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                  <text>Volunteer
Day/Career
Fair

Highlights
Pages

Volume 1, Number 9

A student publication serving California State University, San Marcos

8-9

Friday, March 11,1994

COVER STORY

Second

Annual

Pow

/ CSUSM will hoM its Second Annua! Pow Wow March 18-19 In tfce
stud$ntparkmg lot at the CSUSM campus located onTwin OalciGalley Road.
Cdefec^pg the cultural richness of
four West-:
:
er» states.
S7
^
&gt;4 ; The Pow Wow fes&amp;tft^ cultural
eSreiits.such as intertribal dancing, drum
competition, native foods, and America*! i ndi^ ait^ and crafc/Thefirstday
also -includes workshops designed to
-. ejpic^^
middle and
high scteicijstudents tp go tocollege.
"'• .Last
matel^
people over three days,
with representation from 70 sovereign
Indian nations.
ises to be equally successful. The program includes gourd dancing, Aztec
Dahcere?t^^
and
• many
Pow Wow is an important
event for &gt;the Indian community, the
general public, and the University," said
. Drd^

Wow Committee.
. P o w Wow -^spoiasored by:
Nbrfsttem, CSf ^Si Foundation, Indian
Student^ Cfega^izatioh, ^
Diego
area Indian Wsinesses and community .
•
activities are ^
freeand open to the public. The master
ofeireippii^
Edmonds. T^e hours arefrom4 PM to
Midnifghibn Fi^Jajr*
and 9 AM
to Mi#ight on Saturday'Mar. 19.
;JPoc additional information call
? 52~4945V V : V

^

Photo/Daniel Mason

�This week...
• Things to Do in S D over Spring Break
• 3-Year Degrees

P age 11

• Arizmendi to Perform
• Summer Schedule

Support Groupsstudents helping
students
K aren Morones
Contributing Writer
The endeavor of acquiring an
education can be exhilarating and
fulfilling, yet it also can be stressful
and require sacrifices. We often have
to suspend other important aspects of
our lives, such as employment, relationships, and leisure activities. When
students cope with the difficulties
and share in the excitement together,
the educational pursuit can become
much easier. Support is available on
the campus of CSUSM.
Support groups bring together
people who share common concerns
and help each person to cope more
effectively. In a relaxed, comfortable atmosphere, students assist each
other with personal and educational
challenges. Through shared understanding and the exchange of ideas
with peers, students in support groups :
• experience a sense of control
over their lives
• reduce the feeling of isolation.
• obtain a better perspective on
their problems
• have the opportunity to discuss emotions
• share and reinforce positive
coping skills.
To join a CSUSM support
group, simply be there. With no fee
or obligation to attend every week,
just come when you feel the need.
Support groups meet in Room 5205,
Craven Hall in the Student Resource

P age 13

P age12

P age 14

University Employee/Students Pay
Lower Fees
True or false...? University
employees who are also students at
CSUSM (UES) pay full fees including tuition and other expenses.
What? You guessed incorrectly?
That's right! UESs do not pay nary
the amount of fees that full or even
part-time students pay.
How much do the UES pay,
you might ask? Well, the grand
total is $3 per semester up to six
units. Yes sir, three bucks. One
dollar is allotted for Student Unibtf
fees, one dollar is earmarked for
Health Facilities, and the last dollar
is allocated for Student Body Associated fees.

But wait...aren't the UESs
entitled toafewperks? Ofcourse,
sure, but should they be completely exempt from paying fiill
fees, especially student fees, since
after all, they are students?
The ironic part is that it is
entirely possible for the UESs to
rlin for an elected position on the
Associated Students council. This
means that the UES who pays
nominal fees, at most, is given
the responsibility of representing
full-fee-paying students.
I 'm not suggesting that the
UESs are not entitled to repre-

sentation on the A.S. council; a student is a student is a student, no matter
how great or small the monetary contribution to a c&amp;sh-strapped system.
But a conflict arises when those
who do not contribute monetarily are
able to participate fully in the programs sponsered by the rest of the
fundingpopulace, simply because they
are students.
Perhaps the university, during
this time of financial dire straits, would
reconsider its position of favoritism
towards its employees and commit
the UESs to paying their fair share of
fees.

Center at the following times:
Mondays:
11 AM-12 Noon
Parenting Support Group
12 Noon - 1 PM
General Support Group
Tuesdays:
11 AM-12Noon
General Support Group
4 PM - 5 PM
General Support Group
Thursdays:
12 Noon - 1 PM
Military Spouse's Support
Group
We also offer a Therapy
G roup with Dr. Darlene Pina on
Thursdays 12 Noon to 1 PM.
Unlike a Support Group, a Therapy
Group deals with deeper issues
that require a facilitator who is a
Ivaiee Clark
qualified therapist. Also different
s
fromthe Support Groups, youmust i&lt; Dkecu&gt;rSi^ponSeihicis&lt;f, \
/.ispfelis' to ^mbM your .qiies^
sign up for the Therapy Group l ^^^riSSUSSi^' r e e l i n g pro^ B ^ i e ^ ^ g V i ^ c I a b f e ; and |
prior to attending. Please register \
proven to b e a big
in Room 5115 or call 752-4910, j j siitoess, ^ n^mNa^his is not a
• 1+.. Plastic grocery .bags canthe counseling telephone number.
* one-time e ffort but an on-goihg
j i S t f program.
If you are interested in a iti^^M^j^
'v
J (Grocery
Support Group, but you cannot
fl^ttdi^^urnWaste I
of
v*
Ppstiit notes CAN be reattend during any of the times
and Recycling Services to o b-j these bags. H ea^e^^toh your cycled, i
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listed, please come to the Student*
serve the^"dumpliig* pf our I plastic bags t&amp; bins p&gt;vided a t &gt;
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jackets CAN be
Resource Center in Room 5205,
mixedpaper pick-up. Although 1
recycle*!
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Craven Hall, or call us at 752- , itwasconsideredacleancollec- |
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^ M ^ M m ^ mail CAN be re4943 and suggest additional times.
timf we d o need improvement CFhese bags have lowfiber concycil^L
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We welcome your suggestions and
iii the following areas:
tent andamiibtrecyclable. J Us
E n v e l o p {including
ideas.
i I ; Student Newspaper (should better to request plastic bagsand
those with windows) CAN be re&gt; gQr into the mmp&amp;per bins).
cycled, *
Shredded paper in plastic eery store to te recycled*)
10: N tmpaperJCANberebags ( shied^paperis great
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i&gt;iit the plastic bags ate not pers c annotbe recycled {saalta- cycled, ^ .
Thanks to all of you foryour
T recyclable).
cooperation iii making our effort to
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Cardboard backing on
waste- suciKbW^ b e thrown i nto the pads ofpaper arid boxesthat pencess.If you d onot have a mixed
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high;

•*The Writing Center®*

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�CSUSM to Honor Bill Daniels at Annual
University Ball
CSUSM will honor Bill Daniels at its 7th
Annual University Ball. Widely regarded as
"the father of cable television," Daniels is
chairman of Daniels Communitcations Inc., a
diversified group of companies including
Daniels &amp; Associates.
"Bill Daniels was selected as this y ear's
honoree because of his vision, leadership,
high ethical standards, and community service, all of which are legendary. H e is widely
respected not only f or his remarkable accomplishments in the business world but also f or
his philanthropic activities. Supportive of
higher education, Daniels funded C SUSM's
first endowed chair. Daniels represents the
ultimate aim of our university; he is an outstanding citizen of his country and community, and, in addition, he is a role model of
business acumen, fairness, and success," said
President Bill Stacy.
Over the years, Daniels has received countless awards for his civic leadership. He is
known both as an entrepreneur and a humanitarian. He served as the earliest leader of the
fledgling cable trade association, founded the
first cable brokerage company and launched
the first cable investment banking business.
He owned and operated hundreds of cable
television systems, created dozens of innovative sports programming companies, and
along the way, has devoted a sizable share of

• &gt; -V/ '
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1

time to the creation of new civic enterprises,
helping those less fortunate, and cultivating a
new generation of industry leaders. Daniels
is an active participant in federal and state
government and remains an outspoken advocate of America's f ree enterprise system.
In 1992, Bill was honored with a special
Emmy Award f rom the National Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences for his unparalleled record of achievement J n the development of television, and f or his humanitarian
work.
C SUSM's ball will be held at the Sheraton
Grande Torrey Pines in La Jolla on April 9.
For information call Jane Lynch at 752-4406.

nUnplanned Pregnancy?1
Decisions To Make?
Don't face this
crisis alone —
We Provide
• Free Testing
• Medical Referrals
• Shelter Homes
• Practical Help

s

N o N e e d to F eel A lone
We C an H e l p Y on.

(Comptetely Confidential-AO Services Are Free)

irthright

277 S. Rancho Santa Fe Rd.
SuiteS
San Marcos, CA 92069

744-1313

150-A N. El Camino Real
Wiegand Plaza
Encinitas, CA 92024

942-5220

2 4 H r H otline 1-SOO-848-LOVE

Poli Sci Candidates demonstrate
teaching styles
Amy Glaspey
Staff Writer
Even candidates for faculty positions at
CSUSM have to pass a challenging test—the
teaching test.
The Political Science Department is in
the process of hiring a new faculty member to
teach in one of two categories: Political Behavior and American Politics or Public Law
and Political Theory. Before a faculty member is accepted, he or she must pass a teaching
test.
"Here at CSUSM, a faculty member's
main responsibility is teaching. We put the
candidates in an environment where we can
evaluate their teaching," said Dr. Peter Zwick,
head of the Political Science Department.
Friday, March 4th and Monday, March
7th, two candidates demonstrated their teaching styles in front of CSUSM students. Dr.
Helena Silverstein joined six students last
Friday to discuss contemporary constitutional
law issues in a seminar format. Monday, Dr.
Louis DiSipio, presented a lecture on Latino
voting patterns to a senior seminar class of
twenty.
Dr. Zwick said that putting candidates in
an actual classroom setting serves two purposes. "First we are inviting student reaction.
Second, we are watching and evaluating their
performance in that setting."
After Silverstein and DiSipio's presentations, Dr. Zwick invited students to give him
feedback on the candidates performance and
teaching style.
"Traditionally, major universities invite
top candidates to a seminar," Zwick said.
Candidates will then "make a formal presentation of their research containing lots of
data" to the decision-making committee.
Sometimes graduate students are invited to
the seminar.
The Political Science Association, a
CSUSM student organization, was actively
involved in bringing the candidates closer to
the students. In lieu of a scheduled Political
Science class Friday March 4th, the PSA
gathered together students to sit in with Dr.
Silverstein. "The PSA was really helpful in
getting people to come out and listen," Zwick
said.
These classroom presentations were the
final step in a candidate selection process that
began last fall. When the Political Science
Department obtained authorization to hire a
new faculty member the decision making
committee (Dr. Zwick, Dr. Golich and Dr.
Thompson) announced the position in a trade
publication called "American Political Science Personnel Service Newsletter."
They also "put the word out" to other
universities.
The committee continued their search in
Washington D.C. at the American Political
Science Association's meeting in September
1993.

* The APSA meeting hall was a virtual
'meat-rack* said Dr. Zwick, where candidates and universities looking for faculty met
for interviews. Dr. Zwick, Dr. Golich and Dr.
Thompson spent time at the meeting "getting
the word out and looking for a good candidate."
Applications and resumes rolled in last
fall. Over winter break the committee evaluated the applications and broke candidates
down to a short list of twenty then into a
shorter list of eleven.
"Since all eleven looked good on paper"
it was time to conduct in-depth phone interviews to further evaluate the contenders. Economics Professor Arnold joined the team.
The committee spent one-half hour on a
speaker phone with each of the eleven finalists to evaluate their "personality, interests
and how they came across verbally." These
phone sessions "added another dimension to
the selection process," said Zwick.
Financial constraints prohibited inviting
more than two candidates to visit CSUSM for
final interviews and classroom performance
tests. The Political Science Department has a
total selection budget of $2,000 to cover
airfare, food and lodging for all of the candidates combined.
Dr. Helena Silverstein is currently a professor of Government and Law at Lafayette
College in Pennsylvania. She earned her Ph.D.
at the University of Washington. Silverstein's
academic interest is "Legal Mobilization"
(using the legal process as a means of social
change).
Dr. Louis DiSipio is a p rofessor at
Wellesley College in Massachusetts. He
earned his Ph.D. at the University of Texas in
Austin. His area of expertise is elections and
political behavior.
Who will make last cuts? Silverstein or
DiSipio? Will the selection c ommittee's
choice coincide with the students' favorite ?
The word is not out yet. The final decision
will be made early this week. When the hiring
process is complete, The Pride will publish a
profile of our new political science faculty
member.

VOLUNTEERS
NEEDED FOR POW
WOW
Volunteers are needed f orCSUSM's Pow
Wow scheduled for March 18 and 19 to help
with setup, breakdown and other activities.
A meeting will be scheduled f or volunteers prior to March 18. If y ou'd like to get
involved and be a part of this annual tradition,
call 752-4945.

�Psychology
Student Research
Fair
planned forApril 13
r

1

T he Psychology Student Organiza
A tion (PSO) and the local chapter of
Psi Chi (The National Honor Society in Psychology) are proud to announce the First
Annual California State University San
Marcos Psychology Student Research Fair
on April 13,1994. This will be a full day of
events including research paper and poster
presentations by many CSUSM psychology
students, learning workshops, guest speakers, and a lot of fun. Poster presentations and
fun events will be held in Founder's Plaza,
and guest speakers and student paper presentations will be in Academic Hall.
The day will be highlighted by two
guest speakers—Dr. Mark Snyder, Professor
of Social Psychology and Chair of the Department at the University of Minnesota; and,
Dr. Brett Clements from UCSD who will
speak on "Individual Differences in Schizophrenia." Times and places to attend these
and other presentations will soon be announced.
Mark your calendars and plan to attend
the 1994 CSUSM Psychology Research Fair.
The official schedule will appear in the next
issue of The Pride. Beapartoftraditioninthe
making!

Commencement
Youth Service
Dinner Dance Planned Awards—Nomination
Tickets for the Commencement Dinner Deadline Extended
Dance, to be held on April 30,1994, will go
on sale in the University Store on March 14th.
The deadline to purchase tickets will be April
22nd so please plan ahead.
Student tickets will be $15.00. Faculty, staff and alumni tickets will be $22.50.
Sponsor tables, which will sponsor two needy
students to go the the dance at no cost, will be
$275.00 for the table of 10.
To purchase alumni and sponsor tables
you will need to go through Student Activities. More information regarding this event
will be coming soon, any question in the
mean time can be brought to the Associated
Students Office located in Commons 205 or
by phone to 752-4990.

Wd#foTe^h
V

Who do you know that deserves to be
recognized? The North San Diego County
community has responded to the President's
Service Awards with enthusiasm and the
nominations are pouring in. The President's
Youth Service Award ceremony is planned
for Tuesday, April 19 at 6:30 PM at the
CSUSM campus. Won't you please be a part
of this special project? If you have questions
or comments, please contact either Gabriela
Sonntag or Brittany Crist in the Library.
The deadline for nominations for the
President's Youth Service Awards has been
extended from February 28th to April 1.

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Ify &amp; ? M t i o l e a e h

New S eries

STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFERS INTERNSHIP
INFORMATION
The Office of Student Activities announced today that they currently have information and applications for internship opportunities in our nation's capital.
The Capital Experience is offering
semester or summer long internships in Washington, D.C., where students can gain valuable "real world" experience as an academic
intern. The Capital Experience is guided by
experienced educators, helps each individual
student develop and adhere to a "Learning
Plan" and offers housing, all for a reasonable
tuition cost.
If you are interested in learning more
about this unique learning experience, please
contact the Office of Student Activities at
752-4970 or stop by Commons 203. They
have informational application packets for
interestedstudents.

DuKlfa^yMZN

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From the animators
of The Simpsons.
Featuring the voices of
Jason Alexander, Tim Curry,
Nancy Travis and Dweezil Zappa.
With music by Frank Zappa.

NETWORK

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Saturdays 10:30 PM/9:30 Central

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�New Construction Director
is Named
T he B urn h am F oundation S cholarship
T wo $1 &gt;000 s ^ b o i ^ W ^ wiH b e awarded. Criteria are as follows:
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Decker has a master's degree from the
University of Southern California and bachelor of science degree from Illinois State
University. Decker and his wife Joan live in
Cardiff By-The-Sea.

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Minority U ndergraduate Fellows Program

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M ISSION
To increase the number of minorities in student affairs and higher education.

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N ational A ssociation of S tudent P ersonnel A dministrators

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^

said President Stacy.
Since 1986, Decker has worked at the
University of California San Diego as the
Assistant Director and Coordinator of Capital Planning where he was responsible f or
planning, programming, and financing capital projects. He also worked for two years at
UCSD as an educational facilities planner.
Prior experience includes working for six
years at the University of Illinois, Urbana as
assistant director and as a policy analyst in the
Office for Planning and Budgeting.

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' V I D E O G A M E S Otf

CSUSM President Bill W. Stacy announced the appointment of Russell L. Decker
as the Director of Campus Physical Planning.
His responsibilities will include the capital
planning and capital construction f or the campus. He will start at CSUSM April 4.
"I am please that CSUSM attracted a person of such demonstrated excellence. Decker
has 13 years of experience in the planning,
coordinating, and financing of capital projects.
He worked for two major research universities, at both the system and campus level, and
managed more than $600 million in construction projects. CSUSM is a new and rapidly
growing campus and has an extensive construction program planned. We will rely
heavily on Decker's expertise to keep our
capital construction program on schedule,"

:-^

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your the bookstore,

GOALS
To provide participants with knowledge, insight, and understanding of the
opportunities available in student affairs in higher education.
To provide participants with opportunities to engage in mentoring and
networking experiences.
To provide participants with experiences in student affairs and higher
education.

0eaADUrtic»«»l Ryot* a re \

C RITERIA F OR PARTICIPATION
How can I get involved in the NJi.S.PA. Minority Undergraduate Fellows Program?
• Nominees must be ethnic minority students (Native American, African American, Asian American or Latino/Hispanic American).
. jprogftta ^

and a i c ^ j b ^
• Nominees must be completing the sophomore year or the second year in a twoyear transfer program. Students in their first year at CSUSM are eligible. .

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• Nominees must demonstrate academic promise.

Applications a re now being a ccepted.
DEADLINE: MARCH 25, 1994
Cpntact the Office of Student Activities for further information
752*4970
Commons 2 03

�Part 1: HPV—what is it?

Human Papillomavira virus
Joel Grinolds, MD, MPH

T T f you read this column frequently you
I might be wondering why I am writ
J L ing about another sexually transmitted disease. In reality, I have no idea how
many people actually read this column. Recently, I have written about other current
health concerns; however, the subject of this
column, Human Papillomavira Virus (HPV)
infection, has become a very common and
important health problem to the college-age
population. This will also be a first, the first
of a two part column, because HPV infection
is complex and misinformation is common.
Human papillomavira (HPV) is the virus
that causes warts. There are more than 60
types with approximately a dozen types that
can cause warts or subtle signs of infection in
the genital tract. Genital HPV is not a reportable disease so we do not have exact numbers
on how much of the population is infected. It
is estimated that between 500,000 to 1 million new cases of genital HPV occur each
year. It clearly is the fastestrisingviral STD.
Genital HPV is now thought to be more
contagious than previously. It is usually
spread through sexual contact with an infected person, although intercourse is not
necessary to spread the infection. In studies,
two thirds of those with genital warts infected
their partners. It is very likely that genital
HPV infection also can be transmitted when
warts are not present.
When viral infections are transmitted from
person to person the virus infects the top
layers of the skin and can remain inactive or
dormant for a long time. We are frequently
asked for how long? No one knows for sure
but months and may be years can go by before
signs of infection or warts appear. For most
people, warts will appear within three to six
months. Some types of HPV will result in
more visible warts than others. Types 6 and
11 will almost always result in visible warts.
Other types that may infect the cervix of
women may not produce visible warts. Currently, there is no easy test that is reliable,
cost effective, and helpful in treatment that
identifies the HPV type. HPV cannot be
grown in the laboratory and cannot be detected by a blood test.
We also know that when warts or other
signs of HPV occur, a healthy immune system may clear up the warts by itself over a
period of months or years. However, the
HPV may still remain, and recurrence of
warts is fairly common.
When HPV is present in the genital area
without visible genital warts one is considered to have "subclinical infection." It is
becoming very clear that subclinical infections are much more widespread than anyone

would have thought ten years ago. Also, as
research tools become more sensitive in detection of HPV we are finding a greater prevalence in patients with subclinical infection.
Many researchers believe that medical science is for thefirsttime identifying an infectious agent that likely has been widespread in
the population for decades.
What does it all mean? I will address that
in a column soon.
If you are concerned about this health
problem, read the next column and/or contact
your health care provider or Student Health
Services at 752-4915.

Student Health
Services has condoms
for sale

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| the workshop entitled 'Dangerous Prornises^The R oleof Alcohol Advertising.'
This was a very interesting and i nforma^^^ssioiidiatusedascriptedslideshow
womert
in alcohol a dvertisementsNote: This is
being countered by the Media Advocacy
campaign with slogans such as "Stop Using Our Cans t o Sell Your Cans" and

Look for these billboards coming soon to
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Student Health Services is now selling
l ^ j ^ ^ a i f e ' ^ g ^ ^ r ^ e most incondoms for $2 a dozen. These are Lifestyles
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formative session that Iattended was called
brand latex condoms and are lubricated with
responses i ^todedj^&amp;ltowiiig:
] Spring Break
fe^l^^^S^idS
was
Nonoxy nol-9, a spermicide found to be effecv Mariscalsaid,
p t^sentoiby MichaelHoff* V k ^ &amp; m M
tive both in preventing pregnancy and killing
jj
He
HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. How effective are they in preventing the spread of
a nddon'ts in northAIDS? Perhaps the most dramatic example
ern Mexico* He was well informed and
drugs wMch
fc
mp^w&amp;i a
was a study done in Europe involving discorin all, it
dant couples. This is the term used to dew m i vixy productive seminar, but as
scribe monogamous relationships where one
v i i s ^ ^ i ^ ^ ^ I u ^ ^ S ^ mo&amp;important
individual is HIV-positive and the sexual
partner is HIV-negative. In the two-year
p f TheCSUSMstudentgraupalsoshared
I wprtcsfops
study, none of the couples using latex condoms
about to
•' , David ^ l l l ^ p ^ ^ ^ S ^ f ^ ^ H
correctly with each sexual contact contracted
Diego
the virus. Of the control group not using
These
condoms, 10% contracted the disease. Latex
condoms, when used correctly and consisbold their Spring B m a l ^ H ^ F ^ n i m m
tently, also help prevent the transmission of
HPV (genital warts), Chlamydia and Genital
After attendingtheevent, the students
a fcohd
Herpes.
i ^ W ^ l ^ - ^ t o e d to the
Of course, the only truly "safe sex" is that
occurring in a mutually monogamous relationship where both partners have been tested
for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), including AIDS.
Even women who are using another form
of birth control are advised to use condoms to Susan Mendes, LVN
protect themselves against STDs.
StaffAdvisor to S.H.A.B.
The Student Health Advisory Board is
On Saturday, March 19, SHAB members
The Student Health Services Center has sponsoring two events in March. The first is are sponsoring a food booth at the American
numerous free brochures available on the use a non-alcoholic celebration on St. Patrick's Indian PowWow here on campus. They will
of condoms, STDs, and other health issues. Day. The students will be serving free be selling healthy, low-cholesterol fajitas and
The center is located on the first floor of "mocktails" (non-alcoholic cocktails) at a juice drinks. The board hopes to raise enough
Craven Hall. It is open Monday-Friday 8 AM table in Founder's Plaza from 11 AM - 1 PM funds to send a delegate to the American
to 5 PM for students who want to purchase on Thursday, March 17.
College Health Association Conference in
condoms or who need to make an appointThey will also be giving out designated Atlanta in June. Come to the Pow Wow,
ment to see the doctor. For questions or to driver buttons and information about the new dance, celebrate, and enjoy the food, knowmake an appointment, call 752-4915.
"Zero Tolerance DUI Law."
ing all the proceeds will go to a good cause for
your fellow students.

STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD TO
SPONSOR TWO EVENTS

�PUBLIC SAFETY NEWS
DUI—Don't Find Out the Hard Way
Dave Ross
Public Safety Officer

One picture is worth a thousand words!
Photo: courtesy of LA. Times

SKINNY DIP CREAM
THE AMAZING DISCO

SMOOTH APPEARANCE

on any part of the body

Distribuship Available
Call For Details.

997 W. San Marcos Blvd. Ste. 105
San Marcos
744-7165

If you drive under the influence of
alcohol, or any other drug, you risk the
chance of spending the night in a cold
place. I'm not talking about the smelly
county jail. I 'm talking about that cold
slab at the county morgue. And the worst
thing is next to you could be an innocent
pedestrian, driver of the vehicle you hit,
or even a child, maybe yours! Get the
picture?
DUI, DWI, stupidity, whatever you
want to call it. If you drink alcoholic
beverages you probably have driven under the influence. In San Diego in 1992,
23 people were killed and 542 injured in
alcohol-involved crashes. The sad thing
is this could have been avoided and the
people in those numbers were in the 16 to
20 age group. More than 43 percent of all
16 to 20-year old deaths are caused by
vehicle crashes.
Nationally, enough people die in these
crashes to fill a sports arena. Does a sold
out stadium give you a good idea? We're
talking serious numbers!
Based on the current status of drunk
driving in the U.S., two out of five people
will be involved in an alcohol-related
crash at some time in their lives.
AM I DRUNK? Some people think
you have to be stumbling or falling down
to be considered intoxicated, and unable
to drive. Well we all know that's wrong,
I hope. According to the California Vehicle Code (CVC) a person cannot drive a
vehicle with a .08 percent or more, by
weight of alcohol in his or her blood, and
sometimes as low as .05 percent. This is
only for people 21 years or older. If you
are under 21 and caught with a blood
content of .01, under the new law (SB
689) as of January 1, 1994 your license
will be suspended for one year.
There is no safe way to drink and
drive. Your skills can be impaired with a
blood alcohol content (BAC) of only .02
percent (equivalent of one 12-oz. beer, a
4-oz. glass of wine, or a 1 1/4-oz. shot of
80-proof liquor).
BAC tests measure the percent of alcohol in apersons blood based upon grams
of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood or
grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath.
These tests are performed by taking a
blood, breath or urine sample. The test is
your choice unless the facility cannot
perform a certain test. If you didn't already know you gave written consent for

chemical testing for alcohol or drugs on
your drivers license application or renewal form.
Did you know that 64 percent of passenger vehicle drivers who are fatally
injured between 9 PM and 6 AM have
BACs at or above .10 percent (the old
legal limit). Drivers with BACs above
.15 percent who drive on weekend nights
risk a 380 times higher chance of being
killed in a single vehicle crash than non
drinking drivers. For the average male
(170-189 lbs.) that's about 1.5 drinks an
hour. And for the average woman (110129 lbs.) you're at risk after 1 drink an
hour. And if you're tired, drink on an
empty stomach, have strong drinks, or
take other drugs including medicine, alcohol could further impair your driving
skills and judgment.
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN I G ET
CAUGHT? Once an officer believes
you are under the influence of alcohol or
drugs, he or she will have you perform
some field coordination tests. If the officer feels that you have failed the tests or
you refused to take them, i t's off to jail
you go. Once at the jail you are given the
chance to pick the test you want to take.
After that, you get booked, fingerprinted,
and given a nice colorful plastic bracelet.
Did I fail to mention they take all your
personal items including your shoe laces
and belts? Then you are placed in a dirty
cell with some interesting characters. Later
you have to make that embarrassing call
for someone to come and pick you up.
Plan on about five hours of time spent in
jail, and only if you are arrested for DUI
of alcohol. If you kill or injure someone
or have some other charge, plan on not
going to work for awhile.
D ON'T DRINK OR DO DRUGS
AND DRIVE.

Source: California Dept. of Motor Vehicles,
California Highway PatrolhSan Diego Police
Department, Office of Traffic Safety, and the
California Vehicle Code.

�ft

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Volunteer Day was a Hit!

:M

In the spirit of community partnership, CSUSM
says thanks to all who participated in making it
a fun day for all Students from various clubs
donated their time to work on various
community projects, including:
• cleaning up Discovery Lake Park area
• inviting public school students and Boys and
Girls Club youth to campus for workshops,
encouraging them to continue their education
• assisting in community senior activities
• helping low income individuals with tax
preparation
• plus many other volunteer activities

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�March 2 - 3

�He who conquers others is
strong. He who conquers
himself is mighty.
— Lao Tse

"Louis Farrakhan is a
Problem"
Doris and Alex Padilla
Contributing Writers

So we again find ourselves battling
over racial issues. America's obsession with
race continues, and as usual, ignorance and
paranoia persist. Unfortunately, our racial
dilemma only surfaces, or is given heightened media attention in a negative context,
and only when America is forced to address
it.
"Louis Farrakhan is a problem." So
begins the cover story of the Feb. 28, 1994
issue of Time Magazine. While most can see
an agend of racist ideology in Minister
Farrakhan's views, the real question should
be, "Why is America so concerned at this
time?" Is it that we as a society are moving
towards more racial tolerance and such words
are offensive? Is it that the "political correctness" age that we so gladly subscribe to,
allowsno room for such verbiage? Or is it
that such words coming from a group like the
Nations of Islam are just too forceful?
When an organization through a charismatic leader like Farrakhan fills up the seats
of Madison Square Garden, the Los Angeles
Sports Arena and other major public entertainment venues, people take notice. When
an organized security force can combat drugs
and crime in the most crime-ridden city areas
where the local police departments are powerless, heads turn. When a group can reach
into our prisons and successfully rehabilitate
discarded individuals, something is definitely
going down.
Farrakhan certainly speaks about fact.
African Americans have been struggling for
social equality and economic independence

in America since its conception. Farrakhan
states that his goal is not to teach hate. The
main focus of his argument calls for change in
social perspective for African Americans. To
learn true "freedom" in America requires
economic control over oneself, and collective, or group control of community businesses. This is sound strategy, and to these
considerations, Farrakhan does speak for African Americans.
However, in promoting more hate and
discourse among ethnic groups, Farrakhan
does not represent the voice of most African
Americans. For African Americans to take
the hate that has been so bountifully served
upon them in America and deflect it upon
another ethnic group is counterproductive,
and we understand that. The irony continues
to be America's lack of understanding the
obvious. If hate is being promoted in the
African American community, it certainly
does not come from Farrakhan, The Nations
of Islam, or any of its members. America
only needs to look at the fabric of its societal
framework to see the seeds of this deadly
virus.
If there is a problem with Louis
Farrakhan, it rests with those organizations in
America that do not wish to see any unity or
real progress made by the African American.
Until we discover our inaccuracies in attitude
and judgment towards each other, and venture toward a change in understanding each
American, we shall continue in ignorance
and remain a flawed nation.

Mickey Conroy
' State Assemblyman - ^-Vv

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t O H l f S CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY
THE PRIDE, CSUSM Student Newspaper, San Marcos, California 92096-0001,
(619) 752-4998
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Mary Szterpakiewicz
BUSINESS MGR/ADVERTISING: Sheryl Greenblatt
COPYEDITORS: Donald Beran, Roy Latas, Anita Williams
LAYOUT EDITOR: Krista Thornton
PHOTOGRAPHY: Carlos Mariseal, Mary Szterpakiewicz
STAFF WRITERS: Karin Foster, Amy Glaspey, Thomas Lee Huntington, Roy
Latas
CONTRIBUTORS: Susan Mendes, Joel Grinolds, MD, Amy Cubbison, Karen
Morones, Doris and Alex Padilla, Mickey Conroy

20 YEARS OF TRUSTWORTHY
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••

;

�Letters to the Editor
Nix to Video Games
Dear Editor:
This morning I sat in the Dome and
watched a truck back up and unload of all
things, video games. Videogames? For the
student lounge. Give me a break. Are we
really serious about our reputation in the
academic community? Do we intend to
uphold our reputation as a challenging academic campus? Not by providing vidiot
entertainment in the lounge. What is wrong
with installing a television in the lounge that
could serve to provide us with news, Discovery channel, soaps for the truly deprived or
any other manner of dubious entertainment?
Who is paying for these games? They aren't
free, and I certainly would hate to think that
any portion of my already excessive fees
were being used to provide the students with
mindless and idiotic entertainment.
If we are overly concerned with entertaining the students, why not simply devote
a portion of the computer labs to computer
games? At least students with the urge to
entertain themselves would pick up some
computer skills. I personally feel that video
games have no redeeming social value and
they do not belong on the campus of a school
that is attempting to make its mark on the
cutting edge of academia. Unless, of couse,
we are not. I do not come to school here to be
entertained. I come to get an education.
Maybe if more students were to rethink their
priorities, they might see that the games have
no place on campus.
Susan Gehrke

Student Lounge TYirned
into a Playground
Dear Editor:
The other day, I stepped into the student
lounge to read a bit before class. What I
found upon entering was a pool table, three
video games, and fewer students using the
room to study than was previously the case.
What has happened to the student lounge?
It's been turned into a playground.
If you believe, as I do, that a college
campus should primarily concern itself with
creating an atmosphere conducive to learning, then you would probably agree that this
is not the best way to use the lounge. This
campus has the advantage of having an atmosphere that centers around education and a
studentbody that is bent on academic achievement, but the arrival of these games lessens
this advantage. I've talked to several friends
on campus, and I hear much the same thing.
That is, that i t's a waste of space, and almost
embarrassing.
While I, personally, have a soft spot for a
good game of pool, I sincerely doubt that is

the best use for our lounge. And, I wouldn't
be completely honest if I said I have no
problem with video games such as Mortal
Kombat, but do we want to spend our valuable and limited space on these devices? I
would argue that we do not, and I suspect
that those students who do make use of the
lounge would agree.
What students need on campus is a place
to study in some degree of silence, that is,
without the noise of the Dome, while, at the
same time, being able to drink a cup of
coffee or have a sandwich. The study lounge
was the best place to do this, until Mortal
Combat came into the picture. Now, the
students that used this room for that purpose
are combating the noise of the Dome, or
pooling at the tables just outside of it.
The decision has been made, for now.
But we can change it by gathering 200
signatures in order to place the issue on the
spring ballot. Then, we can all be involved
in deciding how to best utilizerthe student
lounge.
Barry Walker

Lexis/Nexis isn't Perfect Yet
-- f iii

Dear Editor:
I applaud Mr. Holmes' letter! I see that
he is as concerned as we in the library about
the computer competency requirement. We
recognize that students need extra help in
using the computer resources in the library.
Our concern led us to hire and train students
to serve as Information Assistants (see Pride
article October 22,1993). We believe that
by educating and providing assistance
through the Information Assistant Program,
students will learn to evaluate their searches
better, limit their printing to what is essential for their research, and learn to appreciate the capabilities of downloading.
We are also environmentally conscious
and unfortunately students do tend to abuse
printing so we continually encourage students to download their searches to a disk.
The library has even been selling disks at
cost to make it easier for students.
Mr. Holmes does not have all the facts
straight about Lexis/Nexis and the printing/
downloading problem. The incident recounted by Mr. Holmes is true; students
have been known to print reams of paper
from Lexis/Nexis. At the end of fall semester the library inquired about the possibility
of disablingthe printing function from Lexis.
We were told that this was not possible.
Much later and totally unrelated to our inquiries, Mead Data (producer of the database) informed us that they would no longer
support the download document feature.
However, they do allow us to record a
session onto disk. This feature captures the
entire search to be downloaded but requires

Past

Is the

?

Mary Szterpakiewicz
Editor-in-Chief % '-&gt;?",&gt;, '&lt;
- v--'- S,
In a growing movement among colleges &gt; minutes to every class period and Instead
t
and universities t o 0t costs, some areactu'l&amp;wetik s e a i e ^
ally doing
t it
traditional British-style 4-year degree, a re- financial incentive to teach in the third
article reported that semester. ' " ;
"'
many colleges and d iversities are offering
Proponents say a3~year program would
3^yeaj;,depeeprograms, ' ' \
v v &amp; ^ ' H allow students to enter the work force
Middiebury CoUegein Vermont is offer- sooner, pay off school loans sooner, sav~
fog a 3 -yeft i ii^^radua^'degr^e f c^stu- *j m gtax dollars m 4 reducing g owffiamt j
d^nti nlajoiliig kk iiit^rnalic^lil
. subsidies, It would alsoforcecolleges to
accelerated program was also introduced at J reexamine thekmission statement^eliiiu-v
nating unnecessary courses and sticking
l^f};!^
program is
Those infavor agree that "3-year p mthe freshman class j
grains aremost appropriate f or §xtrem£iy
sighed u p ' l a ^
Wall Street Jourmotivated students * If universities and
§ M | j | " • 111 H I h H f l
of highschool 11 colleges a ieflexiblein allowing a student
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ I n t e r e ^ d in colleges to take five or six years to complete his
, degree, they should be equally flexible in
allowing m otivate students who cafcffn- "
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automatic
a thing of the; isb
Critics thinkfouryears aren't enough,
New York and '
several
in the, Midwest have T&amp;y:argue' that hi«b schools d a w S j ?
poorj^bdf teaching basic skflli
iStop^
j ^fe^iip^iO^iiiinfeblle^vin Ohio are , college' students require more H 0 t p o ^
n X 1 r y(^finay%%y^%ortie worry t &amp;liich;
a quick tonovec will cause
Xty
b e hard-pressed to recruit s t u ^ r i ^ t ^ ^
eitrodmentfeli sharplydue to Ittdenfempv^^ | *
J i p ^ ^ ^ ^ y i ^ S ^ i e : sdfeJMs, Robert J. %
Buccino, vfbej president f or advancement,: f ct students woiidtag their way JEtiiough
; c o l i ^ ^ u r t evine, chairman
j
\ Institute for Educational Management s
iSduce the cost of a
Harvard suggests that colleges ^ e^yMfi^
They add&amp;$ 10 ate what students are learning,J iot how *
mupli ttoiethe^ sit to,

W mt dn"
h su e t

that the student view each screen of information to be recorded. In essence it captures the
screen image on disk. The instructions for
recording a session have already been placed
by the Lexis/Nexis terminals.
Gabriela Sonntag
Reference/Instruction Librarian

The Editor reserves the right to
edit for length and clarity. Send
your Letters to the Editor by mail,
e-mail, drop off at ACD 208 or
place in mailbox located in
Student Services.

I gj||pu like:&gt;
;-|&gt;mse"pr poetry andwould j
U kc^o'get-yo^,!^
u |j|iear
| from you. You can drop off submissions to
I^ThiPride office at ACD 208.' Slip i t under
^the^poor if no one is at home.;.

�Arizmendi to perform one-woman play
atCSUSM
Yareli Arizmendi, co-star of Like Water for Chocolate,
will present a one-woman performance piece, Nostalgia
Maldita:1-900-Mexico, on Sunday, March 13 at 3 PM.
Arizmendi, an assistant professor in the visual and performing arts at CSUSM, not only performs the solo role but also
wrote the play.
Nostalgia Maldita: 1-900-Mexico explores cultural
values and identity from both sides of the US-Mexico border.
Laced with humor, satire, and compassion, the play questions
the value of pursuing another culture's ideals and dreams.
Admission is $3 for CSUSM students and $5 for
general admission. Tickets may be purchased at the
University's bookstore during normal business hours or by
calling 752-4730. Tickets may be purchased at the door onehalf hour before the play, unless it is sold out. For further
information, call the Arts and Lectures Office at 752-4945.

ACADEMY AWARDS PREVIEW
Thomas Lee Huntington

e

T

Staff Writer

^W. "T ith the box-office success ofJurassic Park
\ J \ J and the critical success ofSchindler'sList,
T T this has been the year of Spielberg, and
there is little doubt that the upcoming Academy Awards
ceremony will do anything but put the icing on the cake.
Schindler's List has more nominations than any other film,
and Spielberg has captured all the other awards (Golden
Globe, Director's Guild) that usually serve as indicators of
Oscar performance. Also, the Academy has shunned
Spielberg for years and Schindler serves as a perfect opportunity to make up for past exclusion while at the same time
rewarding the socially conscious, epicfilmmakingOscar so
loves. It is unfortunate, though, that so many otherfilmsfar
more cinematically interesting and daring than Spielberg's
work will be shut out in the process;
BEST PICTURE
Nominees: Schindler's List, The Piano, Remains of
the Day, In the Name of the Father, The Fugitive
Not much suspense here, though this is a fairly wellrounded selection of qualityfilmsthat (with the exception of
The Piano) break very little new cinematic ground. Short
Cuts and Fearless were far superior to most nominated films
but not nearly as accessible. The Academy went out on a
limb last year by choosing the unsettling masterpiece
Unforgiven, but expect no such luck this year.
What Will Win: Schindler's List
What Should Win: The Piano
BEST DIRECTOR
Nominees: Spielberg, Jane Campion {The Piano),
Robert Altman (Short Cuts), James Ivory (Remains of the
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her career in The Age of Innocence. Bassett and Channing
Day), James Sheridan (In the Name of the Father)
Nice to see Altman nominated here, though he has little gave powerful, engrossing performances but Hunter blows
chance of victory. Jonathan Demme's fine direction in away all competition for her passionate, complex portrayal of
Philadelphia and Fred Schepsi's work on Six Degrees of a mute pianist.
Who Will Win: Hunter
Separation were unjustly shut out, but Campion deservedly
Who Should Win: Hunter
makes her mark as only the second woman to be nominated
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
for best director.
Nominess: Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive), Pete
Who Will Win: Spielberg
Postlethwaite (In the Name of the Father), John Malkovich
Who Should Win: Altman
(In the line of Fire), Leonardo DiCaprio (What's Eating
BEST ACTOR
Gilbert Grape), Ralph Fiennes (Schindler's List).
Nominees: Tom Hanks (Philadelphia),r Laurence
This is the category with the most talent. Jones stole
Fishburne (What's Love Got to Do With It?), Anthony
Hopkins (Remains of the Day), Daniel Day-Lewis (In the The Fugitive from the.talented Harrison Ford and newcomer
Fiennes bitathed life into Schindler. Postlethwaite was
Name of the Father), Liam Neeson (Schindler's List),
This is the toughest category to call, though Hanks remarkably moving without being the least bit sentimental.
Who Will Win: Fiennes
looks like the favorite for his performance as a homosexual
Who Should Win: A 3 way Jones-Fienneslawyer dying of AIDS. His co-star Denzel Washington was
'X
just as impressive, but the Academy has always loved tragic Postlethwaite tie, J;
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
star turns mid giving Hanks the award would make up for the
Nominees: Holly Hunter (The Firm), Emma Thompfact that the film was slighted in other major categories.
Fishburne was awesome as Ike Turner, and his surprise son (In the Name of the Father), Winona Ryder (Age of
Innocence), Anna Paquin (The Piano), Rosie Perez (Fearnomination makes the race even more competitive.
less).
Who Will Win: Tom Hanks
Hunter and Thompson make history as the V&gt;st pair of
Who Should Win: Daniel Day-Lewis
actresses to go head to head in both the lead ana supporting
BEST ACTRESS
Nominees: Emma Thompson (Remains of the Day), categories, but neither will bring home the statue here. Eleven
Angela Bassett (What's Love Got to Do With It), Debra year old Paquin was charming in The Piano, but Madeline
Winger '(&amp;hadowlands), Holly Hunter (The Piano), Stockard Stowe in Short Cuts and the entire ensemble cast of the Joy
Luck Club were unfairly-slighted.
Channing (Six Degrees of Separation).
The biggest suprise here is the denial of Q$car perennial
Who-Will Win: Winona Ryder
Michelle Pfeiffer, who gave perhaps the best performance of
Who Should # i n : Rosie Perez

�FunThings to Do in San Diego County

North County Repertory Theatre
— for a change
Amy Cubbison
Contributing Writer
Are you tired of doing the same thing
every weekend—crazy clubs, mundane movies or drab dinners? Are you stuck in rut?
Why notjump off the bandwagon and sharpen
the creative side of your mind?
Solana Beach has a well-kept secret that
is slowly but surely beginning to leak out.
Tucked away in Lomas Santa Fe Plaza just
off of the Lomas Santa Fe exit is the North
County Repertory Theatre.
Believe it or not, the theatre has been
around since 1982. It was started by Olive
andTomBlakistone. The theatre is charming
and quaint and holds 185 people. Although a
non-equity theatre, the North County Rep, as
locals call it, produces professional quality
plays. The actors receive a pittance compared to other major theatres but actors vie to
be in the plays because of the high caliber
productions.
Plays range from comedies such as Neil
Simon's Biloxi Blues, to more dramatic productions such as the recentM. Butterfly. Every
play is fresh and new with an interesting flair.
Having attended numerous plays at the North
County Rep, I have never been dissappointed.
One of the funniest was a crazy comedy by

Neil Simon (a favorite of the theatre) called
Rumors. I ached from laughing so much.
There is a new play every couple of months.
Tickets are regularly priced at $16 but with a
student I.D., they are only $12.
The theatre is in a terrific location, next to
a cute coffee house that features home-baked
goodies and music. The Samurai Restaurant
and Froglanders Yogurt are also in the plaza.
And, there is plenty of parking!
- So... what does all this mean to you? Not
only does the theatre have plays, they also
offer acting lessons for adults and children.
Auditions are open to everyone and students
are often used in productions. If the idea
sounds good but you're tight on money, you
can volunteer as an usher and acquire free
tickets.
This summer the North County Rep will
be launching their new children's theatre.
Currently featured is a delightful romantic
comedy by Wendy Wasserstdp, I$n'tlt Ro-«
mantic. It is very refreshing^iist in time for
Spring. So, next time you can't think of what
to do, give the North County Repertory Theatre a try. You might find it a very pleasant
surprise.

M

SAN MARCOS
PRESENTS
EVERY
•

f

THURSDAY
8 TO CLOSE

J

WITH THE GREEKS!!

471-2150
flQk
®#4 t p l

.
© *4

BIKE. LakeMiraMar has a 5-mile bike/joggingtrail

shops in the district and on Adams Ave,

Open7days/week. Freeparking.

antifesacfrt Of-

Mission Bay-a great area for biking, rollerblading, walking, panicking, kite flying (or Just

people-waiting!)
E tewowfogorpr^

ten there are seaside concerts in warm weather,

MISSIONS

'

Mt^fpn San LoufeRey-4Q5&amp;ii/tton Ave;.
Oceanside. Museum with good historical inforisland. Leave from B Street Pier at Harbor Drive. mation and gift shop. Free: Call 757-3651.
Fee $1.58 + $.50 bicycle fee each way. Ferry
Iu6s&lt;fon
foMmto"
Mission
leaves hourly on the hour.
&lt; Gorge Rd, Call 281 -8449 for infoipation.
|
Pacific Coast Hwy, from
Mission San Antonio- Pala Indian Reserva-

j v Hon. V

Ocear&amp;ktetoiyfcisi^

x - -rH *

Harbor arid Ske thru Camp Pendleton to San
MUSEUMS
Gfemente.
.
. '9m ^ rco^
** 276 w .
WALKING
San Marcos Blvd., open Tues., Thurs. and Sat.
Walksboot Internationaf sponsor theme from 1-4 PM. Free.
walks dally {historical, view walks, beach walks, %
Engine Museum
etc.) Guided tours are free; monthly bulletin $12/ 2040N. Santa Fe Ave, Vista, Openeveiy day 10
yr; first issue Is free, Calf 231-7463.? ' , AM - 4 PM. Free^Call 941-1791,
.N^tMrai
spon- •
Ranchp Buena Vista Adobe 640 Aita Vista
sors t e e walking tours throughout the County
Dr. in Vista, open Wed. - Sun 10AM - 2:15 PM,
with plant and wBdlife talks given bytrained closed in inclement weather. Call 946-4919.
glides. Call 232-3821 Ext. 2p3 for brochure.
&lt; pffltffiy,
14114
Cabrflto lighthouse Monument. F t Lorna , Midland Rd. open Fri,^Sat-Sun 10 AM - 2 PM
i ps a one-miJe hidng trail with tidepool explora* call679-8587* "
&gt;

Hons, whale watching from the glass enclosed
T O Prospect
O
l ^^riJan^Mar. Open 7 days/week, $4 per Ave: i a J afeFfge. Wed S-9 PM 454-3641.
carload. Call 667-5460. *
Wjjke Miramar Is best for walking/joggjngon
non-fishing days (Wed.-Fri.) when the lake,road
is closed to vehicle traffic. Open 7 days, no fee.
Take
to M f a Mesa Blvd. east, south on
S crips RanchRd,, east on S crips Lake Dr. J

7 days, off Morth Torrey Pines Rd. in l a Joifa. Fee
$6.50 adult, $4,50 students $3.50 kids 4-12.
Parking $2,50* Call 534-FISH.
^Il?pa I^^Museum^ oiffers f i ^ a a j ^
to
onfasfirst Tues, of
month
P i^SNNMogical Prwerw in Poway *s on a rotating basis. Calf 239-0612 tor Info,
a njce wa&amp;~~&lt;jbgs permitted on leash. Froro l-15
Sflf* Pogp M^rifne M^mm
^ HarSpuih tak&amp; B a r ^ Bernardo ftd. into Poway-it IxwDr, San piego includes 3 ships, Star of ImSa,
becomes Espola Rd. t he preserve is on t ie left fterkeley, and Medea for $6 fee, family $12.
on t h e b r ^
Poway. Open 7 days, 9 A M-8 PM. Cal! 234~^S3&lt; •
+
Park in dirt areajartdf-walk in. No fee.
"
1
at the Broadway
• Los Psrmsquifog C m m ftssefve- hiiing ; Pier every Sunday - Broadway
Haibor Dr.
trails. From Mira Mesa Blvd, turn right on Black Near the Starof India. Free, Call 532-1431,,
Mtn.Road- It is across from the horse ranch. Info
SCENIC DRIVES
53S&amp;087
'
/
'
^ M g ^ p ^ p i j i a f i : during the Apple Festival in
Coronado Historical Walking Tours Tu-Wsnow in the winter, or anytime
shops and the Jul&amp;h Pioneer
I1&gt;SatatGWetta8ay i m * $4. The Coronado
Museum. Phone 765-0227.
:
the museum at the Hotel Dei Coronado, lounge
P ^ ^ lQ the Ar^za-Borrego State park and
; m the sun deck, or walk on the beach.!:
tour or stop -arid see the
Waiting Touts ofttreQasfamp Quarter N th slicfe
of the'
'
cassette tape guide-bring yourwalkman) every seasons. Park Headquarters on Palm Canyon
S at Tape rftttei$5. Call 233-5227.
Dr„ tWomiic® west of B&lt;»TegoSpi%igSv C ai767Wilderness Preserve on Route 76 Eas*&lt;#&gt; 5311.
15 M m ,
b $2.' hiding and M l V i S i f Bates Nut Farm.
Rd., Valley Center - picnic area, farm zoo, free

Building, ^rom T43-333&amp;5
1?I ^ |
&gt;
Call for..: sion Ave; Sa« Marcos- free shows- call for info

the editors office to the loading docks, with a film
tmt m-3i3t;
^
&gt;
,
&gt;*
; VIEWS &amp; ROMANTIC STROLLS

744-1150X2833
Mtt Pi^CHI^r.l^^S^fV^tQ^ 5" Hcht^ to 76
•:; Torrev Pines Beach Trail - off La Jfrila Farms
•••
ftd,
9 AM-4 PM
Rd. greatocean views. HM&amp;f your own risk. East to County
7 da^/wk
Catt 742-2119. "
V

Self-Realization Fellowship Gardens # ^ ^ i t l ^ ^ t ^ Unfygr^ty Obseryatpry.
(Swarrfs) Medfteflotj;

$ 2 . 0 0 MARGARITAS, DRAFT, &amp;
WELLS
030 CENTS TACOS
WINJ$i&amp;i&gt;BIZESi
®# 4

.
BICYCLING
StoycBmi fpyteSt t rms afKMhfa.cail gat- St. in Gaslamp District downtown. Also antique

Tourtfift^

JL

COLLEGE NIGHT

;

^

^

onttebe^inEi^
deserved.
Agreatquiet spot, with Koi porids and ocean
views*

T

a

k

e

^

L

a

g

u

na.
go to the M t
Laguna Forest Service booth for free tickets. Calf
594*6t$2*

Thanks to Susan Mcnndes for compiling
this list for us. Look for mor^in the next
issue of
77»Contiifewatett
Parking.
days, 8 AM-5 PM. Located off E ncirte 1 certs, Theatres, R ^ u r i b t s . :
Btvd.436-3036 •

^ ^^^^r^jgW

Scenic Or!

�SUMMER SESSION 1 9 9 4
(course information subject to change)
F ootnotes

C ourse

02
02
02
02

ACCT
ACCT
ACCT
ACCT
EDML
EDML
EDML
EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
LBST
PSYC
PSYC
PSYC
SOC
SOC
SSM

305
20
306
20
307
20
415
20
552
20
553
20
563
20
364
20
390
20
400
20
496C
30
500
20
501
20
596A
20
499
20
499
21
499
22
395
20
220*
20
300*
20
402
20
303
20
20
395B
491A
20
* Includes lab

CS

EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
HIST
ID
LBST
LING
SOC
SSM

304
304
499
350
350
364
352
4 10
499
499
499
347
400
395
400
315
415

JULY 5 -JUI.Y 29

020506
020506
020506
020506
GN
EE

BUS
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
LBST
SOC
SOC

SESSION 4

02
0205

cs
cs

SESSION

07
08
02 07 LA 0 0 QN
07 CC
02

J UNE 6 -JULY 29

020506
020506
020506
020506
02 CR
02
EE
LA
02

SESSION

2
J UNE 20-JULY 29

SESSION

02
02
0205
020708
020708
08
LA
02
020506
020506
020506
GVLA
01 DO
020506
01 DO
DD EE GN
02
02

J UNE 6 -JULY 1

S ect.

C ourse T itle

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
COST ACCOUNTING
TAX ACCOUNTING
INFO SYSTMS FOR ACCT/MGMT
THEORY/METH BILINGUAL
METH.OF INST.IN PRI.LANG
APP OF ENGL LANG DEV
CULTRL D IVERSTY&amp;SCHOOUNG
SOC&amp;ED MLTCLTRL STDNT&amp;FAM
CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
SP.TP:ART METH ELEM&amp;MDL
CMPTR-BASED TECHLGIES EDU
INSTRCTN STDNTS S PEC NEED
ST: U T INST FOR TEACHERS
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INTERNSHIP
INTRO STATISTICS IN PSYCH
COMPUTERS IN PSYCH
PSYCH TESTING
MARRIAGE &amp; T HE FAMILY
CURR.ISS.SOC:FLM&amp;AMER SOC
TP.SSM: STRATEGIC ISSUES

4
4
4
2
3
2
4
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
1
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4

ISSUES IN C O M P T E R SCIENCE
ISSUES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
INDEPENDENT RESEARCH
EARLY FIELD EXPERIENCE
EARLY FIELD EXPERIENCE
CULTRL DIVERSTY&amp;SCHOOLING
AM.UT:WWI-PRESENT
ADV.EXPO.WRTING FOR TEACHR
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INDEPENDENT STUDY
CALIFORNIA HISTORY
ID.PERSPCTIVE O N UTERACY
INTERNSHIP
ID.PERSPCTIVE O N UTERACY
SEX ROLES
HUMAN RESOURCES MGMT

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
1
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
4

3 0 2 ~ " " 4 0 ™" "30172™
380D
40
30139
*******
499
40
*******
499
41
499
42
*******
395
40
313
40
30158
327
40
30163

FOUNDATIONS B US ENVIRONS.
STD FILM:THE WESTERN
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INDEPENDENT STUDY
INTERNSHIP
RACE/ETHNIC RELATIONS
LAW ENFORCEMENT

2
3
1
2
3
3
3
3

304
498

cs
cs

C RN
30168
30169
30171
30170
30112
30114
30113
30115
30116
30117
30175
30122
30123
30131

ISSUES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
INDEPENDENT STUDY

3
3

30
31
30
30
31
30
30
30
30
31
32
30
30
30
30
30
30

50
50

*******

*******

30154
30155
30156
30157
30161
30173
30165
30166
*******

30127
30130
30128
30138
30140
*******
*******
*******

30150
30129
*******

30164
30159
30174

3******
* 0167

U nits T ime
0800-0950
1800-2145
1000-1150
1630-1850
1630-1920
1200-1350
1630-2020
1630-1915
1400-1550
1700-1950
0900-1050
1630-1915
1630i1915
1630-1820

0930-1150
1300-1520
1500-1650
1000-1150
1800-2050
1000-1150
0900-1050
1300-1450
1200-1350
1900-2050
0900-1050
1000-1150
1500-1650

1900-2150
0900-1050
0900-1050
1300-1450
1300-1615
1300-1450
1700-1950

0900-1150
1800-2050
1500-1750

D avs

L ocation

MTWR
TR
MTWR
TR
MTWR
MW
MTWR
TR
MTW
TR
TWR
MW
TR
MTW
ARR
ARR
ARR
ARR
TWR
TWR
TWR
TWR
MR
MTWR

ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD*
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD

113
113
115
115
317
402
315
402
404
404
315
402
408
411A

SCI
SCI
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD

207
207
304
306
102
113

ACD
ACD

209
209

MTWR
MTWR
ARR
MTWR
MTWR
MTWR
MTWR
MTWR
ARR
ARR
ARR
MTWR
MTWR
ARR
MTWR
MTWR
MTR
MTWR
MTWR
ARR
ARR
ARR
ARR
MTWR
MTWR
MTWR
ARR

F aculty
DESIKAN
BROWER
COLE
MILLER
STAFF
ULANOFF
STAFF
STAFF
BELL
STOWELL
GOLDBERG
STAFF
STAFF
POWELL
STAFF
STAFF
STAFF
STAFF
COPELAND
STAFF
STAFF
SHENOY
FLYNN
CLARKE

ACD
ACD
ACD

BOEHNING
BOEHNING
WU
404
KUCER
411B
POWELL
411B
STAFF
302
YUAN
302
CURRY
STAFF
STAFF
STAFF
303
SCHWARTZ
411A
KUCER
STAFF
411A
KUCER
306
PINA
115
ZUMBERGE

ACD
ACD

113
302

ACD
ACD

308
3 19

ACD

2 06

ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD
ACD

ACD
ACD

CLARKE
MENDOZA
STAFF
STAFF
STAFF
STAFF
ELISE
ZHANG
YOSHII
YOSHII

SAN DIEGO INTERNSHIP COHORT » • &gt; June 6 - July 29
Footnotes

COHORTS
C OLLEGE
OF
E DUCATION

G ENERAL
I NFORMATION

Course

020700
0208
030408
0208

EDUC
EDUC
EDUC
EDUC

410
440
452
460A

Sect. CRN
20
20
20
20

^
^
*******

Course Title
INTRO ELEM SCH CLASSRMS
CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
STD.TEACH&amp;MULT/BLNG SEMNR
ELMT.SCH.CURR:TEACH MATH

Units Time
1
1
2
2

1700-1850
1900-2050
1800-2150
1800-2150

Days

Location

W
W
R
TR

OFF
OFF
ACD
ACD

Faculty

CAMPUS
CAMPUS
206
406

LLOYD
LLOYD
STAFF
STAFF

SPECIAL EDUCATION COHORT • • • June 20 - July 29
Footnotes

Course
EDMX 526
EDMX 531
EDMX 540

Sect. CRN
30
30
30

^
*******
*******

Course Title
LEARN&amp;INST IN INTEG P ROG
INST&amp;ASSMNT IN S PEC EDUC
LANG&amp;UT ED IN INTEG PROG

Units Time
5
3
5

0830-1620
0830-1620
0830-1620

Days

Location

MTWR
MTWR
MTWR

ACD
ACD
ACD

PRIORITY REGISTRATION: April 25 - 2 9
GENERAL REGISTRATION: May 31-June 3
FINAL EXAMS: Sessions 1 , 2 , &amp; 3 - August 1 &amp; 2; Session 4 - July 5

406
406
406

Faculty
GOLDBERG
PARSONS
STOWELL

�SDSU Offers Writing Classes &amp; Seminars
Interested in developing special writing
skills? SDSU College of Extended S tudies is
offering a variety of writing courses:

sage twice, and how to sell the book directly
to avoid the middleman's discount. It will be
held Thursday, March 24, from 6-10 PMr
The fee is $50.

W RITING T RAVEL A RTICLES
THAT SELL—Why not make money from
traveling and create a tax deduction at the
same time with the help of this course? In

C HARACTER D EVELOPMENT
WORKSHOP— This course will challenge
you to create characters vital and unique
enought to successfully carry the theme and
tension of your manuscript. The course will
be taught by Rita Micklish, author of Sugar
Bee and Victoryknoll, as well as many magazine articles and television scripts. It will be
held Saturdays, March 12-26, 9 AM-12:30
PM. The fee is $68.
SCREENWRITERS' WORKSHOP—
This advanced screenwriting workshop will
give prospective writers a practical and realistic approach to writing salable scripts. Led
by Irving Cooper, accomplished screen and
television writer, this course is designed to
facilitate understanding of the structural profile of the script and the creative elements that
give it marketability. The course will be held
Tuesdays, March 22-Aprill2, 7-9 PM. The
fee is $64.
V
H OW T O SELL 75 PERCENT O F
HOW TO SELL YOUR BOOKS T O
GENERAL AND NICHE MARKETS—It YOUR FREE-LANCE W W I ^ G f - T h i s
can be hard to sell your book if it is written seminar explains how to use the professional
first and buyers are sought later, but this system of selling before writing for lucrative
workshop will show you how a succesful results. The workshop is led by Gordon
book's marketing is best integrated into ev- Burgett, who will show you when YOU should
ery step of its creation. Gordon Burgett, query and when you should seiiA'the copy
author of numerous books including Self- unsolicited, how pros double their income by
Publishing to Tightly-Targeted Markets and selling reprints and rewrites, and how to take
more than 1,000 magazine articles, will cover every tax deduction. The workshop will be
how to design a book that meets the needs of held Saturday, March 26, from 1-5 PM. The
its buying market, how to sell a book's mes- fee is $48.

four hours, Gordon Burgett, author of the
Travel Writer's Guide, will show how you,
like the professionals, can complete twothirds of the work before you leave, include
additional material en route, and sell the same
observations to newspapers and magazines.
This course will be held Sunday, March 27,
from 1-5 PM. The fee is $48.
B EFORE YOU W RITE T HAT
BOOK—Why write an unsold novel or reams
of readerless non-fiction when you can learn
precisely what is needed to make your book

CLASSIFIEDS
SERVICES
TWO BLACK Living Room Chairs. Like
New. $100 each, 2for$175 or best offer. MACINTOSHMousenot working? Call
HOUSE IN ESCONDIDO $900 + DeCall 741-0975.
The Mouse Doctor. 972-8569.
posit. 3 Bedroom, 1-1/2 Bath, 2-car
garage. Nice Yard, Quiet. Kids/Pets OK.
LOST Lady' s USNA miniature class ring
Close to all. Available April 1st. 739- IN-LINE SKATES. Mens sz. 8/womens (1961) with clear stone. $50 reward.
sz. 10. Like new. Paid $120. Must
1838
.'•
sacrifice for $50 or best offer. 789-9142. 723-0519
ROOM FOR RENT/DEL MAR. $400 a
month + 1/2 utilities. Call 793-7769.
FREE CLASSIFIEDS
HELP WANTED
FOR SALE
For students only—25 words or less.
INTERESTED IN LEGAL WORK?
Each additional word, 50 cents.
MAC SE/30 with 4 extra megabytes
Looking for part-time legal assistant. No
of RAM, modem +QuickFax soft- experience necessary. 3-4 days a week.
REGULAR CLASSIFIEDS
ware, HP DeskWriter &amp; computer Approx. 4 hrs./day. Call 793-7769 or
25 words or less—$10.00. Each
table w/casters. SE/30 $500, Printer 632-0599.
additional word, 50 cents.
$200, Table $65. Modem + software
Drop off classifieds at ACD 208
$65. 589-4921 or Ext. 4087.
STUDENTS interested in helping acTHE PRIDE, CSUSM Student
Newspaper, San Marcos, CA
RING. Oval cut blue topaz in 10K gold quire board space for rideshare/car pool
92096-0001
setting. Sz.7. Make offer. 789-9142. info. Call Susie at 486-9762.
FOR RENT

publishable and paying before you write the
first word? This workshop, led by author
Gordon Burgett, will help you create a nononsense planning guide and produce a winning product. The course will be held Tuesday, March 29, from 6-10PM. Thefeeis $48.
HOW T O WRITE AND SELL A ROMANCE NOVEL—Learn the rules, formula and editorial requirements for successfully marketing your novel. Diane Dunaway,
author of Why Men Don't Get Enough Sex
and Women Don't Get Enough Love, will
cover "hooking" the reader, love scenes, plotting and subplotting, and shortcuts to an outline that works. The course will be held
Saturday, April 16,9AM - 3 PM. $58.
B ECOME
A
F REELANCE
WRITER—Turn your ideas, experiences and
interests into marketable articles with this
course. Karen Kenyon, author of Sunshower
and numerous articles and essays, will show
you how to develop ideas, find local and
national markets, write a winning query letter, and present articles in manuscript style.
The course will be held Saturday, April 23,9
A M - 3 PM. The fee is $52.
WRITING FOR CHILDREN—Learn
how to write for the booming children's market. Led by writers Edith Fine and Judy
Josephson, this course will discuss targeting
your audience, myths about the youth market, tools for reaching your readers and marketing strategies. T he course will be held
Saturday, May 7, 9:30 A M-3:30PM. The
fee is $58,
Classes are held in the Extended Studies
Clasrooms at SDSU. For more information
or to register call 594-5152.

DISPLAY
ADVERTISING
Rates for standard size ads:
Bus. Card $25
1/8 page $65
1/4 page $100
1/2 page $175
Full page $300
Discounts are given for prepayment and for multiple
insertions.

Deadline for next issue:
APRIL 4
For more information&gt;
contact Sheryl Greenblatt
at 619.752.4998

�1

&gt;

;^

——^

^

^

#

"...

?

'"H

0 | P | | | i ^ u s E verits:
Apr. 8
byJNorth County artist, Patsy Babcock. CSUSM
Floor. The exhibit depicts the artist's ongoing struggle to find the
or studio space. • '
•
^ ^ ^ J ^ &amp; ^ ^ S f e S ^ ^ General Meeting. 12 Noon, Dome. •
honor of Women's History Month, Professor Elwood will show the film

The P olitical
A ssociation
meeting

Wednesday, Mar. 16

12:30 PM in the Student Lounge
Commons 201
Topic: HEALTHCARE

"Nostalgia Maldita: l ^ M e s i c o » Yareii Airizmendi, "Like Water for Chocolate" star, in
iappli®
piece, explores bi?hational issues. 3 PM, ACD 102. Ticketed
[
"v' ]
'
J
%

M ^Say, Man 14

I

&gt;/ , ' * " , ;;
speaking oinf"Service-Learning: Boon or Bother?*'; 12

J5 - V \

j,

"
5205;;'

^ Jtnpii^^^^^^n^^

:

-

\&gt;
Graven 5205,

Skp^l^pi^^

\ Wed&amp;e^a^ M ar.16 ^ v ' # ;?; r / / ' c ,
-3F^304,;:

;

^'

' V"
^

\

*v
/

&gt;

&gt;

1

&lt;

tgHtie Student Wealth Advisory
:J
-;
SelesW: - ^Resolvfng the Conflict;; '.
i n^itjtei^ Ke^and/' 12:15 PM, ACD104.
?. &lt;: *g|fi
%
l lllllll f jj | | |p | lllll l llllllllll l llllilll HI | | lil111 IBIIPBII l llf Bill
J:
7

'vv -

ICC Meeting.2 PM, Ommons 206,

|
r tional

2

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