDSU three years ago. We both
meet plenty of guys, and girls for
that matter, when we go out. Yet
we never really met many people
at college.
After reading Eric's article
Male Angst I realize we are not
the only ones who wonder why.
My friend, Nicole and I are both
fit blondes and don't have any
problems picking up on guys
if it is necessary, but actually
it has never come to that. Even
though it is 2002, girls still like
it when guys make the first
move.
Now that doesn't mean
using some lame pick-up
line on the girl sitting next
to you in class, college girls
are too smart to fall for that.
Since the guys at CSU
i are also very intelligent
why not use your brains
to strike up an interesting
conversation.
Though the idea of a party
always appeals to me, in fact
love to throw them. But
every time I do throw a party
it requires some investing for
drinks and appetizers and if you
invite people that you don't know
then you have to make sure that
there is someone big enough to
throw anyone out who causes a
fight.
Plus you have to make sure
that no valuables are left out in
case a thief happens to get word
of the party, and we haven't even
But she did
something that
most people at CSU
rarely attempt; she
sat at my empty
table and started up
a conversation.
gotten to the idea of thé police
coming.
Because even though I like to
give mankind the benefit of the
doubt that these things won't
happen I would be ignorant
to believe that the possibility
isn't out there. Anyone who has
thrown more than one party of
100 people or more knows what
I am talking about.
Now don't jump to conclusions
here, I am not against anything
that
Eric said I am here to give
suggestions from a single girl's
perspective. In fact I would like
this to continue on to a weekly
column. But it doesn't have to be
for just single people. I think that
the whole school could use some
help on getting to know each
other better.
For those 21 and up, there are
great clubs that host 'college
night' in which anyone with a
student ID gets a discount on
drinks. For those under 21, we
could have a weekly posting of
the best movies out and plan a
CSU night starting at a local
restaurant and ending at the
theatre.
Yet the best way to meet people
from CSU is at the cafeteria,
even though I have never formed
a relationship with anyone there,
In fact the only person who actually suggested going out was
a girl from Greenpeace, who
didn't even go to college. She
didn't 'pick-up' on me because
I'm really only attracted to men.
But she did something that
most people at CSU rarely
attempt; she sat at my empty
table and started up a conversation.
Luckily we had common interests. So she invited me to meet
her friends at á club downtown
that weekend She even wrote
down the directions and time
they were going. If a guy were
to make the same effort I would
have been even more willing to
go. Yet there are two key things
that guys should remember when
taking such an approach,
First, it is good to find a
common interest and keep a
conversation going for a little
while, or wait until after you
have met up with the girl more
than once before asking her out.
Second, girls feel more comfortable in groups, or if they are at
least given the option to bring
a friend. So ask her and her
friends to meet up with you and
your friends! Anyhow the first
step begins with you; yes you,
whoever you are. If you want to
meet more people you have to
approach them with some wit
or topic of conversation beyond,
"hey babe, you want to go to a
party with me". Believe it or not
most of us girls have heard that
line before,
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�Cal State San Marcos Student Missing
By MARTHA SARABIA
Lead Editor
CSUSM student, Alex Ryan
Zíngaro, has been missing since
Sept. 4fromhis Carlsbad home.
His roommate was the last one to
see him last Wed. at 10:00 a.m.
at their apartment.
A junior majoring in communication and a snowboarder,
Zíngaro was scheduled to attend
CSUSM classes on Wed. but
never showed up. In addition,
he never went to work at Tony
Roma's restaurant in San Marcos
to what would have been his
second day on the job.
Before disappearing, Zingaro
called his employer to let him
know that he would be late
because he needed to come to
CSUSM. He said that he needed
to make some arrangements for
a class. "He called and said he
was going to crash a class and
he was running late," said one of
Zingaro's co-workers.
Although Zingaro has not
been seen since last Wednesday,
his belongings, which include
schoolbooks, clothes, and his
surfboard, are still in his apartment.
Both of his parents have said
that he is not the kind of person
to disappear without calling and
that he kept in close touch with
them as well as with his younger
brother. However, the police
do not think there is anything
unusual about his disappearance,
other than that he has turned up
missing. There is no suspicion of
foul play.
starting classes. His father has
said that there has not been any
activity in his bank account
since he disappeared. Family
andfriendshave also said that
he is a responsible person and
has not been known to use drugs.
They have also handed out many
flyers about Zingaro's disappearance to the community.
The police are asking those
who have information regarding
Zangaro and/or his car whereZingaro is 22 years old, 5
abouts to call (760) 931-2197.
Zingaro's mother said to have feet 11 inches tall, and weights
talked to him a week ago. "I
175-180 pounds. He has wavy
[The San Diego Union-Trihave no idea what could have brown hair with blond tips and bune and the North County
happened to him," she said. She blue-green eyes. He is suspected Times contributed to this article.]
also added that he was excited of driving his blue 1989 Mazda
about his new job and about
pickup, California license plate
• ^ ^ I P ^ • IMBl
i
5U57091, with a camper shell,
because it is also missing.
He was living in Lake Tahoe
where he was attending a community college before coming to
Carlsbad in May.
s
s
i
n
c
i
Disappeared Without a Ttace!!!
P lease H elp U s F ind
ALEX ZINGARO
SBMIejMUgj
weed Your
i Help!
•OS/Blu
H
M azda P ick-Up w / B lue >
ü
p
^
Calif. State San Marcos Student
Last seen Wednesday morning, Sept. 4, in Carlsbad
(near Ei Camino .Real & Carlsbad Village Road)
If you h ave a ny i nformation
p lease c all t he C arlsbad P olice Dept.
760-931-2197
7 60-518-5805 or 9 49-770-5242
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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<h2>2002-2003</h2>
Contributor
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University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Description
An account of the resource
The thirteenth academic year of California State University San Marcos.
Sort Key PR
Original Format
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newspaper 11 x 17
The Pride
Yes
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The Pride
September 10, 2002
Subject
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student newspaper
Description
An account of the resource
The Pride's Vol. 10x, No. 2 edition highlights the grand opening of the new Arts and Science buildings, a Q&A on Islam, and irregularities with the CSUSM MBA program. (Note: This year was misidentified as Vol. 10 It should have been numbered Vol. 11, it has been entered as Vol. 10x to make the distinction between the volumes clear.)
Creator
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The Pride
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University Archives, California State University San Marcos, Kellogg Library
Publisher
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University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Date
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2002-09-10
Contributor
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Lezlie Lee-French, Library Archives Support
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The information available on this site, including any text, computer codes, data, artwork, video, audio, images or graphics (collectively the "Material") are protected by copyright and other intellectual property laws. Parties other than California State University San Marcos (”CSUSM”) may own copyright in the Material. We encourage the use of this Material for non-profit and educational purposes only, such as personal research, teaching and private study. For these limited purposes, Material from this web site may be displayed and printed, and all copies must include any copyright notice originally included with the Material. Additionally, a credit line must be included with each item used, citing the article or review author, title or article or review, title of the database, sponsoring agency, date of your access to the electronic file, and the electronic address. Copyright 2015, California State University San Marcos
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PDF
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English
Type
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Text
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newspaper 11 x 17
Arts
donation
Islam
Jean and W. Keith Kellogg II
MBA
Science Hall
The Dome