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Wednesday, March 3 , 1 99 3
A studjgf ^ %
^ -^^Mjniversity , San Marcos
Volume 3 , Number IO
Yet another rainstorm hit San Diego County
closing Cai State San Marcos
�Pioneer
Major fee increase coming soon
The cost for a university education will increase by $4500 next fall
Wednesday, March 3 ,199 3
Volume 3, Number 10
Sankofa keeps
drum beating
Campus music group beats to the
sound of a different drum.
Kleidoscope/ 8
To tell the truth
One thing that canraise a journalist's
ire is the action of another person to
judge what is and is not newsworthy.
A recent campus event fits this scenario to a tee.
Voice/ 6
Lend an ear to
Tenor'
"Lend Me a Tenor* is currently on
stage at the Moonlight Amphitheatre
in Vista.
Freestyle/ 11
NEWS
CALENDAR.....
YOUR VIEWS
CLUB BEAT...
FREESTYLE
.
PAGE 2
PAGE 4
PAGE 7
PAGE 9
PAGE 10
Onthe covers Renownedjazzguitarist
Peter Sprague, who will Be performing at CSUSM on March 5 .
KATHY C MBS/CONTRIBUTING WRITER
O
returning to CSU are displaced workers
moving to another career.
People with degrees are t h e "best
equipped to make the change to a new
profession," h e said. "These students will
be penalized by 'double dipping' tuition."
The increase comes on the heels of a
$50 per unit increase already in place at
California Community Colleges. Officials
at Palomar College reported a 53 percent
drop in the number of college graduates
enrolled this spring.
College graduates have become the latest target for fee hikes at California State
Universities with an increase that could
shoot as high as $4,500.
Beginning this fall, graduates who have
a bachelor's degree will be required to pay
a "differential fee," $150 more per unit
than non-graduates. The fee would be
added to CSU's standard $1,300 annual
fee.
T h e additional fee is detrimental t o .
According to Stacy, the real pinch will
California," warned President Dr. Bill
be felt by students planning to become
Stacy. "It's not good public policy."
Stacy added that many of the students teachers and nurses. This adds to the
impact forecasted by a report called "Economic Impact of the CSU on the California
Economy," written by Robert Girling of
Sonoma State University, Sherry Keith of
San Francisco State University and George
Goldman at the University of California,
Berkeley.
The report suggests that budget cuts
will result in a 7 percent to 12 percent
decrease in thé number of degrees granted
each year by t h e 20 CSU campuses for the
next nine years. Teaching is likely to
suffer because CSU trains nearly 75 percent of California's public school teachers,
the report said.
Stacy closes campus after power outage
ROMAN S. K E /EDITOR-1N-CHIEF
O NIG
Cal State University San Marcos President Dr. Bill Stacy shut down the campus
Feb. 18 after yet another major storm
pummeled the county, leaving the campus
without power.
According to Stacy, San Diego Gas &
Electric crews were called to the area after
a power outage along Barham Drive cut
electricity to the university.
Stacy said that despite the inconvenience of the outage, it gave the university
the opportunity to test its back-up electricity generator.
"We have an emergency generator and
back-up power on campus, and it was t h e
first time we had occasion to turn it o n —
and it failed," said Stacy.
Stacy said h e was told that power would
not be restored forfiveor six hours after
SDG&E crews made it to the scene, so h e
cancelled classes for the day since many
rooms without windows and rooms with
computers could not be used. He said that
in hindsight, however, this was a mistake.
He said "the president's inexperience
with the power going off in California" led
to thedecisiontoclosethecampus, "which
was a big mistake to do."
Stacy explained that power was restored
considerably earlier than the original time
estimate, and late afternoon and evening
classes could have been held.
He said that one professor who was at a
conference during die day in Los Angeles
rushed back down in driving rain to meet
her class only to find the campus closed.
"They told u s it would be two to three
ROMAN S. KOENIG/PIONEER
A Cal State San Marcos professor runs through a downpour (right) as a security guard keeps watch in front
of the Science Hall after the campus was closed due to a power outage Feb. 18. The loss of power was
caused by damagefromrecent heavy storms.
hours before they could examine theproblem, and another five or six hours to repair. Well, they were able to repair itwithin
two hours," said Stacy.
T h e president said that although closing the campus may not have been the
best idea, it was necessary for safety since
it was impossible to work in the darkened
conditions.
Stacy also indicated thattheeventcalled
attention to having a ôet plan for similar
situations in the future.
"Now looking at it, I'm sorry we didn't
have a system to coordinate (closing) and
opening (the campus)," h e said.
Major rains also caused flooding last
Friday on the first floor of Craven Hall,
leaving approximately two inches of water
in some offices and in t h e Student Health
Services center, an official with the center
said.
Workers at t h e scene cleaning up the
flooded offices refused comment on the
situation, and officials with the Facilities
department could not be reached for
comment as to t h e flood's cause.
�wkaú/\¡ews
WASC accreditation team coming to campus
T h e campus community is asked to mark its calendars for
t h e upcoming accreditation visit by a review board which will
determine if Cal State San Marcos will be an accredited university,
said Diane (Johnson) Martin, assistant vice president for
academic affairs.
The accreditation site visit by the Western Association of
Schools and Colleges (WASC) will take place March 23-26, she
said.
Students are encouraged to take part in the accreditation
process by reviewing CSUSM's self-study, a document outlining
the university's goals for its accreditation, said Martin. Copies
of the document are available in the Associated Students office
or on reserve in the library, she said.
"The purpose of accreditation is that (it) establishes
standards for universities... to further educational excellence,"
said Martin. aAnd then what happens is that each institution is
responsible for defining its own characteristics for excellence."
The university is then reviewed to see if it is meeting those
goals. Accreditation is then decided by the visiting committee
from WASC.
She said students are also involved in the process, as the
WASC officials interview members of the campus community
to help determine their decision. According to Martin,
interviewers will talk with a representative sample of the campus
(i.e. students, staff, administration and faculty) and ask questions
related to the self-study.
The WASC officials then write up their report determining
if the university is worthy of accreditation. Martin said that by
reading and understanding the university's self-study, students
can help meet the goals presented in the document.
Additional information can be obtained by calling Martin at
752-4052 or Nancy Curry at 752-4129, Martin said.
Associated Students elections announced
Elections for Associated Student Council positions for the
1993-94 academic year will be held the last week of April, it was
announced last week.
Exact dates and times of the elections will be announced
later.
Students interested in running for open council seats or
serving on the elections committee can stop by the A.S. office,
room 205 in the Commons Building, for candidacy applications
and information.
Careers and controversy
Inaugural career fair successful; student protests
military recruiters' presence on campus
ROMAN S. KOENIG
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
While Career Cento* Director
Sandy Punch hailed last week's
inaugural career fair as a success, one student protested the
presence of military recruiters at
the event
a
I was protesting the presence
of (military) recruiting officers
because (they have) institutionalized sexism, homophobia" and
have refused the full inclusion of
women and homosexuals in the
a rme d f orces , said s tuden t
Donald Scott, a homosexual who
formerly served in the military.
Scott said that h e was also
opposed to having the FBI at the
fair, since h e alleged that they,
too, are sexist and homophobic,
as well as the Border Patrol.
"I feel that (having) these institutions on campus is a violation of Cal State San Marcos'
Mission S tatement ,
and
(CSUSM) president Dr. (Bill)
Stacy and t h e administration
- should apologize for this action."
Although, Stacy and Executive Vice President Dr. Ernest
Zomalt were unavailable for comment on the issue, Punch said
Scott has just as much right to
SEE FA /PAGE 4
IR
Athletics program may be field
of dreams for the near future
KATHY COMBS/
Pioneer direct phone lines now in service
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Direct phone lines to Pioneer's office are now available.
Voice mail response will be available later this week. For the
editorial desk, the phone number is 752-4998. Advertising can
be reached at 752-4999.
Unless private donors go to
bat for the athletics program, inter-collegiate sports won't be in
line for a solid kick-off for at least
three more years at Cal State San
Marcos.
Although intramural sports
will continue to grow over the
next few years, funding for an
inter-collegiate athletics program
will not be reconsidered until
1997, the same year it was scheduled to come on-line. Fundingfor
the program has been placed on
hold to make way for higher priorities such as the library, the
Arts and Humanities building and
the Science building. Also on the
drawing board is the Physical
Education building which ac-
Art exhibit celebrates Women's History
Committee W (CSU San Marcos' chapter of the Women's
Council of the State University) is sponsoring a women's art
exhibit through tomorrow. Times arefrom10 a.m. to 4 p.m,The
presentation can be found in the conference room across from
t h e Associated Students office.
Send us your news
Pioneer is looking for news submissions from campus
organizations, whether they be student-oriented or general.
Drop releases by Pioneer's new office, room 14-208, in the
Academic Hall, or call 752-4998.
MICHAEL BAG AD/ PIO E
ST
NE R
Cal State San Marcos student and former military serviceman Donald Scott protests
the military's ban on gays outside the Commons Building during last week's career fair.
cording to PresidentDr. Bill Stacy
has been targeted for completion
by 1998.
T h e first effort is to get the
facilities on campus," he said.
"The second concern is inter-collegiate sports and that will require private fundraising."
The college will look to private
sources to help fund the program
and to develop playing fields,
which in the initial stages would
be used for intramural sports. The
state will foot the bill for the land
for thefields,however Stacy said.
this is where the state's commitment stops.
In the meantime, faculty teams
will concentrate on defining the
curriculum for Physical Education majors. Planning is still in
the early stages, but when the
P.E. department comes on-line it
will be on the cutting edge of 21st
century technology, says Dr. Richard Millman, vice president of
academic affairs.
T her e are two ways to build a
P.E. department," h e said. T her e
will be no activity to train coaches
or to teach someone to play volleyball." Instead, CSUSM will
offer a "scientifically based physical education."
That scientific base will include
requiring students to become
knowledgeable in biology, chemistry, anatomy and the science of
motion. In addition to housing
classrooms for a wide range of
majors and a computer lab, the
P.E. building will also be a center
for fitness and recreation, Stacy
said.
�PIONEER / WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3 ,199 3
P lan s a r e c urrentl y in t h e
works t hi s m ont h f o r a b ab y
clothes and materials drive for
women and men who a r e facing a
crisis pregnancy.
I nter-Clu b C ouncil : M eet s
every other Friday a t 2 p.m. Call
the Associated Students office at
7524990 for addtional information.
B usines s M anagemen t Association : A Happy Hour will b e
held tomorrow at4:30p.m.. a t t h e
Long Shot. Other events planned
for March: d essert/coffe e seminar and business hour. Dates will
be posted at a later date. For additional information, call t h e Associated Students office at7524990.
A LSO : T h e A lternativ e
Lifestyles Support Organization
will b e meeting t h e third week in
March. F lyer s will b e p oste d
around campus. Call743-6292 for
additional information.
A igonau t S ociet y ( Histor y
C lub) : Dr. Gunderson will b e
speaking on "Women: T h e Hidden Story" on March 9 from 11
a.m. to 12 p.m. in room ACD 306.
C ampu s F riend s of N OW :
Movie"HighTide," starring Judy
Davis, and discussion led by D r .
Renee Curry, tentatively scheduled f o r T hursda y or Friday,
March 11 or 12 a t 6:30 p.m.
C hes s C hib : T h e Chess Club
Collegians f o r Life: Meetings plays c hes s every Monday at 6
e ver y o the r W ednesda y a n d p.m. with a tournament t h e last
Thursday of t h e month in room Monday of every month. Students
ACD 410.
a r e invited to come play or learn.
March 10 from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30
p.m.
• "Study Skills & Intro to Computer-assisted Study Skills InA dul t C hildre n of D ysfunc - struction." Seminar meets Montional F amilie s s uppor t g roup : day, March 1 from 3 p.m. to 4
"The feeling of being valuable i s a p.m„ and Thursday, March 11
cornerstone of self-discipline, be- from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m.
cause whe n one considers one•"Prevention & Intervention
self valuable one will take .care of f o r Sexual Assault." Seminar
oneself in all ways necessary." meets Thursday, March 25 at 12
( ScottPeck,Th e Road LessTrav- p.m.
eled)
• "Tes t Anxiety Reduction."
S uppor t
g rou p
m eet s Seminar,meets Tuesday, March
Wednesdays from 4:30 p.m. to 6 9 at 10:30 a.m.
p.m. a t t h e Student Resource
•"Single Parenting Network
Center, room5205in Craven Hall. M eeting, " o ffere d T uesday ,
March 15 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.
WIN ( Women' s I nformatio n
•"Creating t h e Healthy FamN etwork ) W orkshops : Work- ily," athree-segmentpresentation
shop s open to all students and offered through April, will hold
staff. Meetings located in t h e re- segment two: "The Compulsive
source room of t h e Student Re- Family" on March 4 from 3 p.m.
source Center, room 5205 in Cra- to 4:30 p.m. in t h e resource room
ven Hall from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 on t h e fifth floor of Craven Hall.
p.m.
T h e meeting deals with incorrect
• "Stres s Management,* of- beliefs about t h e self and comfere d T uesday , M arc h 2 a n d pulsive behavior, t h e core of all
addictions. Also in segment two:
Wednesday, March 10.
•Avoiding t h e "Superwoman "The Persecuted," to b e held
S yndrom, " o ffere d T uesday , March ll.Thispresentation deals
March 16and Wednesday, March with incest and violence in t h e
family.
24.
Student
Resource Center
S tuden t Life P rogam s f o r
C a l S tat e M en : All programs
held from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. in
t h e r esourc e room at t h e Student
Resource Center, room 5205 in
Craven Hall.
• T o r DivorcedFathers Only,"
child support and other complicated matters. Tuesday, March
9.
• a A mid-semester stress progra m for m e n who a r e somehow
fitting school into their impossibly hectic lives," offered Tuesday, March 23.
Counseling
& Psychological
Services
1 9 9 3 spring semester
s eminars : all meetings located
in t h e Resource Room, on t h e
fifth floor of Craven Hall.
• "Persona l Safety & Assault
P revention. " S emina r m eet s
Wednesday, March 9 from 3:30
p.m. t o 4:30 p.m.
• "Stres s
M anagement. "
S emina r m eet s W ednesday ,
C
ampus clubs
FE
RE
PregnancyT t
es
Confidential Counseling
Medical Assistance
Financial Aid References
H our s
M-F
930-330 pm
T ue * Ac T hurs .
6:00*9:00 p m
— ALL SERVICES ARE FREE —
S nMrco, C 92069
a asA
744-1313
a.m. to 12 p.m.
"Job Search Strategies," meets
Friday, April 23 from 10 a.m. to 11
a.m.
Writing Center
T h e Writing Center is located
in r oo m ACD 403 (the first hallway n eares t t h e elevator). Tutoring is available on a walk-in basis.
T h e c ente r is open Mondays from
8 a m . to 4:30 p.m., Tuesday s from
9 a.m.to7p.m.,Wednesdaysfro m
8 a m . to 7 p.m., T hursday s from
8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Fridays
from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
TU Sprit oftC&tState cfa* f it woe
Pionee r
Career Center
S prin g s chedul e of w ork shop s a n d e vents : All workshop s a r e held in t h e C aree r
Center, Craven Hall room 4201,
"unless noted otherwise. Call 7524900 for additional information.
" Graduat e S chool, " m eet s
Friday, March 5 from 9 a m . to
11:30 a.m. and Friday, April 16
from 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
"Resumé Writing," m eet s Friday, April 23 from 9 a.m. to 10
a.m.
"Effective Interviewing," also
m eet s Friday, April 23 from 11
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C ircl e K C lub : Meetings every Monday at 5 p.m. in Craven
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E conomic s Clyb: M eet s every day at 11:45 a.m. by t h e fire
plug between t h e buildings.
SALT S ociety : ( Student s
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prayer groups and devotionals
Mondays from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m.,
room ACD 315 and T hursday s
from 1:15 p.m. to 2:15 p.m.
SCTA: (Southern California
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NE R
Patrons of the Dome Café have some changes in store for the establishment including an assortment of health foods.
Additions on the way for café and store
SHAUNA OENNING/
STUDENT WRITER
As a new school, California
State University, San Marcos can
expect many changes to come.
One in particular is the addition
of a wide variety of healthful
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choose from in t h e Dome Café.
Currently, students can find
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or at the University Store, which
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3
free speech as the military recruiters do in looking for new
members.
"We looked at that issue early
on," said Punch. "What we (including Zomalt) looked at was
discrimination against homosexuals and as (the military, FBI,
etc.) are government agencies as
we are a government agency, we
cannot prohibit their freedom of
speech" justthe same as students
can exhibit theirs in their interes t
Punch said that since President Clinton h a s made some
changes in terms of recruitment
practices concerning the issue,
the situation has been helped as
well.
Meeker, who manages the University Store (both are part of
Aztec Shops), say they are aware
of the problems facing students
when it comes to food on campus:first,the lack of variety and /
or healthfulfoodsatboth thecafé
and bookstore, and secondly, the
fact that the café closes at 2 p.m.,
leaving afternoon and evening
students with insufficient food
availability.
T ogether , M arten s and
Meeker are planning to offer a
greater variety of foods to better
fit the needs of morning, afternoon and evening students.
Until the student population
increases and the café can afford
a larger workforce, it will con-
tinue to close a t 2 p.m., according
to Martens. Instead, she plans to
improve the variety of food offered in the Dome Café. Plans
include the opening of a taco bar
offering tacos sold by the ounce,
a pasta bar and perhaps a french
toast and p ancak e b reakfas t
available between 8 a m . and 10
a.m.
For the health-minded, products by Naked Food will be offered.These include Naked Juice
fruit and vegetable concoctions
a s well as a variety of Nutrimental
fruit and vegetable salads. In addition to the snacks already offered at the café, Martens said
She also said that Scottwanted
to interrupt the actual fair going
on in the Dome, but was asked to
p rotes t outside t h e building,
which he did.
"I understand Donald Scott's
position," she said. "And while he
h a s t h e r igh t to f reedo m of
speech, so do the employers."
D espit e t h e c ontroversy ,
Punch said that the inaugural
career fair was a success.
"The employer reactions were
extremely favorable," she said,
adding that the employers in attendance were given evaluation,
forms that showed the enthusiastic response. Punch also added
thatstudentevaluations were also
very favorable.
She said t ha t e mployer s
pointed outthataccommodations
for them were excellent and that
the caliber of students was very
high.
Student evaluations showed
t ha t t hey , too, w er e overall
pleased but would have liked
more recruiters, she said.
According to Punch, some
employers who planned to attend
the fair pulled out at t h e last
minute because of hiring freezes
andfinancial constraints. Shealso
said three applicationswere made
with the Peace Corps during the
event
With the success of this first
fair, Punch said she is now looking to next fall's career fair. She
said the morning segment will
consist of recruiters from businesses and the afternoon fair will
focus on graduate schools.
"If we. have a good response
from recruiters now, it will build
a foundations for future fairs,"
she said.
SEE F O /PAGE 12
OD
�Pioneer
Respect freedom
of choice, voice
Freedom of speech and choice at a
university campus is of paramount importance, as it apparently is at Cal State San
Marcos.
There was no greater example of that
recently than during the Inaugural Career
Fair, where student Donald Scott let it be
Oar
w
known his views about lifting the ban on
gays in the military.
Although Pioneer a gree s with this
stand, it is also equally important for others to express the'opposite view, as was
shown by the presence of military recruiters during the career fair.
Career Center Director Sandy Punch
and other university officials made the
right decision in letting the recruiters on
campus for this reason.
No matter how one looks at it, the lifting
of the ban is imminent, and no matter how
thin you slice it, gays are in the military
already — they always have been.
Until the day comes when the ban is
lifted, however, it is important to show
tolerance towards the military's current
position, and to allow other students the
freedom to chose a military career.
GHrrŒffTDSMK
MET
tewe
THE m C B O R T ï B t f
When it comes to problems, the best policy is totellit like it is
If there is one thing a journalist can't
stand ifs being dictated to over what is or
is not a story.
One recent event on campus drove that
home for me. These last two months are
fast going down in San Diego history as
some of the wettest on record. This would
surely have an unanticipated effect on the
workings of brand new buildings.
As a result, leaks, floods and power
outages would be expected here at Cal
State San Marcos as kinks in the structures
are being worked o u t
Apparently, however, some in the Far
ciMesdepartmenttake this very seriously;
seriously enough to dictate to me the importance of stories concerning these issues.
LastFriday, a s l went to Student Health
Services to take care of some business, I
was told by one of the officials there that
there had been a flood on thefirstfloor of
Craven Hall, where Student Health Services is located. Sure enough, behind a
doorway in the complex there were Facilities workers cleaning up the mess left
by the flood.
I had my camera bag and notebook in
hand, thinking that this might make an
interesting story for the paper. For the
first round, when I asked about what had
happened, all I got were dirty and suspicious looks, as if there was a cover-up or
Point
With this reasoning I said that there
wasn't, and one of them snapped back at
me with a quick "Yes, there are."
Next, I asked why they weren't being
cooperative and they claimed that it would
make them look bad if this situation were
reported in the paper.
Maybe it's just me, but there's nothing
"bad" about seeing Facilities workers
rushing diligently to clean up and solve a
problem. Sure, they may have been under
a tremendous amount of stress, but that
gave them no right to dictate to me the
importance of the story; they could have
just amply referred me to the head of the
department for information.
Ironically, no one was at the office when
I called and the voice mail system was not
answering. Come press time this week, I
had no choice but to run a blurb about the
incident with little if any information.
The fact is that there is something wrong
with the buildings if they are flooding like
Craven Hall, and the campus community
has the right to know about i t But apparently, some people in Facilities don't see it
that way. They gave the appearance that
problems with the buildings are to be kept
secret from the people who utilize the
facilities every day. By doing t ha t they
give the whole operation an appearance
that is much more suspicious than I know
it really is.
o^ {/i&w
ROMAN S. KOENIG
something. This, however, was only t h e
tip of the iceberg.
Afterfinishingmy business in Student
Health Sendees, I promptly left and went
around to the front entrance of the building on the first floor. Just past the entry
way to my right was the same hallway
filled with what seemed like two inches of
water on the floor.
Just as I got my camera out of the bag,
the workers stopped what they were doing and l ef t I asked them what was wrong
and they said they didn't want their picture
taken. I had no problem with that whatsoever. I f s always been my belief that if
someone doesn't want a newspaper camera in their face, that right should be respected.
I thought then I could at least get some
information about what had happened.
Then they got hostile with me, telling me
that there were more important things to
cover on campus.
...Not on a stormy Friday afternoon.
Cal State San Marcos President Dr. Bill
Stacy, when interviewed about the campus
closure after the power outage on Feb. 18,
had no problem telling Pioneer that there
may have been flaws in how the closure
was handled. He even put a bright side to
i t saying that it brought to light the importance of haviiig a set plan in future
instances of that nature. Those in Facilities who think that not talking about the
problem is the avenue to take should reevaluate their way of thinking.
The treatment I received last Friday
was unfair to me, unfair to the campus
community and unprofessional to say the
least
Physical problems, as I said, are to be
expected in a new building, and although
the flood looked bad, it would have been
simple to explain what the problems were
and how they were being rectified rather
than to hide them under the table as these
workers deemed necessary to do.
If everyone treated me or any other
reporter of this newspaper with the attitude that they can judge what goes in this
publication, Pioneer would not be the independent campus voice it is striving to
be.
And the losers in that scenario would
be you, the reader.
�öfreetTäl»
Q uestion : How could the Rodney
King trial been handled better?
Angela O ber , t eaching p rogra m
a
I have mixed feelings about this
trial. It's too much. They need to
focus on one a rea "
L eann e C rane ,
t eachin g p rogra m
"The jurors names should not have
been publicized. They went
through so much stress. This could
have been prevented."
Letter shows writer's ignorance about gays
I am in complete shock and utter
disbelief after reading Irving Davis' letter
regarding gays in the military in the last
issue of the Pioneer.
This disbelief stemsfromt h e fact that
even now, in 1993, there is still ignorance
in regards to the homosexual lifestyle and
what it entails and the stupidity Mr. Davis
shows when discussing AIDS.
The question of letting gays in the
military is moot There have been gays in
the military since day one. If gays haven't
made great contributions to the armed
services, Mr. Davis, then why are gay
veteran groups all over the country?
There isa misconception that gay men
are always on "the make" and that they
only joined the military to meet men. I
know of several gay men and women who
have been (and actively still are) a part of
our defense system. T hes e men and
women joined for the same reasons that
heterosexuals have: to serve their country,
to get money for college and to see the
world.
Mr. Davis says to be aware of the
"smokescreens" homosexuals are using
to advance in society under the "guise of
legal rights and discrimination.'' This is
not a smokescreen. Your sexual orientation
should make no difference in the workplace
or in our existence in society; we are human
beings just like everybody else and wish to
be treated as so. We aren't asking for
special privileges in this world, just for the
discrimination and hatred against u s to
end.
As far as the death sentence we are all
facing, do you not realize that the rate of
Believe m ewhenlsay being gayisnot
a choice. If it was do you think I would
choose to be an object of ridicule and
degradation by society and to hear ignorant
people such a s yourself spou t s uc h
prejudicial statements about something I
had no control over?
As far as "inevitable early death" that
members of thegay community face, what
do you base this on? Yes, there have been
many members of thegay community who
have died before their time (as the song
says "...only the good die young."), but
homosexuals lead long, h ealthy and
extremely productive lives — just a s
heterosexuals do.
I'm sorry to be the one to break this to
you Mr. Davis, but we have been around
for thousands of years and we will be here
'till the very end. You say our lifestyle
offers no excuse and no future? It is true
thathomosexualrelationships do not bring
about procreation, but let me just say that
I am looking to a very bright future. I am a
junior here at CSU San Marcos working
ongettingmyBachelor'sdegreeinEnglish
and my teaching credential (yes, Mr. Davis,
I am going to be a teacher. Can you handle
that?).
(/iect/g
PUBLIC FORUM
h eterosexual s contractin g AIDS h a s
surpassed the homosexual community due
to I.V. drug use, blood transfusions and
unsafe sex practices? Although the gay
community h a s received most of t h e
attention in regards to the plight of AIDS,
that is only because we are one of the few
segments of society trying to educate
misinformed people like yourself, Mr.
Davis. AIDS is not a gay disease, it is
everybody's disease. It has no face.
T h e "wild plight ... into an early
demise" that the gay community is heading
for is absolutely blasphemous. We are not
looking for a hedonistic existence. Like
heterosexuals, we too are looking for that
special someone, a loving partner and
companion, and I am not asking for yours
or society's approval on how I live my life.
I am sure my dating practices are far tamer
and safer than most heterosexuals.
As far as the self-inflicted misery that
accompanies being gay, that too is also
untrue. The only misery afflicted upon me
is by the uninformed members of society
like yourself, Mr. Davis. Being gay is not
something you choose. I knew I was
different as far back as grade school. I was
born this way, I wasn't recruited!
I am also in a loving monogamous
relationship with a law e nforcemen t
student whom I hope to be with for a long
time. No future, Mr. Davis? T h e future for
me and my "family" is so bright, "we gotta
wear shades."
FREDRIC BALL/ENGLISH
Clark should check facts, says Associated Students official
F ran k D elapena , s ecurit y
"I feel the policemen are guilty.
They shouldn't have hit him."
I have a response to Suzanne Clark,
chair of ICC (the Inter-Club Council), regarding her article in the Feb. 17 edition.
I would recommend that Suzanne check
her facts before making statements in the
newspaper. I suspect misinformation has
been a key ingredient
First, the AS currently provides every
university-recognized club/organization
and the ICC with $50 per semester for
operating expenses. T h e AS has just discovered that the insurance premium for
Pioneer
Volume 3f Number 10
Wednesday, March 3,1993
C
alifornia State University, San Marcos
San Marcos, CA 92096
Editorial: (619) 752-4998
Advertising: (619) 752-4999
Alisa T akeachi , l ibera l S tudie s
"I would have been more selective
about who they chose (for the
trial).''
Roman S. Koenig
Photos by Michael Bagstad.
Question asked by C y C
ath ombs.
Advertising Manager
1993 is $2,500 more than anticipated and
budgeted.
Suzanne never mentioned that the actual cost of the insurance, which is $100
per annum per club. It does not matter if
they havefivemembers or 100 members,
and currently we have 27 recognized clubs.
At this time less than 20 percent of the
clubs are collecting dues or sponsoring
fundraisers.
Second, income for student fees for the
1992-93 academic year are approximately
STUDENT WRITERS: J essic a Carro, Suzanne Clark, Jan
Cooper, Mik James Hamada, David Hatch, Mark Hopkins,
Shauna Oenning, Sarah Schultz, Chris Valerian
CONTRIBUTORS: Larry Boisjolie, Kathy Combs, Dr. Joel
Grinolds, Daniel Hernandez, Chava Sandoval, Jonathan
Young
CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS: Michael Bagstad,
Ralph Berry, Teri Kane
PRINTING AND PRODUCTION SUPPORT: West Coast
Community Newspapers
Editor-in-Chief
Copyright © 199 3 by Pioneer. All rights reserved.
Rob Regan
Pioneer is published every two weeks for the students of
California State University, San Marcos and is distributed on
Wednesdays. It is circulated on the CSUSM campus, as well
as atPalomarCollege, Mira Costa College and local businesses
$64,000, not $80,000.
Third, according to their bylaws, t h e
ICC is responsible for sponsoring Club
Days. However, due to lack of organization and interest of the ICC a nd/o r clubs,
the AS Special Events chairperson had to
assume responsibility.
It is unfortunate that I am required to
l aunde r t hes e d irt y d etail s in t h e
university's newspaper.
SHERYL GREENBLATT/A.S. TREASURER
in the San Marcos community. Pioneer is a free publication.
Pioneer is operated by CSUSM, but is not funded or edited by
universityofficials. Anyopinion expressed in Pioneer does not
necessarily reflect the views of CSUSM officialsor staff, or the
Associated Students.
Unsigned editorials represent the views of Pioneer. Signed
editorials are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily
coincide with the views of the Pioneer editorial staff.
Pioneer reserved therightto not print submitted letters if they
contain lewd or libelous comments or implications. Letters
will not be printed if their sole purpose is to advertise and not
present information. Pioneer also reserves therightto edit
letters for space. Submitted articles by students and
contributors are also subject to editing prior to publication.
Pioneer is a memberof the San MarcosChamberof C
ommerce,
the California Inter-Collegiate Press Association (CIPA), San
Diego Press Club and the North San Diego Press Club.
Offices for Pioneer are located on the second floor of the
Academic Hall, south end, room 14-208.
�Pioneer
Sankofa brings soulful melody to CSUSM
Story by KATHY C
OMBS and photos by RALPH BERRY
'It's like singing a
melodic line. Those
patterns make life more
real to me.'
Dr. W. Komla Amoaku,
director of Visual and Performing Arts
I tV a rhythm that binds the
mind, body and spirit
Andfor Dr. W. Komla Amoaku,
director of Visual and Performing Arts at Cal State San Marcos
and the band Sankofa, the music
is a rhythmic melody that comes
straight from the soul.
From traveling around the
world, Amoaku, a native of Ghana
and a virtuoso of t h e drums
"Gyembe" and "Apantema," discovered diverse cultures have a
common link. T h e result is
Sankofa, a band that incorporates a cross-cultural blend of
Afndmmusicand dance, calypso
and American jazz.
Amoaku's travels led to his interest in exploring the influence
ofAfrican music in South America
and the Caribbean.
"I wanted to identify some of
t h e elements in those various
styles of African music," he said.
The music had "a common ancestry, an ancestry that can be
traced to a common root. Regardless of where you find it,
those elements are always there,*
Common e lement s flow
through the heart of all art forms
in Ghana. Unlike Western cultures, Ghanaians don't categorize
music, dance and art, Amoaku
said. Rather than approaching
music intellectually u sin g a
structured format, artists approach t hei r c raf t intuitively.
Children play games that reinforce an attitude toward rhythm.
Where Western cultures develop
the eyes before the ears, Ghanaians develop the ears before the
eyes, he added.
"I was born into a society that
views the arts as an integral part
of everyday life," h e said. "My
exposure to the arts came by
virtue of my being part of my
traditional environment."
Amoaku began playing the
drums at the age of 5 when his
uncle gave him a toy drum. The
child of an artistic family, he
learned by example, imitating
adults and participating in adult
activities. Rhythm became incorporated into everyday life.
"For me the drum is like pouring out my soul," he said. "It is a
rhythm and speech instrument.
So I was naturally drawn to it."
Because of the instrument's
ability to vary its pitches, the
drummer can approximate the
intonation and the rhythm in the
traditional Ghanaian language.
"It's like singinga melodic line.
Those patterns make life more
real to me."
Not that Amoaku was without
Western musical training. While in
college he studied classicalguitar,
however the two had a rather
strained relationship.
After graduating with a docSEE SA FA
NKO /PAGE 9
Dancer Shoshanna Cordes performs with Sankofa at a Feb. 18 concert in the Dome.
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March is a month that is very
near and dear to my heart, promises to be exciting as well. In case
you have been asleep for the last
millennium or so, M arc h i s
Women's History Month — or
s houl d t ha t b e W omen' s
HERstory Month? There's lots of
neat stuff going on.
Guess what? Yet another issue
has arisen. There appears to be a
definite lack of communication
pervading our more-hallowedthan-yesterday halls, and most of
the people with access to this
information (read: those with Email) are taking an "it's not my
department to inform t h e students" attitude.
Lots of great speakers come
on campus, and no one knows
buttheadministration,faculty and
staff. Lots of activities happen off
campus sponsored by clubs, and
no one knows but t h e clubs and
those who tale t h e time to read
t h e t hre e overloaded bulletin
boards stashed away in corners.
What exaactly is going on?
At t h e beginning of this se-
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SA FA
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8
torate in Ethnomusicology from
the University of Pittsburgh in
1975, he moved to Ohio where
h e served as head of his department until 1991. Hereheformed
thefirstband, agroup of students
whichhe"molded''to understand
t h e musical concepts. Last
month, after being apart for 12
years, the group spent four days
touring parts of the Midwest
Rehearsals weren't necessary.
At CSUSM, a consorted effort
by Bonnie Biggs, Coordinator of
Public Services and bass player
Gunnar Biggs, gave birth to
Sankofa. Amoaku said the Biggs'
were instrumental infindinglocal
musicians and dancers suitable
[yM
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Villamotif, ortohaveacampusof
well-informed and involved students?
The ICC and AS have sugSUZANNE CLARK gested — demanded — pleaded
mester, posting regulations were for more bulletin boards. Bulleonce again changed by the uni- tin boards were even promised to
versity. However, no one knew usatonepoint, according to Gazai
because it wasn't clearly posted. Berhane (of Student Activities),
No longer may clubs may clubs but these promises have not been
post flyers on doors or windows k ep t
The university is a service inbecause it ruins the expensive
finish of said items. We must ask dustry, and the students are the
ourselves which is more impor- customer. Would you shop at a
tant, to have a campus that con- store that always had sales, but
tinues with its beautiful Italian only informed their employees?
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for the new band. Today, the
band members are a rtists in
residence at the college.
The band's intuitive style and
spirit moved studentJudy Brown,
who joined dancers Gelsamina
Merritt and Shoshanna Cordes
at a concert on campus Feb 17.
Brown, who spent three weeks in
Ghana, described her experience
in Africa as "the most inspiring
three weeks in her life."
For Amoaku, Sankofa's music
emphasizes the importance of all
cultures of the world. The music
is away to break down the "glass
walls" between societies.
"Especially living in t hes e
changingtimes, those glass walls
have to come down," he said. "We
must understand we are part of
the human race — that we all
have something to share with each
other."
78
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Sprague String
Consort
performance
a rare viewing
opportunity
Members of t h e Cal State San Marcos
community have a r ar e opportunity to see
jazz guitarist Peter Sprague and his String
Consort March 5 on campus.
Why is it considered rare? As Sprague
explained it, the group seldomly meets for
concerts because members of t h e quartet
belong to other musical organizations.
"It's a very high-maintenance group,"
said Sprague, adding that this is t h e first
time the group has met for a performance
infiveyears.
T h e consort is made up of t hre e jazz
musicians and four classical symphony
artists. Works to be performed include
originals by Sprague, and pieces by Bach,
Mozart and pianist Chick Corea.
A resident of Del Mar, Sprague has
toured, made 21 records and h a s played
and worked with the likes of Corea and
bassist Bob Magnusson.
Sprague said that t h e String Consort
came about six or seven years ago after h e
was inspired by pianist Corea. Sprague
says that h e g et s inspiration for his works
from one simple thing.
"Mostly (my works are) originally inspired by either (musicians) that I've heard
or actual people," h e explained. "One
(song) is called 'Amadeus,' written for
M ozart , and ' Mahavishnu ' f o r J oh n
McLaughlin, a great jazz guitarist.''
Along with the consort, Sprague plays
with other groups, including his Electric
Band, in which he plays a guitar synthesizer
Born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1955,
Sprague and his family moved to Del Mar
in 1963 after spending time in Colorado.
He took up guitar at t h e age of 12, later
studying with San Diego jazz guitarist Bill
Coleman and forming his first group, t h e
Minor Jazz Quartet.
Two performances of the String Consort will be held on campus, t h e first at 5
p.m. and t h e second at 7 p.m. T h e concerts
will be located in room ACD 102.
Additional information about t h e event
can be obtained by calling 752-4945.
�WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3.1993/ PIONEER
H
Randall Hickman (right) as Tito Merelli and Robyn Hampton as Diana are featured in the Moonlight Playhouse's production of "Lend Me a Tenor," playing through March 14.
Lend an ear to 'Tenor:' it's a show worth seeing
J
ONATHAN Y U /CONTRIBUTING WRITER blend with the cast prove that h e is in
O NG
c omman d of t h e M oonligh t s tage .
Vista's Moonlight Playhouse doesn't Quesnel's performance was indeed flawneed to borrow anything as they present less.
You w on' t find any r eferenc e to
their indoor production of "Lend Me A
Quesnel's other local performances, beTenor* through March 14.
Moving indoors from its summer am- cause there are none. This is his westphitheater, the Moonlight continues its coast debut after travelingfromMissouri.
reign as a high-quality, professional pro- His impact as a fantastic performer here
duction with some veteran performers and should shake Southern California deeper
a few rookies. T h e blend of old and new is than an earthquake and neighboring theaters should take note.
almost flawless.
His character is accented by his sup"Lend Me A Tenor" is set in Cleveland
in 1934 and revolves around the arrival of porting actor, Randall S. Hickman as Tito.
a highly-touted Italian tenor, Tito Merelli, Hickman is a well-known face around the
and his jealous wife, Maria. Tito is im- Moonlight with starring roles in "Mame,"
ported by the Cleveland Grand Opera T h e Pirates of Penzance," "little Shop of
Company for a one-night gala perfor- Horrors" and "A Chorus Line."
The performance thatHickman delivers
mances of Verdi's "Othello."
When t h e famed Teno r arrives in is so stunning that it becomes difficult to
Cleveland, h e is too ill to perform. In fact, decipher who holds the lead role. But
the hosts think he's died. The General that's part of the show.
As Max steps onto stage impersonating
Manager of the Opera House must come
up with a replacement for his operatic Hickman's character, Tito wakesfromhis
superstar withoutany of the wealthy bene- so-called "death" and attempts to go on.
This creates a hilarious siltation of misfactor noticing.
Thatreplacementis Max, the manager's taken identity that will leave the audience
assistant. Richard Quesnelfillsthe roll of rolling in the aisles with laughter.
The females roles have the same theme
Max and does an amazing performance.
His dialog, energy, facial expressions and throughout each character. Whether they
are Cleveland's Opera Guide Chairwoman,
a soprano from the opera, or Max's girlfriend, they all want to get to meet Tito —
intimately
Marci Anne plays Maggie, Max's girlfriend. Outof theentirefemalecast, Anne's
performance is the most believable. Her
young character adds an innocent touch
to embarrassing predicaments and gives a
comic relief to an otherwise slowfirsthalf.
who gives an energetic performance of a
tired Maria; and Sean Tamburrino as the
ambitious Bell Hop — all of whom are
Moonlight veterans.
Equally amazing to the performance is
the set design. Don Ertel continues to
work his magic as h e transforms t h e multipurpose room—a drab rectangular room
—into aphenomenal theater.The stage is
very realistic with no painted sets, but t h e
Robyn Hampton plays Diana, the so- real thing on every wall.
prano who performs on stage with Tito
Menshing doubles as the lighting diand wants to get on to other things backstage. Hampton portrays her character as rector, Stacey Rae organized the costumes
a rigged, determined actress. Although and Kathy Brombacher brought it all toher character is quite serious, Hampton gether as director.
stirs up quite a laugh.
If you want to see a great show, borrow,
DianeThrasher plays Julia, the charac- beg, loan or even have someone lend you
a
ter who runs the show Othello."Thrasher the $12 to see the Moonlight's only 1993
is not an unfamiliar face around North winter show. It will be well worth i t
County, but this is here first Moonlight
Performances of "Lend Me A Tenor"
production. Here debutis a little rusty and
s h e will need some more practice before are Thursday, Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets are $12
others start to take notice.
for adults, $10 for seniors and $8 for stuRounding out t h e cast is Jonathan dents with identification. T h e Playhouse if
Menshing, who portrays a rather foul- offeringreserved sets for all performances.
mouthed general manager; Theresa Layne To make reservations/call 724-2110.
�To compliment the already
successful Pizza Hut in the café,
Martens said she has specifically
requested having the option of a
Hawaiian pizza with ham and
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
pineapple.
she is also looking into carrying
"Hopefully, well have all our
Harmony Snacks, which include new items in a couple of weeks,"
trail mix, Fig Newton bars, white she said.
chocolate-covered pretzels and
So, now that problems numgummi bears.
ber one is solved, how will stu-
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Also b ein g c onsidered , said
Meeker, are fresh cut fruit and a
variety of organic goodies from
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Martens and Meeker said they
make it a point to get feedback
from customers about the new
changes.
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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>1992-1993</h2>
Subject
The topic of the resource
student newspapers
Description
An account of the resource
The third academic year of California State University San Marcos.
Contributor
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University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Sort Key PI
Original Format
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newspaper 11 x 13.5
Pioneer
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
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Pioneer
March 3, 1993
Subject
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student newspaper
Description
An account of the resource
Volume 3, Number 10 of the first student newspaper on the CSUSM campus. The cover story reports on musical events and intense weather conditions.
Creator
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Pioneer
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University Archives, California State University San Marcos, Kellogg Library
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University Archives in the CSUSM Library
Date
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1993-03-03
Contributor
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Charla Wilson, 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
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Text
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newspaper 11 x 13.5
athletics program
campus closure
fee increase
military
power outage
rainstorm
spring 1993
WASC accreditation
-
https://archives.csusm.edu/student-newspapers/files/original/7d294adaaf72818062422cd50b513b76.pdf
96b1a0b6cc6d1c9bca6db20705c86558
PDF Text
Text
w%m
M'
TUESDAY, MARCH 5 ,1991
VOLUME 1, NUMBER 11
S ERVING CALIFORNIA
DECENT STORMS p
STATE UNIVERSITY. SAN MARCOS
L CAMPUS
lj¡ll
A
M ß m r I torscfay's s torm;
of m
,, ' s i i i l
Candidates vie for full-time Cold War downfall
Comic shows laughter
teaching slots Page 2 brings concerns P age 7 not blind
Page
�2
NEWS
H
I
H
M
INSIDE
TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991
INSTRUCTOR BEATS TO
DIFFERENT DRUMMER
Cal State San Marcos professor Dr. Donald
Funes sees more in music than just notes
and traditional composers. His style of
showing students how to appreciate music
expands on the university's goal of global
awareness.
N EWS/PAGE 4
INCREASE LIBRARY HOURS
Pioneer columnist David Hammond pleads
with students to increase the Library's
weekend hours. More hours are needed to
fulfill the college's writing requirements.
O PINION/PAGE 7
EXPLORING COMEDY
Pioneer has explored several unusual topics
in past issues; this edition is no exception!
Join our staff as Pioneer enters the unusual
realm of comedy with a review of North
County's own Comedy Nite and a feature
on a unique entertainer.
E XPLORE/PAGE 8
THRILL SEEKERS
Travel to the stage of the Impnov and experience what it's like to do stand-up comedy.
Editor Larry Boisjolie shares his personal
adventure in the world of comedy.
E XPLORE/PAGE 1 0
LITERARY JOURNAL PLANS
POETRY READING BENEFIT
To help raise funds for the upcoming literary journal, six professional poets will read
original works for the public.
A CCENT/PAGE 1 3
'SLEEPING' A SNOOZER
Film critic Wendy Williams looks at Julia
Roberts' latest blockbuster 'Sleeping with
the Enemy.' Despite huge public appeal,
the film lacks the thrills and chills of a
bonafide hit.
A CCENT/PAGE 1 3
NEWS
P AGE 2
OPINION
P AGE 6
EXPLÖRE
P AGE 8
THRILL SEEKERS
P AGE 1 0
ACCENT
P AGE 1 3
CALENDAR
P AGE 1 5
~
PIONEER/TUESDAY,MARCH 5, 199?
Candidates vie for full-time slots
K ATHY S ULLIVAN /PIONEER
With 1,300-plus candidate applications for
P ositions a vailable
j ust over 30 new tenure positions,
administration,faculty and students at Cal State B USINESS
2 Literature &
English:
Composition
San Marcos have their work cut out for them. SUBJECT
NO. SPECIFIC
1 Analytical
Chemistry:
"Speed is essential because you don't want
1 General
Management :
or Physical
to loose the pool (of talent)," said Professor of
Management
Computer Science: 1 General
History, Dr. Joan Gundersen. She stressed
1 Management
Economy:
1 General
Information
that letters of appointment need to be sent as
Ethnic Studies:
1 General
2 General Finance
soon as possible because CSUSM wants to get Finance:
Current Staff:
18
1 Cost
the top candidates, rather than those in the Accounting:
TOTAL:
35
1 Tax
middle of the pack.
1 General
Approximately 90 candidates have made Marketing:
E DUCATION
2 General
the initial cut and are now being flown in to Current Staff:
Education:
5
5
meet with faculty, staff and students. The TOTAL:
14
... to cover these subject:
second round began two weeks ago and will
• Bilingual Education
continue for the next two months.
• Multicultural Education
A RTS & S CIENCES
Prospective faculty are invited to talk for 30
• Learning & Instruction
1 Numerical
to 40 minutes on their doctoral dissertations or Math:
• Computers and Technology
or Analytical
on current researches. A short Q &A session Psychology:
• Students with Special Need
Cognitive
• Literary/Reading Education
follows to allow students and faculty to ask Political Science: 1 American
• Mathematics Education
questions.
Biology:
1 Cell
• Science Education
i "Studentopiniort matters," saidGundersen. j .Sociology:
1 Griminologyor
Current Staff: '
4
She is involved with the search committee for
> Health & Aging
TOTAL:
9
2 African
two additions to the history department. Her History:
or Amer. Indian
department is asking students to fill out an
New Teachers: 31
2 Ethnomusicology
evaluation form. The students responses are Fine Arts:
Current Staff:
27
added to the candidate's file and are taken into Foreign Language: & Visual Arts
TOTAL:
58
1 Spanish
consideration in their evaluation for employment
Along with their presentation, every candidate has a full day of interviews and meetings
awaiting them. Each aspirant will meet indi- Multicultural Education, Learning & In- process begins with the search committee. After
vidually with President Bill Stacy, Vice-Presi- struction, Computers & Technology in Edu- culling the vast number of applications down
dent Richard Rush, Director of Affirmative cation, Special Learning Needs, Literacy/ to a workable number, casual telephone interAction Lionel Maldonado, Library Director Reading Education, Mathematics Educa- views as well as personal interviews during
Marion Reid, and prospective department tion and Science Education.
academic conventions, also known in the trade
deans.
"The bilingual [Spanish/English] edu- as 'slave markets,' are employed to further
They will also have several formal and cator will come aboard this fall to prepare narrow down thefield.Thefinalthree or four
informal chats with interested faculty and staff. the program to begin Fall of 1992/* ex- candidates are then flown to the campus.
A tour of the site, lunch and a possible dinner plained Joyce Byas, faculty support for the
After the search is closed and the interwith the members of the search committee fill College of Education.
views are over the search committee sends
out their day.
The College of Business Administra- theirrecommendation to their dean. Ifthedean
The addition of over 30 full-time faculty tion, which has received more than 500 agrees with the committee he sends his recomwill more than double CSUSM's faculty. With applicants, is looking to fill 9 full-time mendations to Rush and Stacy. If they agree
a 300% increase in student enrollment ex- positions. These new instructors will ex- with the dean, they send the candidate a letter
pected next semester the doubling of the fac- pand the full-time faculty fromfiveto four- for an appointment.
ulty is essential to maintain stride with the teen. The department is interviewing candiWith these days of budget cuts and degrowing student population.
dates for all aspects of business: account- creased allocations the funding for these new
Each of the colleges are conducting sepa- ing, finance, marketing, management and positions were of a concern.
rate searches with very different criterion. management information.
"The state allocates a designated amount of
The College of Education is adding five or
With over 800 applications received for money per faculty line authorized," answered
possibly six new teachers to their staff, more just two English departmentopeningsalone, Dr. Hinton, Dean of Business Administration.
than doubling their present full-time faculty. the College of Arts and Science is inter- The allocations for the 31 new positions are put
Since the application deadline closed January viewing the most new candidates. With a into a pool and from that pool the types of
31, interviews will continue into April.
total of 18 openings, it creates a tremen- professorships affordable are determined.
S ince the education department is looking dous amount of work for the search comHinton went on to describe that a search
for candidates which can fill more than one mittee and its support groups. See the dia- allocation from the state is pooled within
shoe, a prospective applicant should have gram forabreakdownof the Collegeof Arts CSUSM. Emanating from this pool comes the
expertise in more than one field. Areas of and Science's desired new faculty.
money to advertise and the money to bring in
prime importance art: Bilingual Education,
In all of the Schools the elimination qualified educators for interviews.
�TUESDAY, MARCH S, 1991/PIONEER
N e w s B riefs
VICE CHANCELLOR VISITS CAMPUS
In a rare visit to Cal State San Marcos, Vice Chancellor for the Cal
State system, Herbert Carter, met with students and administration on
Feb. 28.
Carter discussed the future of CSUSM with students and gave his
viewpoints on the proposed budget cuts to higher education by California Governor Pete Wilson. Carter said he understood the governor's
position and commented that "the problems with higher education were
inherited by Governor Wilson, not created by him."
Carter also discussed plans for student governance, the formation of
student activities and the quality of curriculum at CSUSM.
MAYOR NAMED BALL HONOREE
San Marcos Mayor Lee Thibadeau has been named honoree at this
year's University Ball. The naming comes after a suggestion for his
appointment by the CSUSM Foundation.
The University Ball is the college's primary fundraiser. Tickets for
the Ball, which has enjoyed sold-out crowds in the past, are $ 125.
Thibadeau said he was "honored" by the appointment and said he felt
that he was just one of many integral persons helpful in the formation of
the university.
For the past seven years,Thibadeau was instrumental in attracting attention to the new university. As a city councilman, he was one of the
first to approach California Senator William Craven with the idea of a
North County university.
TWO CONCERT PERFORMANCES PLANNED
March marks the beginning of another series of concerts at the
CSUSM, SDSU North County Library . The series is sponsored by both
universities and admission is free to the public.
Holly Hoffman, a critically acclaimed recording artist, will bring a
unique hard-driving jazz style to the university for Women's History
Month. Hoffman's melodic renditions with the flute will be accompanied by Gunnar Biggs, on the bass, Mike Wofford, piano, and Jim Plank,
on the drums.
Hoffman will perform March 10 in the Library. The performance
begins at 7 p.m.
Raices del Ande, a music ensemble that specializes in Andean music,
will perform March 17 in the Library.
The four founding members of Raices del Ande are from Bolivia.
Donald Funes, Professor of Fine Arts at CSUSM, was the group's
director for several years and will be performing with them on their West
Coast tour.
For more information on the concert series, call 471-3515.
SPEAKER'S SERIES RESUMES
NEWS
Rains cause damage on campus
A series of storms that hit the area
last week left campus officials and
students drowning in rain-rejated
problems. *
Downpours caused the collapse of
ceilings throughout thecampus, while
flooding occurred in the student parking lot.
"Every building has roof leaks,"
said Ivalee Clark, assistant director of
Support Services. "It happens every
time it rains."
According to Clark, ceiling damage in the 800 Building was extensive. Financial Services was also
inundated with rain damage.
Campus officials pointed out that,
despite discomfort created from the
rains, instruction was not dampened.
Bookstore worker John Harris
noted flooding in one of Aztec S hops'
storage rooms. According to Harris,
damage was done to paper products
which were stored in the room.
Koll Management, thefirmwhich
oversees the building complex where
the temporary campus is located, refused comment on the flooding. An
official from Koll did say, however,
that reparations would be made when
the rains ceased.
Some students reported that tow
trucks were needed to free waterlogged cars fromfloodedareas in the
student parking lot. Service was also
needed for several cars that would not
start due to soaked distributor caps.
Those who parked on the street
adjacent to the campus also waded
through their share of problems.
CSÚSM student Judy Walters said
she had to remove a fallen tree limb
from the road in order to park her car.
M ARK HOPKINS/PIONEER
CSUSM student Steve Felice climbs over the fence surrounding the
parking lot after rains last Thursday flooded the lot's exit.
Liberal Studies student Wendy
Peterson faced problems of a different nature. Peterson, who is restricted
to a motorized wheelchair, found the
flooded parking lot inconvenient She
said she dropped a book in a puddle
while trying to negotiate the drenched
campus.
Officials speculated that the damage to ceilings occurred because of
the complex's flat-roofed construction.
Task Force seeks government model
J ONATHAN YOUNG/PIONEER
After a semester of research, Cal
State San Marcos' Student Governance Task Force continues to work on
the second step in implementing a
student government by the end of this
semester.
After completing an Associated
Students Mission Statement in October, the Task Force members started
their second goal of determining what
WRITING CENTER OPENS
form of government would best suit
Students wishing help in writing term papers, essays or other reports
can find it at CSUSM's new writing center. The writing center is the current and future students at Cal
State San Marcos.
designed to help students define ideas for papers.
As part of that project, a survey
The center is located in Building 135 next to the Center for Books in
Spanish for Children and Adolescents. It is open Mondays and Wednes- was circulated last week to get studays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and on Thursdays and Thursdays from 9 a.m. dent opinion on three types of government structures. A Representative,
to 4 p.m.
Corporate/Municipal, and Presidential model were outlined in the survey, and five questions were asked
-with-regard to the different govern-
Dr. Patricia Huckle, Dean of SDSU North County Campus, will
continue the Friday evening speaker's series March 8 with a discussion
of her forthcoming biography: T ish Sommers: Activist and the Founding of the Older Women's League.'
The series will feature speakers from both CSUSM and SDSU NorUT
County. Lectures are free and begin at 7 p.m. in the Library. Program
length is usually one hour. Refreshments will be sold prior to the lecture.
3
ment forms.
"The Task Force will use it (the
survey) as a gauge," said Steffanie
Taylor, Task Force member. Taylor
said the survey would not mandate
what structure the Task Force would
choose.
"It's not a vote," she said. "It's to
get a general idea of what the students
would support.... The survey allows
us to make the correct decision. It's
more of an informative survey for
us."
Task Force member David Hammond said that by last Friday afternoon, about 90 surveys were returned;
a total of 1,000 surveys were distributed to students by professors.
"We were pleased with 90,"
Hammond said. "It shows a statistical
significance because it represents a
large share of students as far as surveys-gor"- - —
- 1——.
J
Both Taylor and Hammond said
the Representative structure was leading the three examples, but noted that
not all surveys were tabulated.
"Itappears that the Representative
Government was the most popular
pick among the students," Hammond
said.
"Three out of the six Task Force
members want the Representative,"
said Taylor. "It allows everyone to
take part. It's truly representative of
the organization of a whole."
A decision is expected to be made
at this Friday's Task Force meeting.
The next phase is to writeaconstitution
based on the chosen form of government. That project is expected to take
about three months. The final phase is
implementing the student government
with elections.
"Hopefully, we'll be able to have
elections thissemester,"Taylor said.
�4
PIONEER/TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1 9 9 1
NEWS
Only moderate exercise needed to maintain healt
Most people believe physical exercise is beneficial to one' s health and
well-being; however, a frequent response to questioning about exercise
is, "I just don't have time."
It is true that there seems to be a
perceived or actual reduction in leisure time in the general ¡populace. In
students who usually are also working and may have family responsibili- H EALTHNOTES
ties, there is, no doubt, limited time.
D R. J OEL G RINOLDS.
Along with this, many people believe
that health benefits from exercise
Well, recent studies are showing
accrue only with strenuous exercise that you don't need a lot of time or
for long periods multiple times per have to be a "superjock" to obtain the
week.
benefits of exercise.
The American College of Sports
Medicine recommends a regimen of
20 or greater minutes of relatively
vigorous exercise performed three or
more times per week as a minimum to
maintain physical fitness.
A recent study compared the effects on fitness of 30 minutes of
moderate-intensity exercise daily with
three short 10-minute bouts of moderate-intensity exercise per day in a
group of healthy middle-aged men.
Fitness effects on both groups were
very similar and the authors feel, for
many individuals, short bouts ofexercise may be sufficient to maintain
fitness and will be more likely ad- ate exercise such as walking, gardenhered to over a longer period of time. ing and sports may be enough. Also,
This definition of fitness applies remember it is never too late to start!
So why wait, get active.
primarily to prevention of cardiovascular disease. Some other recent re- u — _ _ — ^ ^
search indicates that lower levels of
UNIVERSITY
exercise can provide many of the
TRAVEL
health-related benefits formerly
DISCOUNTS
thought to be achievable only with
vigorous activity.
AIRFARES
Someof these health-related bene* EUR0PS •
fits pertinent to college students inORIENT SO. PACIPIC
clude stress reduction, improved
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RAH PASSES TOURS
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Instructor's musical teaching theory
beats with a different global drum
LARRY
BOISJOUE/PIONEER
To Dr. Donald Funes, there is
more to music than reading notes
and studying composers. Funes, who
instructs music at Cal State San Marcos, wants to help create a Music
Department that reflects global
awareness and intra-cultural sensitivity.
"It's difficult to break the traditional molds of teaching music,"
said Funes "Programs traditionally
deal with dead, white, male composers."
Funes teaches his classes the con-!
cept of ethnomusicology, the study
of music in its social context. Funes
said that this form of music education will increase sensitivity about
women and other races. He indicated that the study ofjust classical
composers is not reflective of the
whole picture music paints.
"We need to look at music in the
context of society," he said.
Apart from teaching music of
other cultures, Funes is also active
in performing it as well. On March
17, he will be performing with Raices del Andes, a group of South
American musicians.
Funes, who was trained in classical music in Washington, became
involved with Andean music after
searchingfordifferentstylesofmusical expression.
"In the 60s I started hearing more
and more folk music. I wanted to
play in a more informal environment, so I started searching for different types of music," Funes said.
His search began in India, but
was cut short due to problems at
home. In the mid 1980s, Funes took
a sabbatical in New York to teach
Concert
Raices Del r Ande: Performs the second show in this
semesters Concert Series
sponsored by CSUSM and
SDSU North County. The
performance is March 17 at 7
p.m. in the Library. Admission is free.
Gabriel now integrate other forms
of music into their own styles. Simon, according to Funes, has awakened the world's interest in South
African music.
Funes said that music reflects
class struggles within cultures, and
that it is able to adapt with cultures.
In order to capture the feelings in
different types of music, Funes said
he likes to attend traditional festivals South American countries to
get the feel of the culture.
The ability to appreciate music is
heightened with a knowledge of the
language in which it is performed.
Funes said he gained a deeper unDonald Funes (bottom left) with Raices Del Ande, perform traditional
derstanding of the music of Bolivia
Andean music.
just by speaking and learning Spanish.
north Indian music. While there, he Andes, specializes in this type of
"You can't thoroughly undermet a Peruvian musician, who taught music.
stand the music unless you undera widerangeof Andean instruments,
"It's still part of everyday cul- stand the language," Funes comand developed a love for South ture in much of South America," mented. With this thought in mind,
American music.
Funes said, "It's been around for Funes tries to find ideas in music
He mastered the pan pipes and thousands of years."
with which students can relate.
began playing with musicians who
Funes said that much of Ameri"I try to head s
t
performed auctotono, the authentic can music today is reflective of understanding of mtudents yocdeeper
usic. M ourses
music of Andean cultures. Raicel cultures around the world. Musi- renotaboutworldmusic.butabout
del Andes, which means roots of the cians like Paul Simon and Peter ahe world of music.
t
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�PIONEER/TUESDAY, M ARCH 5 , 1 991
Nation now has
new heros, cause
For two decades, America has been a nation without a cause.
Following the tragedy of Vietnam and in the wake of Watergate,
a cloud ofcomplacency settled upon acountry feeling the injuries
of war and betrayal by its leaders.
For two decades, we have been a nation without heros. With
the death of Martin Luther King, Black America lost its greatest
symbol of true freedom andequality. The President of the United
States lost his leadership and became nothing less than a common
criminal to his baffled nation. Our soldiers, in fighting a socially
unpopular war, lost their dignity somewhere amidst the confusion.
PURVIEWS
P I O N E E R S T A F F E DITORIAL
Women deserve equality
In the 1970s, the proposed Equal Rights Amendment was
shot down. The rejection wasn't because it didn't receive the
amount of needed votes; it cleared the House, the Senate*
President Jimmy Carter, and 48 states had ratified the bill. This
ideal amendment failed to become a part of America's
constitution simply by missing its deadline.
Utah and North Carolina failed to cast their vote by the
scheduled date. These two states, controlled mainly by strong,
male-dominated churches, failed to add to this country's foundation of laws a revolutionary bill that would have been beneficial to the female population as well as the male.
Women in America have been lobbying and rallying for
equality among the male-founded, run, and dominated American society; a patriarchal culture has determined how this
country was molded and set. Today's culture has changed and
now women want to stand on the same platforms as their
counterparts.
This new setting is welcomed by most, and should be
allowed to evolve in a society where both sexes are equal.
What those two states failed to realize when they missed the
ratification deadline was that the Equal Rights Amendment
would also benefit men, since with equality comes mutual
responsibility.
The military is a good example for this point, a topic of high
interest today. Women would have had a kind of two-fold
equality when it comes to the battlefield.
First, a woman could fight alongside a man when defending
this country or attacking an offending army. Some consider it a
great honor to die for this country, an honor only reserved for
men. What makes a woman less suitable to fight a war? What
makes a man more superior in this area?
The second part of this equal responsibility is that women
would be forced to fight; a draft would include women as well
as men.
- ir; AaQttessOT&lfcQf shared responsibility would perhaps be
a new viewpoint of child-raising. This could have been a great
victory for the man, the parent who is usually denied the right
to raising children in the case of divorce or a split-up based on
his gender. Who determined that a man is less suitable to build
a family? What makes a woman much more superior in this
area?
Society has stereotyped the man as strong with no feelings,
a woman with feelings and no strength. People asked that to
change with the proposed amendment, and it must if the
evolution to equality is to develop.
Mythology shows the worship of a goddess, history shows
civilization with shared powers among genders; in the 70s it
was two different denominations in two distant states that felt
their religion to be sorightthat they had to keep men superior
to women. Religion should not dominate the decision making
of today and neither should men.
The failure of the Equal Rights Amendment is a scar on
America's history. Females deserve equal status, representation, and responsibility.
Keep in mind, however, the term "equality," a word the late
states might have misunderstood. The added words to the
constitution would not change America's culture to a matriarchal society, but only grant equality. This miscommunication
between countrypersons would also have corrected some reverse discrimination.
The availability for scholarships and jobs for women was
drastically low then. To correct that, a surge of needed monies
and career opportunities opened. Now getting funding for
school and finding a job is easier for a woman than for a man.
This is is a reflection of Affirmative Action. Both examples,
in attempting to correct discrimination, now discriminate against
the white man. This discrimination game would have stopped
with theEqual Rights Amendment.
J ONATHAN YOUNG/PIONEER
A country that is moved to patriotic tears and feels the
glimmer of pride glowing in its soul, is a place beyond the
memory of most of us.
For two decades we have been a nation without feeling, cause
or heros. If there is anything to be learned from the events in the
Persian Gulf, it's that America is, once again, aplaceof heros and
cause.
With General Colin Powell, Black America once again has a
prodigious model of leadership. His name has become a synonym of intelligence an integrity that we all can utter with pride.
George Bush has brought honor back to the title of President.
His calmness and steadfastness combined to reveal the Chief
Executive as a superb diplomat, while his powers as Commander-in-Chief brought strength back to the reputation of the
military.
The soldiers of the war - ourfriends,family and spouses - are
heros, not only of our hearts, but ofour souls as well. They fought
for all that the word "America" has traditionally symbolized, and
walked away victorious. To them we owe the Inflation of our
country's value.
What all these heros stand for, is the awakening of a consciousness that has laid asleep for two decades. The veterans of
our past war can now walk with dignity for all to see, while
politicians can move awayfromthe mistrusted realm of lawyers
and used-car salespeople. Black Americans can now chase their
dreams with one of many men who have dared to conquer them.
Whereas once we laughed at Bush's idea of a New World
Order, now we can join it in faith and make it our own peaceful
reality.
If all this seems overly sentimental and rhetorical, then look
at the miraculously low loss of lives our troops suffered in the
war. Even though the death of just one human being to warfare
is intolerable and grievous, the impossibly small loss of our lives
gives us physical evidence that hopes can indeed become realized.
Let us all welcome our troops back with a blaze of enlightenment and show them that they were fighting for more than oil they werefightingfor all this country stands for.
Those who bravelyriskedtheir lives for thefreedomof a tiny
chunk of the world should stand forever in our hearts as monuments against complacency. Their cause was just and they are
heros all.
It is time now for each of us to be heros on the homefront. We
should take the courage of those soldiers far away and internalize
i t Let us all f^ght peacefully for our long-lost American dream.
�TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991 / P I O N E E R
P50-2 S. Orange #507
IONEER
2
Escondido, CA 92025
(619) 738-0666
Editor-in-Chief
Larry Boisjolie
Graphics Director
Jonathan Young
Business Director
David Hammond
Staff Writers: Ken Carter, Debbie Duffy,
Kathy Sullivan, Elaine Whaley, Wendy
Williams
Contributors: Ken Bauermeister, Michelle
Duffy, Jenny Eagle, David Hatch, Mark
Hopkins, Peggy Osterloh, Charts Scanlon
Photography: Stacey Smith
Copyright© 1991, by PIONEER. All rights reserved.
PIONEER is published every two weeks for the students
at California State University, San Marcos; it is distributed on Tuesdays. It is circulated on the CSUSM
campus as well as Palomar College, MiraCosta College, and San Diego State University. PIONEER is a
free publication.
PIONEER is an independent newspaper and is not
funded, supported, or edited by CSUSM officials. Any
Opinion expressed in PIONEER does not necessarily
coincide with the views of California State University
officials or staff.
Unsigned editorials reflect the views of PIONEER.
Signed editorials are the opinion and feelings of that
writer and do not necessarily coincide with the views of
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PIONEER reserves therightto not print submitted letters if the manuscript contains lewd or libelous comments or implications. Letters will not be printed of their
sole purpose is for advertising and not information.
Display advertisement rate is $5 per column inch.
Deadline for space reservation is one week before publication and camera-ready art deadline is the Friday
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For more information, contact PIONEER'S office for an
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PIONEER is a member of the San Marcos Chamber of
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A THOUGHT:
"All m tanks are
y
burning. I have no
place to go."
a n IRAQI CAPTAIN
upon surrender
OPINION
L ibrary needs e xpanded h ours
to complete u niversity's mission
A school's reputation is built just like a new
business: one finished product at a time. In this
regard, we are fortunate that the mission here at
Cal State San Marcos is to build "Stanford
South." We will be the benficiaries of these
commitmants.
While I am glad that the Cal State San Marcos faculty is fulfilling its promise to squeeze
everythingfromus that is possible, I fefel like a
football player starting the Superbowl without
helmet and shoulder pads: I'm playing hard, but
I am getting way too banged around.
Sure, we all knew that the entreprenuerial
venture entailed some bumps, but I - and others
- are fed up with a major campus deficiency:
adequate library access time.
In the world according to 1990 higher-education curriculum, student use of the library is
far more meaningful than just a quiet room with,
D AVID HAMMOND
P I O N E E R C OLUMNIST
books. In fact, a legitimate argument circulates
that the library should be two seperate areas:
Circulation, for books and such, and a Computer Lab, for line time that is unaffordable at
home, and unaccordable anywhere but the
school.
So it goes that when a library closes at 4:30
7
pm, or never opens on Sunday, both resources
are denied, and the prospect of "Stanford South"
becomes a pipe dream. Ultimately, Cal State
San Marcos will default to the diploma-mill
status as frustrated students give up their ambitions to master the "A" grade.
On theother hand, action speaks louder than
words. This column will only reach a few
administrators, but your collective voice can
shake a world. The only means to extending the
library hours (and thereby providing the means
to fulfill tlte dreams) is a letter and petition
campaign.
Drop off a note at President Stacy's office
indicating that you want the library hours extended to 7 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, and
open on Sunday. Sign the petitions that are
circulating. Your slightest involvement will
contribute to the greater cause.
Cold War downfall brings uncertainty
I miss the cold war. Especially after following the most recent hot one. If war is hell, what
is a cold war? Heaven? Maybe not quite, but I
think the cold war provided all nations with
concise roles. All countries fell in one of three
categories. Either pro-west, pro-east, or Switzerland.
Everybody knew how to behave themselves
politically during those times.
For example, a country aligned with the west
would not have invaded one of the opposite
affiliation because the Soviet Union would see
the move as a direct aggression against its
interests. The USSR in turn would have to go
against the initial aggressor, which the U.S.
would see as an act against their interests. Now
we have direct clash of super powers.
But both powers had MAD (Mutual Assured
Destruction) and were wise enough to understand i t Both had to keep regional strifes in
check to guarantee their survival.
A super power invasion into territory that
was not considered crucial to the other side was
protested in the United Nations but that is were
it stopped.
It was always comical when a representative
aired grievances, and the offending party nodded complacently as if listening to a Bob Marley
and The Wailers tape through his or her earphones.
When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan or
S o^P. I
side was completely out of the question.
But things are a little different now. For
understandable reasons Gorbachev decided that
domestic problems were more important than
spending billions of Rubles keeping the Capitalistic Protection Rampart standing.
In a way Hungary can be blamed for the gulf
crisis. They were the first Eastern Block nation
to dismantle their Capitalistic Protection Rampart protecting them from Austria. Thousands
of Hungarians and East Germans took the advantage of the open border end migrated to the
west. East Germany was losing so many people
that their country was on the verge of collapse.
They had no choice but to tear down the wall.
The Iron Curtain was lifted and the East
Block aired out. George Bush calls this the
S HARE YOUR V IEWS
"New World Order." I call it the "New World
PIONEER welcomes letters from readers regarding campus Issues, articles
Disorder." Disorder because of all the uncerwritten, or world-related affairs. PIONEER reserves therightnot to print submitted
tainties that are ahead.
letters if the manuscript contains lewd or libelous comments or implications. Letters
Had Iraq invaded Kuwait two years ago all
will not be printed if their sole purpose is for advertising and not information.
the U.S. could have done was to protest and
Letters to the editor and all other correspondence can be delivered to PIONEER'S pound some fists on the desk. Bombing Baghdad
mailbox in Students Services or send to PIONEER, 250-2 South Orange Street, #507, would have been the equivalent of bombing
Escondido, C 92025. Letters should not be longer than 250 words and must be
A
Warsaw or Prague.
the U,S. Granada and Panama what was the
other party supposed to do? Bomb Moscow or
Washington and commit suicide? No. Pound a
fist on the desk and then it was business as usual.
Stability not hostility was the motto of the cold
war.
Nowhere was it felt more than in West Germany, where I grew up. Both Germanys were
the crown jewels of their defense alliance with
we Germans living on both sides of the very
edge between East and West. We called the
border the Iron Curtain; the other side called it
the Capitalistic Protection Rampart. Whatever
its name, a breaching of that barrier by either
signed by the author with^h[s/1ier^hqne number.
K EN BAUERMEI!STER/PIQNEER
�PIONEER/TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991
Local Comedy Nite
has every element
of successful clubs
LARRY BOISJOLIE/PIONEER
With its highly conservative attitude and particularly austere
lifestyle, finding a good stage for jokes in North County can be as
difficult as finding a condom in a monastery. But Comedy Nite in
Oceanside uses just therightblend of atmosphere and talent to
make even the most prudish of San Diego audiences burst with
laughter.
'
The atmosphere at Comedy Nite contains all the traditional j tt
elements one would expect in a comedy club. The walls are
™
adorned with pictures of many of today's brightest comedians. The
stage has a traditional backdrop of bricks and is conveniently close
to die patrons for maximum performer-audience interaction.
Drinks with names like ' The Elaine 'Booz'ler," "The Yakov
Smirnoff* and the "The Pee Wee Herman" are served alongside
food items with names like "The Robin Williams" and "The
George Carlin."
But the real stars at Comedy Nite are the performers themselves.
For an entertainment club that is barely a year old, Comedy Nite
hosts a surprisingly adept scope of talent Everyone from the
emcee to the headliner on the night I attended was top-notch in the
not-so-subtle art of generating laughter.
The show on Feb. 25 began with a Mexican-American comedian from Lubbock, Texas named Raphael. As emcee, Raphael set
the tone of the show with a series of witty jokes about his heritage.
He interwove a Mexican-American perspective into a routine that
touched on everyday observances and occurrences.
The first act introduced by Raphael was Pierre, a performer
¡from Washington D.C. Pierre was by far the most disappointing
performer of the night. His downfall was not due to the lack of
snappiness in his routine, but rather from the abruptness of i t
After warming the audience up with a series of clever gags
about hitchhikers, Pierre quickly packed up his show and yielded
to the next performer, leaving the audience thirsting for more.
Having gone to the trouble of bringing Pierre in from D.C., the
least Comedy Nite could have done was give him a few more
minutes.
In stark contrast, the headliner, San Diego's own Peter Gaulke,
had too much time on die stage. Gaulke, who recently appeared on
SEE COMEDY/PAGE 10
S TAN E A S L E Y & M
Comedian Peter Bermen shows off
during a Feb. 25 performance^
�TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991 /PIONEER
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Pictures of top-notch comedians adorn the walls at Comedy Nite in Oceanside.
S TAN EASLEY/PIONEER
ASHTON'S
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Comedian and his f aithful dog
show t hat laughter is not blind
Fax Number 727-0342
L ARRY BOISJOLIE/PIONEER
Michael Lee stands on stage with
his dog, a golden retriever named
Troy, and launches a joke.
"Would you like to see my dog
do a trick," asks Lee.
The crowd responds with affirmative applause.
"So would I," says Lee.
Most comedians would have
trouble eliciting any kind of
laughter with this joke, but in Lee's
case it is a big success.
Michael Lee is blind, and Troy is
not only his best friend, he's his
eyes as well.
Lee represents a unique brand of
entertainer that can take a disability,
that would be a tragedy to most, and
transform it into comedy.
Apartfromcomedy, Lee hosts a
radio show for people with disabilities, gives motivational speeches
across the country and has had articles published in major magazines.
But for the 35-year-old comic,
dealing with blindness has not
always been a laughing matter.
His life of darkness began 22
years ago while lighting a fire. An
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MICHAEL LEE
explosion occurred which left him
severely burned and induced
encephalitis. Thirty days later Leè
was rendered completely blind as a
result of the encephalitis.
"I had a lot of depression then,"
says Lee. "I attempted suicide and
got into drugs and drinking."
Lee found other kids at school to
(2 months or more) and recieve a body wrap for $29
be brutal and unsympathetic to his
blindness. Problems that were
around before his blindness became
amplified after its arrival.
"I used to getridiculedat school,
like most kids, but when I became
blind it got worse," Lee says.
,
S EE LEE/PAGEA1
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PIONEER/TUESDAY, MARGH 5, 1991
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Perseverance, nerve, humor
essential for aspiring comics y
The room is packed with a
crowd of people, many fighting
the intoxication and boredom that
seems to move in waves toward
the person on stage.
One moment the mass will be
in stitches, literally spilling their
drinks onto thefloorwith
laughter. The next moment they
turn like hungry piranhas, ready
to shred the performer with razorsharp heckles.
I stood in the back of the room
awaiting my turn, hoping
desperately that the entertainer in
front of me was worse than I
could possibly be. Before I knew
it, my name was called and it was
my turn to face theficklecrowd.
I had just entered that unique
corner of the twilight zone known
as stand-up comedy.
With three major comedy
clubs and a variety of nightspots
which feature amateur and
professional comedians, the San
Diego area is a west coast Mecca
for those wishing to delve into
the art of making people laugh.
Clubs like the Improvisation
in Pacific Beach, or the Comedy
Store in La Jolla, attract name
stars like Robin Williams or
Eddie Murphy. With a little luck,
a lot of perseverance and a hell of
a lot of nerve, almost anyone
with the ability to launch a good
yuk can make it big in the local
comedy circuit.
My experience with stand-up
comedy lasted a gruelling six
months. I travelled from nightclub to nightclub, hitting every
amateur night and hoping to walk
away with at least a tenuous
grasp on my integrity.
TYPING
TYPING
S
The steps are easy for those
wishing to score a three-minute
gig at an amateur comedy night.
First meticulously write an
entertaining routine that addresses social problems in a lighthearted and quasi-intellectual
fashion and demonstrates to the
audience that not only are you a
person of wit, but of substance as
well. Or, you can do like I did
and stoop to outright stupid
jokes.
The key to putting together a
riotous routine is integrating
yourself into the script. Find that
one thing funny about yourself whether it be your looks or your
love life - and build around it. If
there is absolutely nothing funny
about yourself, then develop an
amusing alter-ego, or schtick, and
use it to do the talking.
Since I was an employee for a
grocery störe, I incorporated my
experiences with products and
customers as a gimmick. I used
everything from plastic bags to
heads of cauliflower as props.
Be sure to incorporate canned
responses to whatever hecklers
might be in the crowd. Hecklers
do not necessarily interrupt the
performance to degrade the
comedian, sometimes their
unsolicited remarks are launched
as a crude form of compliment. If
the heckler is ignored, however,
any reputation for wit that the
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8
S
performer has established will be
destroyed.
After meticulously writing and
rewriting a routine, practice it
thoroughly until it flows from
your tongue. Do it in the bathroom, in front of the mirror, or in
the car while driving. Do it in the
living room or at work, and when
you've done it enough to where it
seems natural and free-flowing,
do it in front of a non-captive
audience.
Choose your mother in-law or
boss, or anyone else who is
disinterested in what you have to
say, and launch your repertoire. If
they have trouble holding back
even the slightest of grins, then
you'rQ ready to perform. Avoid
practicing in front of dogs, cats, ztsrz
goldfish, or any other lower life
form, since it is difficult to tell if
they are smiling or even paying
attention.
B^i
The stage itself is the most
intimidating factor of the entire
comedy experience. There are
complete mixed feelings of
uncertainty and aloneness which
seem to flow from your pores
under the burning lights. Stage
fright manifests itself in the most
extreme fashion when you are
trying to make a crowd of people
laugh.
I found the feeling of terror
¡ P3P£
m
S EE THRILL/PAGE 1 1
an HBO comedy special, is probably best known for his short stints
on MTV. The madcap white-gloved
hands that trounce throughout the
video network's transmissions belong to the baggy-pants funnyman
himself.
Gaulke's routine had its shining
moments, but seemed far too
drawn-out. He stretches his clothes
far better than he stretches his
routine.
What makes Gaulke such a
prized performer, is his limber use
of his hands in the "fingerman"
schtick, and the clever way in which
he manipulates his clothing. His
"torso-man" routine was the
funniest 20 seconds of the night.
But, without question, the
funniest 20 minutes of the evening
belonged to Boston comic Peter
Bermen. A former loser on 'Star
Search' and 'Remote Control,'
Bermen was a winner with the
audience.
Not only was Bermen's stock
routine well-written and masterfully
performed, his talent of improvisation was mind-boggling as well.
With effortless ease, he bent with
the crowd. His interplay with them
was quick and user-friendly.
Bermen brought daily issues,
like the war, into his routine, and
was able to joke about sex without
using profanity. Look for him to
make it big in the future.
All of the shows presented at the
club were almost television clean.
With limited use of profanity, the
performers demonstrated that laughter doesn't have to be a four-letter
word.
On a scale of one to four
"yawps," - four "yawps" being the
best - the Comedy Nite performers I
saw got a hearty three and threequarters "yawps" and maybe a
"giggle" or two.
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�TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991/PIONEER
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9
Things began to change for Lee
in 1979, when he became involved
with the Better Understanding
Program, an organization which
educates children on how to deal
with disabilities. Through his
experiences, Lee was able to
communicate with the kids that all
people are disabled in some way.
"Kids talked about their own
disabilities," Lee says. They began
to recognize that wearing glasses or
being overweight was subject to the
same kinds ofridiculeas having a
disability like blindness.
Lee enjoyed the experience so
much, he began speaking to crowds
of people on a regular basis.
"When I speak, I like to invoke
emotions in the audience. If I can
get them to laugh, then I'm successful," Lee says,
Sixteen months ago, after his
wife left him, Lee decided it was
time to clean up his act and lead a
healthy life. He quit smoking and
EXPLORE 1 1
entered the Clean and Sober
program.
"After I quit smoking and
drinking, I was left with a whole lot
of time," says Lee. So he decided to
pursue his longtime ambition of
becoming a stand-up comedian.
Lee faced his fear of stage fright
and took a workshop by comedy
coach Lee Glickstein. After
observing Lee's ability of launching
a joke, Glickstein asked him to
perform in a comedy show highlighting disabled comedians.
"At first he asked me to do 10
minutes and I says I can do that.
The 10 minutes turned into 15, then
20 and finally I was asked to emcee
the show," says Lee.
The show, c alled Access to
Comedy,'featured two other
performers with disabilities. The
other performers were Benjamin
Stewart, a 29-inch tall comedian
with brittle-bone disease, and Joel
Rutledge, a legally blind comic with
a stuttering problem.
The show was covered by a local
San Francisco NBC affiliate and
footage of the show reached CNN.
Since the Access to Comedy*
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show, Lee has performed at San
Francisco's oldest comedy club, the
Holy City Zoo, and has done
routines in the San Diego area at
Phil McNasty's in Escondido and
Diego's Surfside in Solana Beach.
He performs in the area when
visiting his mother in Fallbrook or
his 4-year-old daughter, Robin who
lives in North County with his exwife.
Lee travels across the country,
giving motivational speeches with .
his dog Troy. Last month alone, he
travelled to Arizona, Rhode Island,
Washington D.C. and Chicago.
"Troy loves people and travelling," says Lee. "Although he
bugs club owners because he likes
to lay in the walkways."
About 50 percent of Lee's
routines deal with blindness, while
the other half focuses on modern
issues like the war and relationships. Occasionally Lee runs across
a heckler or two when doing his
routine, but he says dealing with
them is all part of the a ct
"I've been heckled," he says.
"When you work in a place that
serves alcohol, you have to be ready
to deal with hecklers. If you let
them intimidate you, then you're
gone." *
Lee says he is a "friendly
comedian," or a performer that
doesn't pick on the audience. He
says that working with an audience
is more natural to him than putting
the crowd down.
The most rewarding experience
associated with public speaking
came for Lee one night after a
presentation. "A person came up to
me after a speech and said, 'I was
considering suicide until I heard
you,'" he says.
Lee regularly hosts a radio show
in the Bay Area called 'Comic
Minds.' The program, which is
aimed at people with disabilities,
airs, through national link-up,
across the country. On the show, he
interviews comedians and takes
calls from listeners.
Someday, Lee says he would like
to do commercials on television and
build his exposure.
"Comedy has given me confi- «¿v
dence in myself to stand up and do
things," he says.
THRILL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
v
diminishing after the first laughs
from the crowd. Once you realize
that your routine is going smoothly,
the audience becomes your friend.
The measure of the best comedians is the ability to pull the crowd
into the routine. Although in
amateur comedy , repartee with the
audience is not essential, the ability
to engage in intelligent dialogue
with them will boost your status as
an entertainer:
If all this sounds terrifying and
nerve-racking to you, then perhaps
comedy is not your bag of tricks.
But if you've got that urge to ham it
up and entertain, then there is no
thrill-seeking^experience as rewarding as stand-up.
I was lucky when I performed at
my first amateur night at the
Improv.
The performer before me - John
from New York - was so bad, that a
comedy stint from Dan Quayle
would have been welcomed.
Not all of my jokes were as
successful as I had anticipated, but
at least I was able to exit from that
little corner of hell with my.
integrity unscorched.
LARRY B OISJOLIE /PIONEER
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Encinitas, CA 92024
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�12
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PIONEER/TUESDAY,
STAND
San Diego area offers a variety
of comedy locations, performers
Whether you're a member of the
audience or a polished performer,
comedy is easy tofindin the San
Diego area.
With comedy night spots and
other clubs that offer comedy
throughout San Diego, finding a
good laugh is easier than finding a
sock in the dryer. The County is one
of the premiere comedy showcases
in the nation.
Probably the best known of all
San Diego comedy spots is the Improvisation. Located in Pacific
Beach at 832 Garnet Avenue, the
Improv hosts the best that professional comedy has to offer.
With its atmosphere of brick
walls and its portraits of famous
comics, the Improv sets the tone on
how other comedy shops should be
run. Once the Improv hosted
amateur comedians, but now only
professionals perform there.
Showtimes are 8 p.m. Sunday
thru Thursday with added 10:30
p.m. performances on the weekends. You must be 21 or over to
auend shows. There is a two drink
minimum for each attendee.
Prices are $7 Sundays thru
Thursdays and $10 on Fridays and
Saturdays. For information call 4834520. |
Just to the North of the Improv
in La Jolla is The Comedy Store.
Located on Park Avenue, this
renowned comedy club features
professional as well as amateur
performers.
On Mondays and Tuesdays,
amateur comics can try out there
routines before a captive audience.
If you wish to participate, call The
Comedy Store between 3 and 3:30
p.m. on the day you wish to
perform. If you are given the opportunity to perform, call the club at
5:30 p.m. and find out your number.
First time performers may have
trouble getting booked at The
Comedy Store, but with patience
anyone can have a chance at stardom. Only 29 amateurs per night
are chosen to perform.
Showtimes at The Comedy Store
are at 8 p.m. nightly with added
performances at 10:30 p.m. on the
weekends.
Performances cost $7 during the
week and $ 10 on Fridays and
Saturdays. There is a two drink
minimum for each show. For more
information, call 454-9176.
Comedy Nite, located at 2216 El
Camino Real in Oceanside, is North
County's premiere comedy club.
Featuring only professional comedians, this night club is sure to tickle
the funny bone.
Comedy Nite is closed on
Mondays, but offers plenty of
diversified fare the remainder of the
week. Tuesdays are non-smoking
nights, where the haters of tobacco
can enjoy the show without cigarette smoke.
If you have a Comedy Nite Tshirt, performances are free on
Wednesdays and Thursdays. Two
shows are offered on Fridays and
Saturdays.
Showtimes are 8:30 p.m. on
Sundays through Thursdays with
added 10:30 p.m. performances on
the weekends. You must be 18 to
attend the shows.
Sunday is Military night at
Comedy Nite.
Admission is $6 during the week
and $8 on the weekends. There is a
two-drink minimum. For more
information call 757-2177.
The Full Moon Saloon and
Nightclub, voted North County's
best meeting bar by the Entertainer,
offers comedy on Wednesdays from
9 to 11 p.m. The Full Moon is
located at 485 First Street in
Encinitas.
A $3 cover charge is required for
admittance. For information call
436-7397. ,
The Bahia Resort Hotel in San
Diego has is fairly new to the
comedy scene with its Comedy
Isle. Located at 998 W. Mission
Bay Drive, Comedy Isle offers
nightly performances by professional comedians.
Showtimes are at 8:30 p.m.
nightly with added shows on
Fridays and Saturdays.
For more information call 4886872.
The Stand-Up, a production
from the Messier Entertainment
groiip, runs a number of shows
throughout the area. The group
features big-name comedians from
across the country.
At these locations, ticket prices
are $5 on Wednesdays, Thursdays
and Sundays.
• Phil McNasty's, located in the
old Whiskey Flats Building at 1260
W. Valley Parkway in Escondido,
offers comedy Thursdays thru
Saturdays at 8 p.m.
For more information, call 7454119. You must be 21 to attend.
• Bonita Store Restaurant and
Nightclub, located at 4014 Bonita
Road in Bonita, offers routines
Wednesdays thru Sundays at 8 p.m.
Dancing follows showtimes.
For more information call 4793544.
• Croce's Top Hat Bar and
Grille, located at 818 5th Avenue in
the heart of San Diego, offers
routines Thursdays thru Saturdays
at 8 p.m. Rhythm and Blues follows
each comedy show. No smoking is
allowed.
For more information call 2371151.
• Starlight Cruises on Sea
Cruise San Diego offers comedy
on a floating stage. Passengers of
the cruise line get to watch comedy
and use the ships casino and watch
a Vegas-type variety show.
Cost for a one-day cruise to
Ensenada is $79 during the weekdays and $99 on weekends. Prices
include three meals. A $12 port fee
is also charged.
The ship departs San Diego
Harbor at 9 a.m. and returns
between 10:30 and 11 p.m. A threehour stay in Ensenada is included.
Proof of citizenship and birthdate is
required.
For information call 275-1322.
Tickets can be purchased by phone
or at the dock.
• Club Coronado, at the Naval
Amphibious Base in Coronado,
offers shows Wednesdays thru
Fridays at 8 p.m.
Only Department of Defense
authorized guests and patrons will
be admitted.
For information call 437-2937.
San Diego radio station 9 IX
offers a phone service called the Xline which gives information on all
types of entertainment. With a
touch-tone phone, callers can be
connected to any of the Stand-up
group's showings. The number for
the X-line is 296-XXXX.
Diego's Surfside in Sblana
Beach also offers comedy fare on
occasions. Showtimes are at around
8 p.m. For information on comedy
at Diego's, call 755-4813.
�ÂGDEN1
TUESDAY, MARCH 5. 1991/PIONEER
Personal a ttention runs through D'Jade Vine
DEBBIE D U F F Y / P I O N E E R
Ifexcellent food, outstanding service and reasonable prices are your
criteria for good oriental dining, then
break out your chopsticks and dig in
at D' Jade Vine in San Marcos.
With a menu that includes both
familiar Chinese dishes and wonderfully different Vietnamese food, this
family-owned restaurant offers a
quaint and comfortable dining atmosphere that is sure to maximize your
dining enjoyment.
The owners of the restaurant treat
all diners as if they were houseguests.
They're not afraid to get personal
with the clientele and frequently stop
O LLEGIATE
by the tables just to engage in friendly
chit chat. Before leaving, make sure
you have a conversation with Willie,
the "owner's husband," who is a delightful conversationalist
If you like your food lively, or
prefer it tame, D' Jade Vine lets you
choose the spiciness ofyourown meal.
Diners can request hotness by using a
simple one to ten scale.
For example, if you like food to
blow your tastebuds to Saturn, choose
OURMET
a 10 in spiciness. Caution should be
used, when choosing this degree of
hotness, since oriental spices can make
your food too scathing to enjoy. Even
if you like it hot, start out with a lower
degree of heat and work your way up.
An excellent choice for an appetizer is the six homemade egg rolls for
$2.85, which are crunchy on the outside with spices, tender vegetables
and meat on the inside.
You can try capturing some of the
best main dishes of the orient for just
$3.95 to $5.50.
Their Chickcn Chop Suey (Rau
Xao), which contains large pieces of
chicken, sliced cabbage, mushrooms,
carrots, watercress, broccoli and onions, is drenched in a wonderful broth.
The Sweet and SourChicken (Mon
Chua Ngot) is absolutely mouth-watering. Crunchy on the outside, tender
and delicate on the inside, it is served
with slices of carrots, green peppers,
onions and pineapple. The sauce is
thick and honeyed and delicious.
D'Jade Vine's vegetarian selections are equally as delectable as its
other dishes. The Vegetarian Chow
Mein and Egg Foo Young are espe-
cially exquisite.
If you like unique and exotic beverages, ask Willie about the restaurant's specialty fruit drinks. Particularly notable is the Cherimoya juice.
The exotic fruit yields a drink that is
as thick as a milkshake and as sweet
as candy. If you like a little bit of
tartness to your drink, try the JackfruiL
Beer and wine arc also served for
those who like to compliment, their
food with adult beverages.
Located at 1450 W. Mission Road
in San Marcos, (down the street from
Palomar College) D'Jade Vine is not
a place where you want to chop-chop
and rush your meal. Stay awhile and
enjoy the food and atmosphere.
Six poets t o perform
in benefit for journal
LARRY B OISJOLIE /PIONEER
Patrick Bergin haunts Julia Roberts in 'Sleeping with the Enemy.'
Raising funds for Cal State San
Marcos' first literary journal can be a
culturally rewarding experience for
the community and college as well.
This is the approach of journal
organizer Regina John, who has organized a poetry reading to raise funds
fpr the infant project. John has assembled six poets that reflect both
gender and cultural diversity in a
reading scheduled March 17.
"An important aspect of this university is furthering cultural interest,"
John said. Through the presentation,
John said she hopes to show the
community that poetry reading can be
entertaining and intellectually fulfilling as well.
The six artists scheduled to read
their works volunteered time and talent in order to show their support for
the journal. All have been published
and reflect global diversity.
Reading for the two-hour event
will be poets Steve Kowit, A1 Zolynas, James Allen, Kari Elliot, Karen
Kenyan and Diane Hill, all of which
currently reside in the San Diego area.
Hill has been published in several
poetry anthologies including the 1985
'Seacoast Poets Anthology' and a
journal entitled 'Up Against the Wall
Mother.' She is a freelance writer in
the San Diego area.
Kenyan, an instructor at SDSU
and MiraCosta College, writes both
prose >and poetry and published her
Sleeping with Enemy' a real snoozer
Julia Roberts is on a roll. Since 'Pretty Woman'
came out last year, her name has been synonymous
with box office success. As the daughter who dies in
'Steel Magnolias* or a medical student playing with
death in 'Flatliners,' she's had one hit after another.
She's also been nominated as Best Actress in this
year's Academy Awards.
And now Roberts is in a new thriller called
'Sleeping with the Enemy.' In the movie, she plays
Laura Burney, a woman married to an obsessive,
abusing man (played by Patrick Bergin).
She decides she's had enough abuse and fakes
her own death. She relocates in Iowa, takes on
another name and begins her life anew.
Her next door neighbor (Kevin Anderson) falls
for her, but she hesitates at getting involved with any
man again. Eventually, he wins her trust and she
tells him her story.
But it's only a matter of time before her husband,
Martin, figures out what Laura has done. The sus-
W ENDY W ILLIAMS
pense
builds as
he gets
ever closer
to finding
out where
she is.
F rom
o utcome
ofthe final
confrontation is predictable. There are no surprises here,
which is unfortunate.
The filmakers have decided to rely on tried and true
characters. The only notable exception is Anderson who
shines in what could have been an obscure role.
Still, if you have the chance, check out a truly suspenseful 'Silence of the Lambs' instead of 'Sleeping with the
Enemy.'
P IONEER FILM C RITIC
first book entitled 'Sunshower* in
1981. The story of her child with
Down's Syndrome led her to writing.
Elliot is a poet from Norway who
currently teaches at National U n i v e r v
sity in Vista.
The winner of two Hopwood
awards for his poetry, Allen has published several poetry collections including, 'See the Lighthouse Burning* and 'Beggars Could Write.'
Zolynas is an Austrian born poet
who has travelled the world in search
of a home: He teaches at USIU in San
Diego, and has published a collection
called 'The New Physics.'
Kowit teaches at Southwestern
College and has published a collect
tion called, 'The Maverick Poets.'
John said she received "enthusiastic" cooperation from CSUSM, particularly from Dr. Ken Mendoza of
the English Department, who will
emcee the event. She enlisted the help
of student Tanis Brown to acquire the
free use of a room at the Joslyn Center, 111 Richmar Rd. in San Marcos.
Currently, the journal has received
over 60 submissions, but has no resources to fund the $1,500 project.
Even though admission to the reading
is free, John said she hopes viewers
will be inspired to give donations for
the cause.
The presentation will begin at 4
p.m. on March 17. There will be an
. intermission in the show and refreshments can be purchased. Admission
is free.
�PIONEER/TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991
14
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�TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991/PIONEER
On C ampus
CASSI: Computer Assisted Study
Skills Instruction from Georgia Tech
has arrived and is available for students to use in the Library. The study
skills program offers assistance in
Time Management, E ffective
Notetaking, Taking Exams and S tudying Mathematics. Orientation workshops are held in the Computer Lab,
Building 135, on March 14 from 1 to
2 p.m. and April 22 from 2 to 3 p.m.
471-3500
F riday E vening S peaker's
Series: Dr. Patricia Huckle, SDSU
North County Dean, will start this
semester's speakers series on March
8. She will be discussing her forthcoming biography, 'Tis Sommers:
Activistand the Founding of the Older
Women's League.' All events in the
series will be held in the Library at 7
p.m. It is free. 471-3515
SIGI PLUS: Systems of Interactive Guidance and Information is a
computer software program designed
to assist college students in their career decisions. Orientations for this
computer system, located in the Library Computer Lab, are March 18
and April 18 at noon.
CALENDAR
Stress Management Seminar: A
Stress Management and performance
Anxiety Reduction seminar will be
held March 11 at 11 a.m. and March
21 at 4 p.m. Both seminars will be
heldintheMultipurpose Room, Building 145.
Study Skills: A workshop to assist
in improving test performances and
reduce test anxiety is being offered
March 14 at 4 p.m. Reviewing the
Self Help Counseling resources on
campus will also be included in this
session, held in the Multipurpose
Room, Building 145.
University Ball: The fourth annual Cal State San Marcos University
Ball is being held at the Rancho Bernardo Inn April 6. This is the university's main fundraiser event of the
year and has always attracted a soldout crowd. Tickets are $125 and the
affair is black tie.
M usic
Alley Cat: Performs with Precious
Metal and Catch 22 at the Bacchanal
March 8.278-8497/560-8022 y
B.B. King: Gives two~ifcrformances on March 12 at the Bacchanal,
San Diego. 278-8497/560-8022
15
Big Sandy & the Fly-Rite Trio: Room D-10, Palomar College camPerform March 8 at Bodie's. San pus. Admission is free. 744-1150, Ext.
2316
Diego. 236-8988
Papa John Creach: Performs
California Connection Jazz:
Performs Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m . at the March 6 through 10 at Elario's, atop
San Luis Rey Downs, and at the the Summer House Inn, La Jolla. 459Lawrence Welk Restaurant, Escon- 0541
dido, on Thursdays at 8:30 p.m. Call Precious Metal: Performs with
758-3762 or 749-3253 respectively. Alley Cat and Catch 22 at the BacchaCatch 22: Performs with Precious nal March 8.278-8497/560-8022
Metal and Alley Cat at the Bacchanal
Progressive jazz jam sessions:
March 8.278-8497/560-8022
Mondays at 8 p.m. at the Metaphor
China Doll: Performs March 7 at Coffee House, Escondido. 489-8890
8 p.m. at the Metaphor Coffee House, Scorpions: Performs with Trixter
at 8 p.m. on March 11 at the San
Escondido. 489-8890
E arl T homas & the Blues Diego Sports Arena. 278-8497
Ambassadors: Perform March 4 and S OHO: Performs Tuesdays
5 at Elario's, atop the Summer House through Saturdays at 9 p.m. at the
Ocean Terrace Lounge, Hotel del
Inn, La Jolla. 459-0541
522-8040
Folk Music Hoot Night: Every Coronado. homas' Big Band Swing
Tami T
Wednesday at the Metaphor Coffee & Dixie/Jazz Band: Performs every
House, Escondido. 489-8890
a 7:30 p at the
Golden oldie j am sessions: Hap- Wednesdayan tMarcos..m.71-2939Mission Inn, S
4
pens 2 to 5 p.m. at the Ice Cream
Wild Child: Performs March 16
Shoppe, Rancho Bernardo, on Satur- at the Bacchanal, San Diego. 278days.
Monks of Doom: Performs March 8497/560-8022
Marcalis:
7 at 9 p.m. at the Casbah, San Diego. 10 Wyntonacchanal, SPerforms April
at the B
an Diego. 278294-9033
.8497/560*022
* Fálómár Conege Conceit Hoiifl
Pianist Peter Gach is featured in this
weeks noon conceit on March 7, in T heater
The Symbol o f t he Future
PIONEER'S 'P' stands alone as a representation of what is to come for the
university, the city of San Marcos, and the entire North County. The type
depicts something in the future while the letter doubles as a question mark;
those questions of college plans, student activities, academic developments, new classes and teachers are answered in PIONEER.
Join PIONEER and the university in starting tomorrow's dreams; come
aboard with a staff that shows different angles to simple news.
"The Future S tarts Today"
7 38-0666
Brendan Behan: Confessions of
an Irish Rebel: The LaPaloma Theater in Encinitas presents this one-man
shdw about this play write. Tickets are
$14 and $16.1-800-794-7474
Blue Plate Special: This soapopera parody is performed by the
Santee Community Theater through
March 24.448-5673
The Hobbit: Montreal's Theater
sans Fil uses puppets to portray
Tolkein's fantasy. This show is March
6 at 7:30 p.m. at the Poway Center for
the Performing Arts. Tickets are $ 12$20.748-0505
Improvizado Psychotto: The
Naked Theater Group presents this
Monday show indefinitely at the
Marquis Public Theater, San Diego.
Shows starts at 7 p.m. 236-1347
Killing M r. Withers: This participation play is presented by the
Mystery Cafe at the Imperial House
Restaurant, San Diego, through July
31. Tickets are $32 and $34 and include dinner. 544-1600
Oklahoma!: The Lawrence Welk
Resort Theater present Rodgers and
Hammerstein's musical about the
changing Old West Performances run
through April 7. Tickets are $29-$36.
749-3448
Woman in Mind: The Gaslamp
Quarter Theater Company presents
this dark comedy about a woman's
daydreams and marriage. Show runs
through March 17. Tickets are $20
and $22.234-9583
F ilms
Gangster Film Archetypes: the
San Diego Museum of Contemporary
Art presents this film series about
1930s gangsters:
SCARFACE - Paul Muni's
portrayal of a Capone-like mobster.
Marchó.
* Each show screens at 7:30 p.m. in
the Sherwood Auditorium, La Jolla.
454-3541
Silent Film C lassics: The
Grossmont-Cuyamaca College of
Extended Studies presents a series of
classic silent films accompanied by
the San Diego Cine-Phonic Orchesl
tra: f
CAPTAIN JANUARY (1924) Star Diana Cary makes an
appearance to introduce this film and
tell a few stories of being a child star.
March 9.
• There will be two more films
at the end of the year. Shows start at
7:30 p.m. at the East County Perform^
ing Arts Center, 8800 Grossmont
College Drive, El Cajon. 465-1700
The Festival of Animation: Enjoy 17 animatedfilmsfrom 11 different countries each performance
through April 28. Shows air at the San
Diego Museum of Contemporary Art,
La Jolla. Tickets range from $6 to $7,
551-9274
A rt
Gallery Vista: Showing Square
One - At the Beginning', a multimedia exhibition by Sondra Parks and
Ten Rider through March 16. The
gallery is at 226 E. Broadway, Vista.
Call for times. 758-5258
Santa Fe Depot: An exhibit depicting early Escondido. The Depot is
on Heritage Walk in Grape Day Park,
Escondido. Call for times. 743-8207
TheMayfair Gallery: Traditional
and contemporaryfineart in all media
by Peter Beckman, Laura McCreeryJordan, Jim Rabby and others. The
Gallery is located at 162 S. Rancho
Santa Fe Road, Encinitas. Call for
times. 942-9990
4
E xtra
Moscow Circus: The Soviet's
finest circus performers perform their
show at the San Diego Sports Arena
March 13-17.Ticketsare$8-$20.2788497/224-4176
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Dublin Core
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Title
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<h2>1990-1991</h2>
Description
An account of the resource
The first 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 PI
Original Format
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newspaper 11 x 13.5
Pioneer
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
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Pioneer
March 5, 1991
Subject
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student newspaper
Description
An account of the resource
Volume 1, Number 11 of the first independent student newspaper on the CSUSM campus. The cover story is about the recent storms that have rained down on campus. Inside the paper is a story about the recent activity to hire faculty campus-wide.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Pioneer
Source
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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
1991-03-05
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
faculty
library
rainstorm
spring 1991
Student Government Task Force