Transcript

·OPINION Now that the ground war

bas bcsun, some will complain that we failed to give diplomacy a chance. Gorbachev's peace plan contained too many holes to merit serious consideration. When this war ends, it will be on our termsIP AGE 4

• FEATURES Even if you're not the

type who relishes a good hike, that doesn't mean you can't experience the great outdoors. San Diego's back country offers thousands of feet of forests and parks for anyone and everyone to enjoylPAGE 9

.SPORTS Ice hockey is a new

extramural sport at UCSD, and the tearn has emerged as one of the leaders in the Pacific Collegiate Hockey Association. In the second of an occasional series, we take a look at the tearn, the players and the rules of the pme/PAGEll

.A&E Lamb', Player Theatre

in National at)' presenta '1be Rivals. .. a comedy in the spirit of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." But "1be Rivals" flJZles ~ Sblkespeare's "Midpmgner Night's Dream" is just _ -. ___ A miowIPAGE 13

INDEX ... lJQID CJipi: 4 ••••• _ ••••••• 2 ~ ..................... 4

............. 9 L,a __ laftmnent •• 12

. KSDT Programming Control May Shift To UCSD Extension By Debbie Rosenthal Staff Writer

A.S. President John Edson met privately with UCSD Chancellor Richard Atkin on on Thursday to discuss the future of the KSDT radio tation, a future now clouded by the pos ibility that control of the station may hift from the AS. to the UCSD Extension.

UCSD Exten ion is already set to manage the new UCSD televi ion tat ion, originally scheduled to go on the air in 1992 but delayed by budget cuts.

Because one of the official roles of the extension program is community outreach, extension offi­cials feel that campus broadcasting falls within that role.

"The way we understand it, all authority to admini ter broadcast services lie under the vice chancellor of extension," said KSDT A i tant Manager C. Squibby Breyman. "What they want to do with that authority we don't know."

According to Breyman, every radio station in the UC sy tern is run by tudents, and all but two of those station broadca t over the air.

KSDT has been run by the A.S. for the past 22 years, but the station has only broadcast on low­level carrier current to campu dorm and on Cox and South we t cable radio frequencies.

The station has had to u e these methods, which can only reach a limited audience, becau e the station does not have a Federal Communication Commission (FCC) license to broadca t over the airwaves.

Rlmas Uzglrls/Guardian

Guitar Man "steels" the night away - John Cephas belted out the blues in the Piedmont tradition as part of the Masters of the Steel String Guitar concert on Friday night at Mandeville Auditorium. See story on page 12.

If the administration of KSDT i transferred to UCSD Exten ion, Edson said , then re ponsibility for funding will hift as well.

But recent attempts by A.S. leaders and KSDT staff members to obtain a broadca t licen e for the tation has changed the situation completely.

"[The AS. would] pay for funding to upgrade the transmitter," Edson said. "We would be able to fund the majority of the cost ourselve ."

According to Edson, Atkin on has aid that the new transmitter would be built afterthe TV station, most likely at the end of the decade.

"The chanceHor was really ambivalent [during Thursday's meeting] and ... said it was something I would have to resolve entirely with [Dean of Extension] Mary Walshok," Ed on aid.

La t Friday, Walshok met with both Atkinson and Vice Chancellor of Under­graduate Affair 10 eph Watson in order to discu the i ue of bringing both radio and television under extension control.

Wat on and Walshok were not available for comment.

When contacted regarding tbe campus radio station, Walshok's assi tant, Joan Vilbrandt, initially denied that Wal hok had anything to do with the project.

Edson explained that the A.S. has over $200,000 in "mandated reserves" that could be put toward the project, in addition to private spon orship.

He also said that student volunteers could help with actual upgrade work.

"While [Atkinson] claimed to be upportive of a student-run radio station, he couldn't give any detail ... becau ehedidn ' t deal with those things," Edson added.

Vilbrandt later said that "there have been some meetings with Wat on and Atkin on ...

See KSDT, Page 3

Panel Discusses Roles of Patriotism, Media in War By Stephaan Harris Guardian Reporter

Questioning the way the mass media represent the United Slate in wartime, four UCSD professors discussed patriotism, politics, and the Persian Gulf Thursday night at UCSD's Graduate School of Inter­national Relations and Pacific Stud­ies.

Sponsored by the Graduate Stu­dents for Peace and the Graduate Student Association, the forum ad­dressed the topic, "What Does Pa­triotism Mean In 1991?"

The panelists - consisting of Ethnic Studies Professor George Lipsitz, Literature Professor Ian Barnard, and Communication Pro­fessors Susan Davis and Vicente Rafael - gave their views on modem patriotism in front of ap­proximately 60 students and specta­tors.

The panels discussed how American patriotism, especially in relation to the Persian Gulf War, possesses negative traits. In addi­tion most of them blrut.!~ the mass media both for promoting the United States as a country that is supreme over all others and for inflating pride, thus questioning the legitimacy of Americans' patriotic view .

"It is fundamentally wrong to show loyalty to a state that believes in the domination of other states," Davis aid.

She added that the confu ion some people feel, even those that advocate the war, comes from the way the situation is presented to us through the media.

According to Davis, events in the gulf seem to shift and heavily favor the American side, even though there is limited information regarding recent events and devel­opments.

According to Rafael, patriotism can create a sense of arrogance or self-importance among the Ameri­can people.

"Patriotism seems to make other countries and their wars less signifi­cant," he said. "Our dead soldiers seem to matter more than the other [casualties]."

Rafael also commented on how capitalistic marketplaces take ad­vantage of the war and the pride of Americans by cHing products that glorify the American involvement in the war, such as "Support Our Troops" T-shirts.

Lipsitz emphasized the effects patriotism can have on the commu­nity. He said that Americans should

come to grip with fundamental views of the Persian Gulf War that tend todivide the society, and should strive to build unity.

According to Bamard, the media are guilty of heavily promoting sup­port for the American troops, while Saudi Arabian and Iraqi troops are mentioned or profiled very little.

Barnard also questioned the rea­soning of American support, be­cause sentiments of nationalism, imperialism, and homophobia seem to be evident in the American way of thinking.

Some members of the audience voiced their opinions and questions in re ponse to the paneli ts' views on patriotism, reflecting upon the effects patrioti m has on the thoughts and views of Americans.

"The main problem with patrio­ti sm is that people consider other source of power,like the economy, to be unimportant and independent of society," said Omar Hernandez, a graduate student of Latin American Studies. "They don ' t account for those other types of power and in­fluence."

Jennifer Vann/Guardian

Susan Davis and George Lipsitz both spoke at Thursday's forum.

2 NEWS

UCSD ClJPS

NEWS IN BRIEF

Expert Appointed to IRIPS Pacific Economic Cooperation Chair

Lawrence Krause, an expert on trade and economic issues in the Pacific Basin, has been appointed as the fust holder of the endowed Pacific Economic Cooperation Chair at the Graduate School of International Relatioos and Pacific Studie (!RIPS).

According to Krause, whose research focuses on the economies of Pacific Rim countrie.i, trade policy in the 1990s will be characterized by increasing regionalism. He predicts that the countries of the Pacific Basin "will form the world's mo t powerful economic region," a region that will con olidate its substantial economic power to compete with the newly unified Europe.

San Diego i poised to become a hub city in the Pacific Basin, according to Krause. "With proper communication and transportation facilities, San Diego could become a service and production center for the region," he said.

Krause currently oversees an economic forecasting project on the Pacific Rim region underthe auspices of the Pacific Economic Cooperation Conference (pECC), an organization of 15 Pacific Rim nations.

Under the umbrella organization. government, busi­ness, and academic experts collaborate on an annual economic forecasting project that focuse on the econo­mies of indi vidual countries as well as the economy of the entire Pacific Rim region.

Financial backing from the new endowed chair will support Krause' research, teaching, and lecturing activi­ties. Krau ehaspubli hedmorethan50article andbooks on trade policy and economic coopermon in the Pacific Rim region.

Prior to joining IR/PS in 1986, Krause was a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution. He was a senior member of the White Hou e' Council of Economic Advisors in the Johnson administration. and prior to that he taught Economics at Yale Univen.ity.

Krause has also erved as a consultant to the United States Govemment's Special Representative for Trade

egotiations and to the U.S. State Department.

Calvin and Hobbes

The UCSD Guardian

The Pacific Economic Cooperation Chair in [ntemat ionsl Economic Relations was funded with a prior donation made to lR/PS by Lawrence and Ewa Robinson of La Jolla.

Scripps Aquarium Plans Celebration For March San Diego Museum Month

As part of the March San Diego Mu cum Month: Scripps Aquarium-Museum will offer a variety of special programs, tours, and hands-on experience designed to educate visitors on the changing world.

During March, the museum at Scripps Aquarium will feature a new exhibit on global climate changes. The display will include the research of Scripps Institution of Oceanogra­phy scientists on the changes taking place in theenvironment over weeks, months, decades. and centuries. The exhibit will feature studies of the Greenhouse EtTect and EI Nino, and will explain how climate predictions are made. The mllSelD1l is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is by donation.

In addition, free marine life lectures will be offered at the aquarium's outdoor, man-made tidepool at 10 and II a.m each Saturday in March. Aquarium docents will speak on the intere ting and unique marine life existing in the ocean waters otT San Diego.

From II a.m. to 3 p.m each Sunday in March, Scripps Aquarium's Discovery Laboratory will be open to students free of charge for a hands-on learning experience on marine plants and animals and their natural ocean habitats.

The historic Old Scripps Building will be open for public tours from II a.m. 10 3 p.m. on March lOaspartofthemuseum month special programs. Completed in 1910, the building is a National Historic Landmark. and the oldest structure at Scripp Institution. Guides will be on hand for free tours.

For more infonnation, call Scripps Aquarium-Museum at 534-FlSH or 534-6933.

London Theater Troupe to Present Aristophanes' 'Frogs' This Weekend

The London Small Theatre Company will present Ari tophanes' comedy, "Frogs," at8 p.m., from Friday through Sunday, in the Price Center Theater. The play is set in Athens - the city is in trouble, the politicians cannot be trusted, Sparta is breathing down its neck, and the wise poets to whom the populace looked for advice were in their graves. Dionysus saves the day with a trip to Hades to re urrect the best poet for the job.

The British tbeater ensemble will perform the play in Engli h to a contemporary music score. Tickets are $6 and are available from the UCSD Box Office at 534-4559, and TicketMaster outlet.

by Bill Watterson

n1t>.ts ?\I\'( I'M WIo.'( Ol/£R HfRE.

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Monday, February 25, 1991

FROM OTHER CAIv'IPUSES

False Letter Declares UCSB Campus 'Sanctuary' for Draft Dodgers

SANTA BARBARA - A recently circulated letter typed on official UC letterhead stated that UCSB had been made a "sanctuary" for all people seeking to avoid a possible military draft.

After raising the hopes,curiosity,andconcems of many students and faculty, the declaration was discovered to be a hoax, written and sent anonymously and without permis­sion on UCSB Chancellor Barbara Uehling's official stationery.

Uehling denied writing the letter, which stated that persons who for moral, ethical, or religious reasons could not participate in the war could find refuge on the VCSB campus. The letter also included Uehling's name and office phone number 11£ well as the name of UC President David Gardner.

Uehling said that her office received numerous calls about the false document from various alanned member.; of the campus conununity, and that she had no idea who was responsible.

Officials at the Student Anti-War Coalition (SA WC) - widely recognized for much of the on-campus protest activites - denied any knowledge of the statement's origins, as did other area peace activists.

SA WC organizers, who said the letter was beneficial because it raises awareness about the issue of a possible draft, recognized immediately that the lener was a fake.

1bey attributed their recognition to the appearance of Chancellor Uehling's name on the document.

"It's such a contradiction in terms," said one SA WC organizer. "That's what's funny about it."

Uehling apparently found little humor in the escapade, stating that the misuse of official letterhead is "a violation of university policy ... 'and it may be illegal."

Some in the campus community speculated that the letter was part of a serious underground anti-war etTort.

According to a public infonnation representative, the administration does nOl have any actual plans for such a draft sanctuary policy.

GuKKnIAN PHtL GRUEN, Editor In Chltlf ROBIN MAClEAN, Managing Editor

BEN BOYCHUK, Opinion Editor LES BRUVOLD, AssocIaIe Sports Editor JAMESCOUUER, ~~nEdltor GREG DIXON, Assoc/lIte Opinion Editor BILL DOWLER, Copy Editor MELINDA HAMILTON, Associate News Edllor MARY BETIY HEARD, Associllfe News Editor lARA HEISlER, Associate A&E Editor HEATHER HOLTZCLAW, Associate Sports Editor CHRISTINA HUIZAR, Assoclale A&E Editor PETER KO, SpotU Editor JENNFER KOlSKY, Photo Editor KENT KORZON, Associate Copy Editor LENG lOH, Arls'EntenlJ/nment Editor MEL MARCelO, ~ Graphlc$ Editor SANGEETA MEHTA, Associllle Features Editor BRIAN MORRIS, AssocIate Photo EdItor JEFF QUAN, Graphics Editor JASON SNEll, News Editor RIMAS UZGlRlS, Pholo Editor JEFFREY YAMAGUCH~ FNIunJs Editor JENNFER YANCEY, Ar111IEnfertIIJnment Edttor

BOB DeANDREA, Bu.Ine •• M"'~'" MICHAEL FOULKS, Advertl.lng M"'~'" MIKE MARTINEZ, AdVertl"ng De'1Qner E. LEIGH HENRY, CI ... ffI«l R.",...",.tlv. -...... """-_: SI'OII)'FrMertIorgor. TomSdlallor. DooQ~. Ka1aSWVO -......-:L ...... !IIIar9t.DanoIIc..t.P .... V_ ~ o..eIc..t.Joo lit. Mi1g Lil

Monday, February 25,1991 The UCSD Guardian

Scripps Receives Grant for Surveying • System expected to advance marine geology studies

The W. M. Keck Foundation awarded a S 1.15 million grant to­ward the first installation of a pio­neering system in seafloor survey­ing aboard UCSD/Scripps lnsti­titution of Oceanography' (SIO) research vessel Melville. The total cost of the project is more than $2 milJion.

S[O has provided about $6OO,<XX> from university sources. Additional funding has been requested from the Navy and the National Science Foundation (NSF).

The new seafloorsurvey system, called SEA BEAM 2000, will be installed after the modification to become operational in early 1992.

The SEA BEAM 2000 is ex­pected to lead to major advances in marine geology, and its map-mak­ing capability will benefit all type of oceanographers - biological, physical, chemical, and geological - who use the ocean floor as a laboratory for increasingly sophi -

KSDT Continued from page 1 it's tied into our TV station [some time] down the road."

Edson said that Walshok' standpoint on the i ue is to "im­prove the university image, basi­cally providing a service to the out­side corrununity. She wants to cre­ate the C-Span 0" research, which is totally divergent from what we want."

Edson said that the A.S. Council wants KSDT to be a place where students can gain valuable experi­ence in the communications field.

If extension begins managing KSDT, then students would no longer be able to program the broad­casts.

The KSDT station manager would also no longer be appointed by students, but rather by extension officials.

In addition, Edson said that if extension gains the right to run the radio station, then the project to upgrade KSDT and obtain an FCC license would be postponed for sev­eral years due to financial reasons.

TIle A.S. wants to get the project underway immediately, Edson ex-

ticated field experiments that in­volve sampling. monitoring, or modifying the environment.

"Acquiringamapofthecompo-ition and shape of this 'laboratory'

is a prerequisite for mo ttypes of experiments,just as buying a topo­graphic sheet is the first step in most land-based field programs," aid Dr. George Shor Jr., SIO professor of Marine Geophysics and director of ship operations.

"The relief of the seafloor is itself a factor that controls many deep-sea processes and must, therefore, be measured if the e processes are to be understood," Shorsaid. "These include the natu­ral building and destruction of sea features and the influences of ocean currents on the ever-changing face of the deep sea."

The SEA BEAM 2000 was de­veloped by the General Instrument Corporation in cooperation with sro scientists. SIO's research ves-

plained. "We want to broadcast some of

the same things ... [but] we want to do it now," Ed on said.

Edson said that he has proposed a compromise with UCSD Ex­tension's requests.

"We'd pay for funding for the new transmitter [and have] a uni­versity-wide committee of facully, staff, students, and administrative official to decide programming," he said.

According to Breyman, such a committee would hire an out ide advisor, but station programming would continue to be done by stu­dents.

"The advisor and commillee would check to see if there was a progranuning deficit [in a certain areal." rather than programming the station themselves, Breyman said.

"We have enough balance that all the programming could be pro­duced from within the station," he said.

"We've been doing it for 22 years ... just because we'd be broad­casting doesn't mean ... that our programming would change. Qual­ity would go up," he added.

According to Breyman, KSDT

sel ThomasWashillgton was the first university ship to utilize an early generation of the SEA BEAM ys­tern, and its scientists are among the world's leaders in the development of side scan and bathymetry tech­nology.

The system has played a key role in ocean exploration, especially marine geology, and has contributed to survey work for ocean drilling and deep-sea expeditions.

The ignals are broadcast from arrays mounted on the ship's hull and are reflected from the seafloor, with their return time measured and converted to depth and offset dis­tances by computers. A ploner then produce multi -colored contour map of the shape and elevations of seafloor features.

"This ystem will enableM ell/ill e to playa leading role in accelerating programs of global exploration and environmental monitoring," Shor said.

KSDT deejay EI Ghazali

would create separate cable and broadcast stations if it was granted an FCC license.

Breyman also said that the cost of running KSDTwouid not change drastically if it were to program two different stations, because the sta­tion would be able to use existing equipment and space to create a second broadcast studio. News Editor Jason Snell also contributed to thIs story,

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OPINION 4 OPINION

EDITORIALS Editorial Board

PHIL GRUEN. EdilOl' in Chier ROBIN MACLEAN. Managing Editor JASON SNELL. News Editor BEN BOYCHUK. Opinion Edilor

TIteUCSD G_dIIl. b""bliJhod 'woumclI_k II the Unlvcnl'yofCtdlf ....... s.n Doc", 0.-.. CI99I , Vlcw ... ,....tcId hcm.1qlftKlII lite ... jon'Y"'" ofllteediooriaJ -.II1II ... n ... 'c~ly "-ofllte UC Boord of ... ,.. ... the ASUCSD. _ the ..... G __ 1IIIt

THE PERSIAN GULF WAR

Peace in the Gulf - on Our Terms Now that the ground war stage of the Persian Gulf War has

begun. some will inevitably complain that a diplomatic option was not given a reasonable chance to bring an end to the hostilities. Indeed. it will be easy for anyone opposed to the war to point to the peace plan proposed by Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and accepted by the Iraqis. CeI1ai.n1y, some would say, a quick peace is better than no peace at all. President Bush rejected the Soviets' peace plan not out of any love for war, but because the proposal was nothing more than a very well-dressed straw man.

The Gorbachev plan was a grandiose exercise in political showboating. It was designed to make the Iraqis look. good, paint Gorbachev as a global peacemaker, and would have allowed Saddam Hu seintoescapescot-free-anoutcome which would have been totally unacceptable.

For a peaceful outcome to be achieved in thi conflict, there can be no concessions made to the Iraqi . Saddam Hu sein' forces invaded Kuwait last August, occupied its cities, annexed it, and seized its assets and it oil fields. Since that time, the Iraqi occupation force has raped and pillaged Kuwait City, taking vinually everything of value. and brutalizing the natives.

Last week, when the Iraqi agreed to a "full and unconditional withdrawal" from Kuwait, they allempted to avoid responsibility by setting down several condi tions, including the reprieve of all United Nations' re olutions and sanctions placed on Iraq. One U.N. resolution in panicular called for Iraq to assume full financial re ponsibility for its inva ion of Kuwait. Under Gorbachev's peace proposal, Iraq would be free from paying war reparations.

The main purpose of thi war is to enforce U.N. anction. Sanctions should be kept in place as long as Saddam's military remains a threat. One of the main goals of this conflict should be the destructi n of the Iraqi war machine. An outcome with anything less is unacceptable,

The gall of the Iraqi leadership is almost beyond belief. After live weeks of blanket bombing, resulting in the pulverization of Iraq's defenses and the vinual annihilation of its infrastructure, Saddam Hussein still believes that he can end this war on his own tenns. Among other things, Iraq demanded aceasc-fire, agreeing to begin a pull-out from Kuwait within a day, and be completely withdrawn within three weeks. Funhennore, Iraq called for the suspension of U.N. resolutions after only two-thirds of its troops have withdrawn.

The idea that Iraq is making any demands at all is laughable. Hussein has called for gestures of good faith from the allies when he himselfhas yet to act in good faith . Recall the earliest days of the conflict, when Hussein promised to have his troops out of Kuwait within a week. Seven months later, he asks for three weeks.

The plan made no mention of how over 500,000 Iraqi mines will be disposed of, nor did it address the status of over 100 Iraqi lighter planes which fled to Iran in the early weeks of the war.

lndeed. consider the source of the plan- Mikhail Gorbachev. In recent months, Gorbachev has watched his Soviet Union crumble and his popularity wane. As a world power, the Soviet Union has become largely impotent, having enough difficulty dealing with its own internal crises. By taking on the role of the diplomatic middleman, Gorbachev no doubt saw an excellent opponunity to reassert himself as important player in interna­tional affairs. Had the allies accepted the proposal, his plan may well have worked.

But the allies - and the U.S. in particular - are not stupid. aearly, a political victory in the Gulf War is far more important than a quick peace and any attempt by Gorbachev to weasel his way out of a crisis at home. It is ironic that Gorbachev had hoped to emerge as a peacemaker and forger of compromise from this conflict. especially considering his recent need to use military force to quell domestic uprisings in the Baltic Republics -uprising which came as a re ult of Gorbachev's refusal to compromise on independence for the republics.

Bush' "high-noon" ultimatum was clearly the only way to go. The Iraqis may have initialed this conflict, but the allies and the U.S. are going to finish it - on our own tetms.

The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 25, 1991

BENSON

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COMMENTARY

Post-War Gulf on the HOrizon • America must be thinI<irYJ of the future in the Persian Gulf, and should plan to leave soon after the war By GnIg DIxon AIaoc:i.ft Opinion EdIIar

We are now one moadl into the Gulf War IDd pcopIe are beJimin& to diac:aMa whit the post-war PmiaD Gulf order sbouId be lib. 1bc diJcusiOIlbas centered on .America's role in the gulf as much as it has upon the future of a defcaled Iraq.

In thinking of the Gulf War, America must plan for the post-war order. This order must be founded on principles which ensure IS8bility aOd growIb for the region.

The first phase of lite post-war Older should be • regional security SlNCtUre. Tho beat ~..nty struCIW'e would be founded upoo 1be ~ of aD of the SIllieS in the rcaioa. indndina IsnIcI.IO dcIaId die IeI'ri1oriaI i ........... ., rI all ...... .....

l.InIel ... be included ill dllllOC-'oto~ die aecuriay syIIem from be!Q'dI". iimpIe1Gol6 las desbudioo. While 11111 DOl ooe 10 defend r..a or las past ICIions, it is. tOYeIdp icalhl& ...... much ri&bt to rebIin ill ~.e as aD)' Olber nation .. in !he reJioo. '

It may, however, p!OVO impoIsibID to iDCIude _ Inet in 1be security S)'IIeID. Ifdlis JlRMllIIO be.tbo case. a smaller SIIUCIUIe could be II1iInJed wbidJ would include Saudi AnIbia IDd !be smaller PtniID Gulf s&aIeI, lim and Iraq. as weD at Syria lad possibly SordID. Egypt could be added to die list if !he rest are amenable.

Above aD, Ibis system sbould be _ up by Iho stales in question. America CIa play • pidina role. but it should not fon:e abe IbIpina d. Middle. BIll NATO to lUll AmcricIn inIIeIaU. America.1.ibwiIe, must be SlR to remove aD of our ImOpS as 1OOIl. II possible after the cooftk:t. The de1De of. l'IIbecI Kuwait IOd, if neceauJy, the occupIIioo fA pq. should be left to Ibo Anb ....

America is iIllile Persian OuIfto eabOe UIIIIed NaIiaas mandltes for Ibe expulsioa oflnlq 6UD . KUWldL Once Ibis is &COl..,. ....... we tbouklJeavte with all..,...opciale ditpMcb To aemain would W !he fires of diIICIIt ia 1be ArIb wodd. wbIcIt czy tbIt our roIo is_ of iqJerWiIt ooIonIadoa. 1'IIIl.not our purpoee and illlbould not be milcclalUued as our goal.

On Ibe question ofrepll'llions: America must be sure to keep .... to • minimum. 1bere baa been Iallc of America retainina limited c:onIrOl of Iraqi oil expona .. a IIXW\S of peyIna for die war. 1bia is rIdiculoua. It is neither poIidcally r.ibIa, ~ prIICIical.

The question of Iraqi reparations .is besr left to the Arab staaes. America sbouId keep any demands to a bare minimum.1DCl prcfu'abIy make oooe at all. We IDUIl rananber'" America wID bave to deal widllbe _ 8I8lea Ioaa after Ibe war is over. There is no wiIdom ia anIagOnizing the Arabs for the sake of domestic: opinion, DO maacr what !he

~ In IeIUnl for Ibe wrongs commiued by Iraq

apiDIt Kuwait. it is IUFOO8bIe tbIIt Iraq be made to pay for Ibe COlt of recoostnICtion within the emiI'IIe. Yet, it must be ~ that Iraq is not a DIllion wbic:b wiD be able to spend huge amouoIS or moaoy.1.raq WM beaviIy indebted bebe tbe.WIf.1Dd DOW"" mucb lICODIbUCdoo alJllowato wonyJlbout 1'IIe~ ~ ... lIOt~t. .... .n."'OfIrlq. -or .... ~ ... ~DO.ot ..... Ibe .... ofdaftllloD...tIIe. _ ....... qalct.1O -_ Rider. now let .TelDmlberVenaiDea.

WIIII,dIeD IbID Apaerica" 6vIn &be ..., M8ny poop1e WIIIt to 'see COCIC.MC piaL 1bey abouId be wamed IbIt COCICin*$ pias wiD not rauJl dbecdy fn'm the .... 1becoet ollbe ... is IIrJdJ 'beiDa .... by die 0u1t ... andby Ibe ~ofodlerDllioGlIDd" AcconI­iDa to die Et:onoMiiiRnl ".,Ioe, MIlly $40 biIHoa has been otr«'ed 1iDce~"""ng of combIIt. 1bia COIla 011 JDp of_ biIIioDs aIftlIdy in tho pipeIiae hill ... in 1990.

BCCIUIe much ortbe COlt of tho opallion wID be pIicl for by otbenI- SOfDDIICJUIQIS say dw up 10 7' pen:ent of_ COllI may be covered by fcnIan aItioDa -America DiIecl not be~ coocemecJ' With Ibe ftt __ 11olses it miy incur.

America wiD Iqely beneftt.indftc.'d)'. BY kcepioa CODbOI of oil poducdon diYideiI. we erIIIft rdldve price aocI supply SIabUity. 1bia wiD allow the world economy (wbicb .. aIaDoIt eadreIY depai4eot OIl oil) to operate wItboUtdie ,.. of being held ...... by .1iDaI08JdividuIL

The - ..... -1Ce ~JeIIIMly cbelpoil,ancI. return to price IIBbility wiD aiel die RIIXWeI)' flam Ibe c:um:nt world aeceuioo. Tbae beaefita wiD be Indirect, and likely wD1 taU IDIDe lime 10 mD­feat, but they wiD rautt noaedaeJeu.

America ... role to play in the c:omio. peICe process. This role wiD be neceady limited, but is si~ nonecbe1ess.. The p-..a dqer, bowever. ilihat America wiD IIy liD play bepmoa. 'Ibis illIOl iDearlDraat.lIId It ....... DOC be our ....

Monday, February 25,1991

LETTERS

Maurer Responds to Guardian EdItorial Board CrItIcIsm IrAIIIan

I lID writina in respollse to your editorial ("1brow the Slackers Out." Feb. ]9). My oYeraII feeling about the editorial is tbM of unprofeasionaJitro. ' Yourpaperia nor reftecting the DeWS OIl

campus. but radIer fonnullling news where Ibere is no news. 1 feel that in order for any paperto be truly objective. it can not be biued to any consequence or incident.

PertJaps the editors have a penooaI dilemma with certain issues. but I strongly feel that this should be raken C8Ie of tbroup other actions.

Not ooly is your statement impre­cise, but it is lacking direc:t support. In tile recenrbistory of the Aasociared Stu­dents, novel' bas there been a more har­monious council, which has bad one COQPDOO goal: to improve ... IlUdent mood on campus.

Additionally. I feel that the staro­meat II -.Maurer bas been noticeablY Iax." and the additioaalltalemeots f'ol..' . lowing tbisstatemcnt ale strooaly .,1-ased. As witb OIbernews qaedia, yo881\t quick to Ihow the ncgadve - without . any understanding of tile history and bEkground of the situation -- and ovedookthepositive \VOlt done.! would . like to tab this time to mention a few .".,....."iahmeAtI that I am very proud to bmI beoa • pert of and believe that "CRdit should,be given where c.tedit is due."

An addition to the A.S. this year was AS. MaJteIins. Please see tile front JI88e of the Guardian ("A.S. Cn:area New Marketing Dept. for PubUcizins SIUdentBveoIl," Ian. 7) forexpJaoatioo. FurthenDote, the new format of the OlaoccUor's Forum bas also been an additional benefit to students. Again. please see thefront page of the Guard­ian (Feb. ll).

Additionally. your statement also mentions tbat ..... [COmmissioner of Programming Malt] Schourer bas been doing Maurer's work ... " In response to . this, r would say that Mr. Sebnmer is continuing to worlc in the same manner as he has been in his two years in office. Last year, it was my understanding that Mr. Scbnurer cbose.to do bis own worlc for his events (TG's, pub shows, etc.). This year, when A.S. Marketing was established, there were DO attempCs on his part to usc • request fonn 10 help design publicity for the events.

My personal opinion as to wby Mr. Scbnurer is continuing to do his deligo work is thai be 'bas developed a dis­tinctive style in c:rearing posters and wants IOcontinue it through his last year in office.

Overall, 1 feel that the GIIIUdian's statement was exageraaed and fails to recognize the work done thus Carby the conunissioners - specificaDy public relations. I hope that your paper will lake whatever stepS necessary to smooth and remedy the situation.

George Maarer A.B. CommiMloner (#

Public Re' .......

The UCSD Guardian OPINION 5

COMMENTARY

NUckB Weapons a Key for the Allies • Using "clean" battlefield nuclear weapons will save American lives

Altbough some Americans are opposed to tbeGulfWar, evaybody claims that they support Ibe IrOOpS. Obviously. suppoI1in, the lIOOpSenlails supponingany reasonable metbod &bat would limit allied easuallies wbiJe ICbievin& die UaitedNaIioas' clearly esaabliahed otpcdvea. UoIonuIwely. cer­tain ~ have prevented the employmaItofthe..-efticienI moans for • quiet end to this conftict. As a result. our 1IUOpS wDl pay the price.

CoavaItioaIl bombing is taking its lOll onlbe Inqia. bm tbcn is plenty of wort to do. UalIIsbombsandartillery snikeadirect bit, they 1ft ioetTective against hardened IarJd8 sudI as II'OOpI in bunkers or buried IIDb. It is for this n.on that we are now proceeding with a ground war. As casuali­lies rise, Saddam Hussein's total disregard for Ibe Uvea of his troops will give him a c:IisIioct advantage. Unlike the American leadenbip, mounting casuelliee wiD have 1iU1e politkaI emaOll this ruthlasdiaalor. His steely decerminaIion stands in sharp CODU1ISt to the Craiby of U.s. public opinion. Considering Ibis. we must lake every mea­sure oecestaI)' to mate the ground ~ as quick and bloodless as possible.

As one general put it, "You CID fly over it, you can bomb it, and youcanspitoo it-but it ain', yours 'till you're in city baIL" To Iibctnde Kuwait, we IIJI8t sraue the region. lbisroquiresinfantry'unitseolcrinathe area andeosuringdweacmy soktiers bavceitber IUIJ~ «fled. Bombs aod Jong-lWlge artiDeIy are DOt foolproof. Detpitc constant blanlrabombinaofltaqidcfensivepositions, we QmIIOI be c:ompieIeIy ~ of wbal will

, be waldDa forOIII' 4Idv.ciDa tIOOpI during • pound war. By usins hettIcficId nuclear weapooa, our troops CIa rest aaswaI that Ibe:re will be no surprises. Tactic:al nuclear weapons wiD destroy all memy targets, including thoee ~ are deeply eotrenched. This will help pdnimize Ibe loas of Ameri­can liwIL SdD, tbse are many mytbs about

RECOIL/ '" ,

tbese particular weapons wbichhavecaused a trepidation towards their use. 1be miscon­ceptions involve the belief thai dae weap­ons will leave lasting fallout, resulting in civilian ~ths, and set a dangerous prece­dent.

Tbere is an erroneous myth circulating that all nuclear weapons result in radiation poisooing of the surroundina area. Today' s tactical nuclear weapons leave little or no raidual radiation - hence the term "low­yield.." Originally, these weapons were in­tended for use in western Europe, and as a rault were designed to keep fallout to a mirUmwn. Michael T. Klare, a foremost expert on the topic, concludes that these "clean" weapons ·' ... reduce the potentia] for coUateral daJna&e to neaJby S1IUCtureS and civilian populatioos." The concept behind them is simple. 1be weapon is exploded high in the air, and theIdJy avoids infusing the dirt with radiation. Durin, the explo­sion, neuIrODS are emiard and penneate the area. WdbiPboursafterlllexplosion,lrOOpS can came in ahd secure the regiOlLIn corn­pariIoo 10 the bomb dropped OIl Hiroshima - equivaleot to 12.000 lOllS of TNT -lbeledevioes arereJatively weak -equiva­lent to lea than 1,000 tons of TNT.

Tbe UIO of baaIcfieId nuclear weapons wouldbeinoneplace-!hebatt/~eld. The areas I8I'gdCd would be ren'IOYed from ci­vilian popuIatioo centers, thus posing no risk'to the bmoc:enr citimns of Kuwait and

COMMENTARY

Iraq. Some suggestions have been to strike the Republican Guard in southern Iraq or clear paths through enemy defenses.

Anotherunfounded fearsurrounding low­yield nuclear weapons is the setting of some sort of "nuclear precedent." Most people would agree that Saddam Hussein, who used poison gas 00 his own people, would have DO qualms about launching nuclear strikes if he had the means available. Scud

. missiles launched at Israel and Saudi Arabia shouldanestto thefact that Saddam does not consider morality or precedent when mak­ing such decisions. And contrary to what some people believe, the international cooununity doesn't look toward America for moral guidance.

Before our strikes, the military should drop leaflets over Iraqi positions. This would wam them of the impending danger and promise humane treatmem if they surrender. Saddam Hussein should also be warned against the fonhcorning nuc.lear strike, and with !he U.N. objectives stated, be given a brieftimc uJtimatum. Throughout all this, we should continue conventional air strikes.

In the past, the strategy of nuclear deter­rence has served to protect America. This time, it may benefit the Iraqis. I am fairly confident that those Jrdqi troops who are free to surrender will do so. In much the same way, the possibility of confronting nuclear weapons might force Saddam to awaken from his megalomaniacal slumber or else face a coup - or worse,

Bloody World War I trench-style fight­ing is far more gruesome than a clean, battlefield nuclear strike. In the end. we will not kill any more Iraqi soldiers than already anticipated. We can save a considerable amount of American lives. We must not allow some people's unfounded fears to forceusinlOullllecessarilysacrificingtroops.

In the past, America's nuclear phobia has greatly hurt our energy policy. Ut's not allow it to do the same to our troops.

Plethora of Pape~s is pernicious By Greg KnIuU ConIrIbutJng OpInion Wtit8r

Walking around campus, it's almost im­possible to avoid them. They lie in large. neglectal stacks outside ofPererson Hall or in riltins, forgotten piles in the Student Center. Almost everybody sees them, but very few people actually pay them any at­tention.

They'relbe UCSD student newspapers .. 1be state of special-interest journalism

IU this school is appalling, even embarrass­ing. Narrowly focuscd ideology is supported by an unquestioning budget process, while !he interests of the average student are al­most completely ignored.

E1evenstudent-producednewspapersare published on this campus, consuming about $SO,OOO of the Associated Student budget annually. This cost could be easily justified if Iho money was distributed equitably be­tween the periodicals, the amount given to each dependtnt on its circulation and the intaest it geoertUes among students. But this is not the case. Inertia, not relevance, guides the funding process - seniority. not readersbip, dictates budgets and print runs.

The wont, though far from the only, example of this is the New Indicator. Ac­cordin, to the ModiaBoard's budget report. theNI. as the oldest A.S.-funded newspaper at UCSD, receives over $15.soo of the students' money every year,despitelbe fact tbIIt large piles of the radicaI.Iy leftist journal Jiearoundcampus, unreadbyadisintermed

ShJdcnt body. The questions abound: Does the NI cJe...

serve the 30 percent of the media budget it gets? Does it produce nearly a thiJd of the AS.-fundedjoumalism on campus? Nearly a thiJd of the interest? Why does its budget keep going up if few people read it? Why does it maintain the same print run if the issues continue to lie around for weeks after they are distributed?

This is not a question ofleft versus right, nor is it one of censorship. This is a question of practicality and fairness. The New JfIIii­calor has every right to print a newspaper, just as it has every right to a portion of the media budget. For it to receive such a huge sum, unquestioned, despite the fact that the vast majority of stu dents don 'tread it is both silly and stupid.

But the New Indicator is only one ex­ample. Conservatives, the Spanish-speak­ing, Jewish people, women. Asians, and blacks alto have newspapers directed to what the respective editors deem are !heir respective interests. The average student is left with only three general-interest peri­odicals: rho Koala, Abbt/abbs, and the Er­ratically. (The GlIIII'dion is funded solely through advertising .xl does not receive AS. money.)

How can this situation be remedied? The Media Board and the A.S. could undertake a random sampling of UCSD students and determine !he ideal circulation of each ncwspaperthrough polling. By simply ask-

ing lOperccnt of the people who attend this school, "What campus newspapers do you read regularly - or even read at aU?" the massive waste that typifies the current sys­tem could be cut almost completely.

Or,alternately,A.S. representatives could monitor the size of each newspaper's distri­bution piles, and determine if their budget for the ncxt quarter should goupordown. If a paper has 50 percent of its copies left in stacks around campus a week after it came out, it simply does not deserve the money it's getting. If every copy is gone within a day, it deserves more.

Of course, each of these suggestions has flaws - the fITS! discriminates against the smaller, less visible newspapers, and the second has no protections against cheating. But whatever the solution, the problem re­mains painfully clear. While the A.S. funds a newspaper for almost every minority group on campus, little attention is paid to the average person attending UCSD. And thus the average person attending UCSD pays little attention to the newspapers.

The First Amendment right of each of these papers to print whatever it wantS is nor, and should not, be the issue. But for the A.S. to dedicate such a huge portion of student funds 10 activities that serve such a small portion of students is not in the best interests of the university or those who attend it. 1be media of UCSD is over-funded and under­criticized, and for it to continue unchanged is nothing less than a scandal.

6 OPINION The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 25, 1991

Traynham Responds to Critics of B&W Cartoons of Color By Jonathan Traynham

In regards to my caricature of Zaclwy Berman (,'Black and White Cartoons of Color," Feb. 19) 1 have

COMMENTARY

received a nwnberofdistwbing letters as you may well be aware.

I've been reminded ..... the fillit whites to board the non-segregated buses during the Civil Rights move­menl were Jews."

One writer even believed Tom Metzger sponsored my pro-Japanese

cartoon which ran Jan. 28. I realize that there might be some

tension between African..Amcricans and our Jewish broIhm; and sisrers because of embarrassing staIementS

made by Jesse Jackson and Professor Griff of the rap group Public Enemy. However,l don't subsribe to such a mentality and my cartoons do not depict it

The caricature was upposed to be a lightly humorous depiction of Zachary Bennan. as well as a rebuttal to statements he made in "Discrimina­tion Wor1cs Both Ways" a proposed

THE

commentary for the Feb. 19 issue which was not printed.. The public never saw what half of my cartoon was ridiculing.

In hisdiscriminalion commc:nuuy he talked about minority scholarships - making reference only to African­Americans. as if they were the only oneswhorcceivedthesescholarships. It was a direct auack on us. This is the article from which the comment "successful race" was quoted. 1llese comments reeicofwhitesupremacy, if you ask me.

I drewthe StarofDavid around his

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neck because many proud Jewish people wearthem. Thecartoon Wlti in no way nanlto generalize the Jewish faith Iti slwing Zachary's political vieWs.

could be construed as derogatory. Evidently I was wrong.

In final analysis, I have nothing but respect for the Jewish religion. For one, they don't nag at people to get them to go to meetings. I wlti worried thal acaricalure of a

person so vocal in the Jewish student body mig'- generate this kind of a response, so I ran it by my two Jewish roommaIeSas well as Zachary Berman himself.

I also am well aware of the sensi­tivity the Jewish community in America has shown Afiican-Ameri­cam, and I amsensitivetomany Jewish issues. I'm a history major. so SlOp sending me shit in the mail quoting Black Ieadcrs and don't IIy and teach me about Jews and the Civil Rights movement, because I know.

I know that these three people can in no way represent the whole Jewish faith, bur their response was ~tive and I couldn't find anything which

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Monday, February 1S, 1991 The UCSD Guardian OPINION 7

Readers Call Traynham's Cartoons 'Anti-Semitic' Editor:

When Jonathan Traynham' s "Black & WhiteCartoonsof~lor" first appeared in the G Utlrdiiln, I was quite pleased that you had fmally found an effective opposing voice to your painfully .ultra-conserva­tive columnist, Zachary Berman. AI last, here we had someone who hadfir t-handknowledgeofwhat it is 10 be an African-American and could share his insights on black­white relations with a mostly igno­rant campus. However, Mr. Traynham's satire has become so full of that very ignorance that he has proven himself to be no better than Mr. Berman.

Though Zachary Bennan's po­lemics border on racist, you, Mr. Traynham, have plunged to the deplhs of characterizing people solely on how they look. In your cartoon ("Zachary Berman's Wet Dream," Feb. 19), whether inten­tionally or not, you have portrayed Bennan as "every racist": a blond, long-ha i red, "booty-chinned" surfer.

More than that, though, you opted for the more powerful visual effect of having him wear a Star of David. How dare you associate my religious beliefs with racism! It 's bad enough that you indict Bennan on the basis of his appearance, but to go so far as to associate his guilt with my religion is chilling. If I might ask a hypothetical question: ifBennan were a professed Catho-

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lic, would you still have drawn a Crucifix around his neck? So, then, why a Mogen David?

I guess it doesn't manerwhether your heroes appear on convention ccntelli if you can't remember the most important thing yourhero(and mine) ever said, "Judge men not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character." You have chosen to ignore that credo. having found Mr. Berman, all blond, long­haired booty-chiMed surfelli, my people, and most of all myself, guilty of being white or Jewish as charged. I wish I could excuse us all. Instead, Mr, Traynham, let the ignorance continue ...

Daniel Shanfield

Editor: On Feb. 19, we were stunned

when we opened the GUtlrdian and found Zachary Berman 's Jewish heritage attacked in a canoon by Jonathan Traynham. Weundellitand that the point of this cartoon was to show how ridiculous some people view Mr. Bennan. However, we believe this cartoon does not dis­tinguish between Berman 's right­wing political views and his reli­gion.

We were particularly honified by the statementthat read, "Seehim, fear him, he belongs to the 'suc­cessful ' race ... but he's not a white supremacist because he's Jewish." This statement can easily be mis­construed to mean that Jews are

successful by birthright. In reality, the Jewish people have had to over­come more obstacles than any other minority.

We were also dismayed by the use of the Mogen David (Jewish star) as a charm around Berman ' neck.

No uch association hould be made. Many Jews are liberal, and in upportof improving theopportuni­

ties available 10 minorilies. Perhaps more care should be taken not to confuse Judaism with the polilical right.

The canoon also seems 10 indi­cate that Jews feel people should beckon to their every need. This is displayed by the Black person bow­ing down to Berman, who happened to have a Jewish symbol predomi­nanlly displayed around his neck. The idea of a person bowing down to other people is extremely repulsive to the Jews. Perhaps the canoon would have been more effective if the Jewish symbolism had been left out.

However, as Jews, we felt per­sonally attacked when Zachary Bennan's Judaism was as ailed. In the future, we hope that people are criticized as individuals, and not as a member of a minority.

Editor:

Jane Kubrin Andrew Fink

I was really shocked by the cari­cature of Zachary Bennan entitled "Zachary Bem1an's Wet Dream,"

in the GUtlrdian (Feb. 19). It is un­derstandable that Zachary Bennan might be the object of ridicule and pun. However, J thought it was in bad laste to. ridicule Bennan's Jew­ish identity.

I don't undellitand why the artist decided to emphasize the Jewish lereotype of abnormally sized fa­

cial features, not to mention the Star of David pendant around the charncter'sneck. What purpo e was he trying to serve?

May I remind the artist that the firsl whites 10 board the nonsegre­galed buses to Montgomery, Ala­bama alongside blacks during the Civil Rights movement were Jew . The first non-black (or non-Afro­American) champions of Civil Rights were Jews. Afro-American andJewshaveboth ufferedrnci m. Why does this have 10 happen? I am disgusted with this blatant anti­semitic image and I am ashamed that my school's newspaper propa­gates uch material.

I hope that the artist's intentions were not anti-semitic.

Marc G. Bodman

Editor: I found three separate instance

ofwhatseernedtobeAnti-Semiti m in the GUtlrdian, (Feb. 19).

In the cartoon about Zachary Berman, he was ridiculed. He was put down not as a columnist or a right-wing Republican - which he is-but asaJew. Though he freely

admits to being Jewish, Ihis should not be taken as a reason for his polilical views.

Secondly, in both the lettelli de­fending Germany, Mr. Bennan' argument were compared to "Nazi stereotypes" and "Third Reich Anti­Semitic propaganda." I would find Ihis hocking no maner who wrote ii, but the facI that it was written by Germans i even more frightening. Mr. Berman's arguments were not at all comparable to wwn Gennan propaganda. NOl only Ihat, but the writers don' l even have all their facts straight. Though Gennany was not the largest rums seller to Ihe Iraqis, il was Ihe base of operations for European anns sales for almost 10 years.

I honestly hope thaI Ihese anti­Jewi h stalements were not meant the way I interpreted them. [f so, I'd love 10 hear an explanation.

Judith Scepesi

n, UCSD G".,.,Ii." wc:lcomu lerltfS .and (OrTU1'Wluriu (rom .11 mcmbc,.. of the unh't:rsity communif)'. Drop your letter at the: GtM~i.,. OfrKU (on the xmnd 0001' o( tM: Srudcnr Ctntcr. :llooyt: the Gc.nual Store) or mail it to:

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Lrrtt:n mWI be:: typed. double. "puc-d, and should induc:k a .iJNtuft and phOIlC number. Un.Js.ncd letten will nOt be prlntc.d. We ruc.rvc the ripn to edit (or len&th and cbrity. We. cannot lUM1Juxe. tNt your Ittkt' Of e.ommc.ntary wIll be printed.

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8 OPINION The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 25,1991

I am as liberal as the oat guy and bdicve that aIawIy and oppacaaiuo of black people iI immonl, but that _ •

long time "I'D. Today there is DO diffen:oa betwun bIacb and wbita, 10 aftinnabve acboo iI juat aralgbt up WI'OII8-

Can Blacks survive the kiln. woundl lnfllcled upon !him by • R«I. Whitt. WId BoW Amerial7 Ler. help

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FEATURES 9 FEATURES

Happy Trails • With all the nearby mountain ranges, UCSD students really should ''take a hike" Story By Kent Korzon, Senior Staff Writer Photographs By Rlmas Uzglrls, Photo Editor

Our surprise was mutual. The deer stopped foraging when we entered the

=.:-41,... :~1t- small, rock-walled clearing, and anxiously looked for a way out. We bloc.ked the only exit. Lacking any other escape route, the deer bounded through the middle of our

group and disappeared into the brush below. While it's not the Sierra Nevadas. San Diego 's Peninsular

Range, with over a thousand square miles of national forest, L 7 reservations for Native Americans, and numerous state and county parks, offers an incredible variety of scenic hiking and biking trails.

One of the most striking features of San Diego's backcountry is in the Cleveland National Forest - the south flank. of EI Cajon Mountain.

Work started at a quarry therein 1935, when stone was needed for what would become EI Capitan Dam. Today, the old buildings are little more than crumbling concrete and rusting iron set in deep Cjlts in the surrounding rock, and San Diego's longest lake stretches back into the mountains.

There's more in common with Yosemite's famous EI Capitan than the name. Like a wave about to break, sheets of granite loom hun­dreds of feet over cow pastures and fanns on the valley floor below.

"It didn't look like you could climb it, here from the road," said Muir senior Keith Melman, when he returned from the top.

Easily seen from Mile High Field, the cliffs are 35 minutes by freeway from UCSD. While driv­ing to the area is easy, gaining access to the slopes is difficult be­cause pri vate land hugs the foot of the cliffs. Wait until the signs change from "No Trespassing" to "No Camping, No Fires," before pulling over to park.

Climbing the first ridge due west of the quany is one possible route up the mountai-n. This route takes you up your choice of steep paths, It is dirt at first, giving way to increasingly more rock as you climb.

Most of the various paths on the ridge meet at "Skyview," a boul­der pile on the ridge. 'The name comes from the view one gets while ;-

approaching from the trails below - a patch of sky framed by a rock arch. Underneath is room for several people to rest in cool shade. There isn't much shade on this climb, but there is usually a stiff breeze. At higher elevations, all routes up require good

See HIKING, Page 10

The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 25, 1991

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HIKING Continued from page 9 climbing ability.

There is no one way to the top, and from some places there is no way to the top at all. A past climber has painted green dots on the rock: to guide people in spots where there is no obviously "right" way to proceed. Following avoid will save you from having to back­track: .

Many "out of the way" places are in the backcounuy, and the scenery begins in San Diego's westem foothills, just 30 minutes from campus. They are covered with dense chaparral that elimi­nates shons as an apparel option. Wear jeans.

In some areas, such as Mission Trails Regional Park, you can just pull off to the side ofthc road, park, and explore. Other areas require a park or reservation official's per­mission, or fees.

In these foothills lies Mount Woodson, northeast of Poway. Called the "Mountain of Moonlit Rocks" by Native Americans, its slopes are studded with an amaz­ing array of smooth "granodiorite" boulders, brought to the surface by ero ion.

Some of these boulders are huge, and the largest tend to cleave along flat plane , fonning one of San Diego's best bouldering areas. Trails up the mountain begin at Poway Lake, off Espola Road.

Other foothills, such as Otay Mountain in the southern county and Black Mountain nonh of Rancho Penasquitos, are better suited to mountain biking than to hiking.

Behind the foothills are several mountain ranges comprising the Peninsular Range. In San Diego, this range is made up of several smaller ranges, many approaching 6,500 feet.

Above 5,000 feet, the chaparral of the mountain ranges gives way to oak, pine, and fir. But the east­ern slopes of the ranges rapidly desertify as they descend to the desert floor.

The northernmost range is the Palomar Mountains, a two hour drive from UCSD. Its major ridges are Palomar Mountain itself(home of the Palomar Observatory), Aguana Mountain to the east, and Agua Tibia Mountain to the west

While the area has numerous trails, among the best are the for­ests and meadows along Doane Creek.

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southern county, the Lagunas and Cuyamacas are quite popular mountain ranges, panly because oftheirclose proximity - only an hour away from UCSD.

There are more than tOO miles of hiking and equestrian trails in the Cuyamacas. They lead to the top of Cuyamaca and Stonewall peaks, and around the Cuyamaca Reservoir.

Througb the middle of the Cuyamacas runs the California Riding and Hiking Trail, which begins at Otay Mountain and ter­minates 142 miles to the north, in the San Jacinto Mountains.

The Lagunas are east of the Cuyamacas, on the edge of the Anza-Borrego Desert. Winter usually brings some snow to the all the Peninsular Range mountains, and hordes of San Diegans as well (especially to Mt. Laguna), who crowd the bills, sliding down the snow-covered slopes on impro­vised sleds. Heavy trash bags work ratherweU.

Wooded and scenic, there are many trails in the Lagunas, in-

Monday, February 25,1991

eluding a part of the Pacific Crest Trail. The road through the Lagu­nas (S-I) is aptly named the Sun­rise Highway, for at Desert View Vista Point, near the road's high point, it provides one with a look at the Salton Sea across a hundred miles of spectacular desert land­scape - the 620,000 acre Anza­Borrego Desert State Park.

The desert is a beautiful place to visit between October and May. In the summer, it's ranked as the hottest place in the country after Death Valley.

It is here that one can enjoy true solitude, but if you enjoy com­pany,one popular spot in the desert is Borrego Palm Canyon.

There, hundreds of palms trace a long, steep gorge into the moun­tains. Water is in pools year-round, and flowing waterfalls in the win­ter months - a seeming anomaly in the desert environment.

These scenic areas are easy to get to, and much of the backcounuy is still in a pristine state. Since spring is approaching, now is the perfect time for a visit.

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Mond~y, February 25, 1991 The UCSD Guardian FEATURE 11

Broadcasting Society Works to Establish Professional Relations By John Steckert Staff Writer

"It's not what you know but who you know."

That old adage has become one of ociety's most fundamental trui sms. Year after year, college graduates find a harsh job market that seems virtually impenetrable. It often becomes necessary for prospective professionals to foster a relationship with those who are already established in their careers. On the UCSD campus, the Na­tional Broadcasting Society can help students interested in the broadcasting field do just that.

Established in October of last year, the UCSD chapter of the National Broadcasting Society, or AERho (Alpha Epsilon Rho). i the I 10th chapter to be installed since the creation of AERho in 1958.

Designed to act as a catalyst to the knowledge acquired through class work of students in the Visual Arts and Communication majors, AERho focuses on fashioning a perspective of the broadcasting field on a personal level.

speaker. " Along with these peakers, the

110 AERho chapters have al 0

generated a well e tabli hed group of alumni that they can tap into within the broadca ting phere. Among the notable alumni are Paul Roth, a producer at IOU TV in Los Angeles; Michael Flemming, the executive vice president of the Playboy Channel; and Gordon Jump, the actor who played the loveable Arthur Carleson on the short-lived serie " WKRP in Cin­cinnati. "

"Not everyone's heard of AERho before," Fedors said, "but we are [present on] 110 different college campuses so you never know when you might meet ome­one who does [know of us]. If you do, it will give you something to start off with , a conversation opener."

Though its primary focus is to establi h relations with members of the professional world. AERho is also a peer review group for individual members to di scu s project and exchange ideas.

The e projects, once completed, are submitted to competitions like the ational Student Production Awards, and are showcased in the local and national convention in

" I see AERho as a means by wh ich stu­

dents can gain a deeper understanding of the [film] industry so they can say 'I

definitely want to pur­sue this career.

" PAUL FEDORS AERho President

which AERhochapters participate. One uch project that several

members of the local AERho group have started work on is a docu­mentary film about the event now transpiring within the Pe rsian Gulf.

"We are not really a production r-------------------------, group," said Paul Fedors, presi­dent of the UCSD AERho chapter. "We don't use a film we made to get into the indu try.Ourfocu i a more personal basis. We go out and meet the people who we are going to work for, find out what they are like, whatthey are looking for. "

AERho channels most of its energies into securing working professionals as guest speakers who can provide members with tips on job searching and a current perspective on the market. Since AERho focuses on the entire spectrum of the broadca ting in­dustry, ranging from the smalle t radio networks to the largest film and television production compa- 1-_--nies, the list of possible peakers is lUlSDAY =NT long and varied. UV::£EtNYwARD

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11 is not seen through po lit ical or military tenns, but take an alto­gether new approach, focusing on a group of people who have perhaps been forgonen during thi time of crisi , but who feel the effect of warfare a much a anyone.

"We looked to the home Ie s," Fedors said. " How they perceive and feel about the war."

The proje t, when completed , will not only help to fill the re­quirements of n Documentary Media cia ,but can also be en­tered into the local and national competiti ons spon ored by AERho.

"The convention are a great place to get a pu h, Fedors said. "You can meet people, showca e your work , and get updated on new technology. The resources are there for you to make contact. . . you just have to be aggre~sive en ugh to go after them."

In the future, AERho hopes that it can be affiliated with the Na­tionalAcademy of Televis ion Arts and Sciences. Thi ' institution di s­tribute the coveted Emmy awards

for telev ision produ ·tions on both a national and local level.

"The National Academy of Telev ision A rts and Sciences is, essentially , AERho on a g reater level," said Tom Rine lla, a mem­be r of AERho. " If we could be a ffiliated with it, it would increase our credibility."

AERho also plans to bring in other gue t 'peaker from local radio stations and telev ision stu ­dios, and arrange for members to see broadcasting sights first hand.

"We ' re young, so we have to get started first," Fedors said. "But I see AERho as a means by which students can gain a deeper under­standing of the industry so they can ay: ' I definitely want to pur-ue th is career' or ' thank God I

found out about it now ' and get out [of school]."

"The film industry i based upon who you know. not what you know. That' how you get job . If they know you and what you can do for them, the more contracts you get and the easier it is to get jobs. Every liuh.: bll helps," Rine lla aid.

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12 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT The UCSD Guardian

Guitarists 'Steel' Spotlight • Six of the nation's best guitarists gave a sampling of their styles, ranging from the blues and jazz to Hawaiian slack-key and country By Ari Krawitz Guardian Reporter

The night was cold, the week had been long, and my girlfriend had a headache, but nothing could stand in the way of the exci tement and energy of the Ma ters of the Steel String Gui tar concert at MandevilieAuditorium la ~ t Friday night.

The concert , organized by the ational Council for the Tradi­

tional Arts, was a showcase of unique talents, featuring six in­credible perfonners who each hold impressive positions in their re­spec tive styles.

John Cepha began the show, playing blues in the Piedmont fingerpicking tyle. Using a slide

n a national steel guitar, he warmed up the audience with music from several different areas of the blues genre. Hi deep voice carried theemotionofhis ong all through the first set, while his hamlonica

virtuoso partner Phil Wiggins ac­companied him for the last half of his perfonnance. Even though the blues have been around for a long time, Cephas and Wiggin invigo­rated the style with complex and energetic solos, convolu ted tim­ing, and a filled-out musical texture.

Wayne Henderson had the sec­ond set, and his Appala hian fin ­gerpicking on a guitar from his own line of nationally-renowned cu tom-made guitars, raised the enthusiasm of the crowd to a new level. The tempos ,of ea h song gradually increased, and hi play­ing soon flew by 0 quickly that the accompanying guitarist fell out of pace, Twice.

Ledward Kaapana, following Henderson, was in no way intimi­dated by the preceding acl. Kaapana brought the tempo of the show down to a mellow island pace, ex­hibitingthe unique Hawaiianslack­key tyle of guitar accompanied

Photos by Rlmas UzglrlslGuardian

Famed jazz musician Cal Collins played his guitar like a piano.

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only by his traditional Hawaiian fal etto singing. A true crowd plea er, Kaapana wa the only player to use any g immicks, such as a manual demon tration of poi­making - in the middle of a song wilhout dropping a beat. Kaapana' relaxi ng emotional playing style. island cowboy sound, Hawaiian tonality, and impres ive handling of the guitar eated him within the ranks 0 f the other masters.

Following the intermi sion Jerry Dou glas, dobro player ex traordinaire, took the stage. The dobro guitar i played in a manner imilar to lap-style guitars, except

the string are "fretted" with a bar in the le ft hand, and inside the body is a mewl re onator.

Dougla troked sounds and melodie out of hi dobro guitar like none other can. His econd song, "From Ankara to Izmir," played with a three-piece accom­paniment, fell into a catego ry somewhere between New Age and oft rock. The piece' accentuated

melody wa intermittently jolted by Douglas' unconventional !ide olos.

Henderson joined the group for "Bill Cheedham," an old fiddle tune brought to a new height by Douglas' and Henderson 's com­bined fingerpicking. After a funky jazz tune, Douglas finished his ex­travagant et with "A New Day," a folk /country ong with an a -tounding banjo-esque solo.

Cal Collins, the hi ghly-re­spected jazz player who performed next. opened hi set with an intri ­catesolo, accompanied by the band. Collins broke his ix th suing near the end of the ong, but after a brief delay, the jazz began to flow again. Perhap on a whim, Collins de­cided to play an extended 010 -

with the band still on the stage -but the accompanists didn ' t seem to mind a bit a they admiringly watched Collins strum the longest chord progression of the show.

Collins' playing evoked images not of a guitar, but of a piano, thanks to his novel technique of playing both chord and melody lines imultaneously. After "How Long Has This Been Going On?" - an apt I y -titled jazz tu ne that had many in the audience squirming

TS & ENTERTAINMENT Monday, February 25, 1991 The UCSD Guardian ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 13

A.lbert Lee, who has toured with Eric Clapton, played his classic "One Way Rider" Friday night at the Mandeville Auditorium.

because of its length - Cephas came on stage and ang with the band on Collin ' final song.

Albert Lee, the last performer, is an often-imitated musical ge­nius who has a history of playing with a myriad of famous contem­porary musicians. Lee, accompa­nied by a back-up guitar, ba s, and drums, sang his lyrics into the microphone, but more often took several steps back toplay his solos. His guitar had a cutaway body allowing access to 24 frets, and he used every one, running his frantic fingers around the fret board at im­po sible velocities. Lee sang his well-known original song, "One Way Rider." chopping it up with numerous clean 010 , but his be t jam of the evening was when Jerry Douglas came out with his dobro to play "Country Boy" with Lee. The duo not only made an excel­lent melodic unit, but Lee also came out with wave upon wave ofmind­stopping solos that made the audi­ence sit open-mouthed in awe.

Follwing this mind blast was the grand finale , which featured all six players together, takingtums at blues solos on the mediocre song "Flip Flop and Fly" with Cephas singing leads. After this feeble at­tempt at a uni ted jam session, the audience applauded the players back out onstage for another simi-

larly weak blues song with Cephas singing once more and the six gui­tarist each taking a solo.

The setting, which deliberately downplayed glitz and flash, re­vealed the extensive abili ties of the performers with amore precise focus on the mu ic and individual styles. Each set was like a mini­performance in its appropriate at­mosphere , from Cephas and Wiggins kicking back in their low­key blues session to Kaapana sit­ting on a stool entenaining as ifthe audience were all back at the Big Island. Each player had more than adequate abilities to pull off ashow on theirown, butlogether these six musicians revealed the true poten­tial of the guitar.

The weakest points of the show was the grand finale with all six mu icians playing at once. The underlying theme in the jam ses­sions may have been that these players were diverse in theirstyles, but diversity combined is good. This may be true in life, politics,or philosophy, but the radiance of these six players was quite stifled in the courtesy songs at the end.

However, even with disap­pointing grand finale and my girl­friend fa ll ing asleep halfway through the show, this was a su­perb once-in-a-lifetime showcase of true guitar mastery.

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Peering Into a Traveler's Life By Mic hael Schwartz Senior Staff Woter

''To hims('/f he is enough. Ellough! Be YO Llrst'lp"

- Peer Gynr

Hcnrildbsen' epicpursuitof elf­knowledge. "Peer Gynt ," will be pre­sented by the UCSD Theatre Depan­ment in the Mandell Weiss Theatre from Feb. '27- March 3.

undefinable mas. There' the Troll King and entourage, and the evil thin man. Peer keeps di covering who he is, only to have the notion rejected and be left with nothing again.

"Peer skims surfaces. He never delves into anything eriously, keep­ing an escape route open at all times. This is a reflection on modem life for me, " Coleman stated.Thi work is rarely produced for everal rea ons. It is exceedingly long and takes place

in locations as di­verse as Egypt and the middle of an ocean. Graduate playwright Naomi lizuka has con­densed the work to approximately half of its original length. While leav­ing every scene in-

"It's a comedy­journey play," Di­rector Mary Coleman aid in a recent interv iew . "There' ~ more thought in laughter than in tear ." This journey takes Peer on a lengthy quest, a search for what a " elf' i . Traveling away from hi home and youth , Peer

"Peer skims sur­faces. He never delves into anything seriously, keeping an escape route open at all times. This is a re­flection on modern life for me." tact, each has ben

- Mary Coleman boiled down to what

travels to Morocco, Egypt, and all over the world in quest of inner­knowledge. Along the way, he runs into mythological figures of Norway , creature like the button molder, that shape all dead sou ls into an

is mo t concise and direct. Describing Ibsen's Norwegian text a "reckless cascading verse," this adaptation preserves the playful­neSs and raucousness of the original , presented in a poetic, loose verse.

The structure has been modified

I

/

Tracey Leigh, David Fenner, Shanga Parker, and Zaraawar Mistry star in 'Peer Gynt' at the Mandell Weiss.

into an en emble approach. The 86 characters are presented by 11 actors. Peer goes through different phases of his Ii fe and di fferent approaches to his life, and different actor assume the roles at each juncture. "There is no stable identity to Peer. Every time he put on a new costume, he becomes a new Peer," Coleman said.

Square dancing has replaced tradi­tional Norwegian dances. The pro­duction replaces Ibsen's folklore with that of the mythological Old West. "It's the legend for people like Billy

the Kid and people riding off into the unset - American mythology ,"

Coleman said.Graduate designer Vince Mountain has tackled the task of putting the wide variety of wooden and metal caffolding on the stage and extending into the house. An underly­ing concept of this production is the idea of tory telling. The actors are storytellers, si tting around a campfire, relating the slOry of Peer Gynt. The acting areas extend into the house both on the floor level and up high on the scaffolding. The stage is open un-

demeath as well, allowing a maxi­mum number of acting nreas.

While Ibsen gives adirect answer to what the true self is, don't count on such a tidy ending from this produc­tion. The ending has been sufficiently broadened to prevent any easy an­swer .

When: Feb 27· Mar. 3, 8 p.m. Whe re: Mandell Weiss

Theatre. Tickets: $6 ·12. UCSD Box

Office 534-4559. For more information call 534-3793.

'The Rivals' Provides Light, Airy Entertainment By Karla D. Stange Staff Writer

The production of "The Rivals" at the Lamb's Players Theatre is like a carbonated soft drink: the fizz and

foam taste good, but the calories are empty and the aftertaste is bitter.

The comedy by Richard Brinsley Sheridan starts off the 1991 season at the Lamb's Players Theatre, and runs

through March 30. Director Robert Smyth sets the play

in South Carolina in the early 1800s against a backdrop of strictly-coded chivalry and gallant gentlemen who

know how to woo women.

The rivals in the play are three suitors who scramble for the heart and fonune of Miss Lydia Languish. The numerous subplots in­clude mi s­taken identi­ties , secret notes, and du­els of honor.

comedy, in the tradition of Shakespeare 's " A Midsummer Night's Dream." Sheridan presents a topsy-turvy world where social barri­ers are crisscrossed. Young people outsmart their elders, servants fool their masters, and confusion is the source of all the laughter.

This confusion creates some hi ­larious momenls in the first half of the play, but when true identities are re­vealed in the second half, the play loses critical comic tension.

After the intermission, the play yawns and stretches into th predict­able conclusion of three reunited couples and a cute dance of joy.

There is a smorgasbord of acting skills in this play. At worst, there is David Cochran Heath (as Sir Lucius O'Trigger) with a screechy Lepre­chaun accent.

At the ho-hum, mediocre level, there is Ted Deasy as the dashing trickster Jack Absolute, and Cynthia Peters as the romantic airhead Lydia.

the fooli sh Mrs. Malaprop, who con­stantly massacres the English lan­guage with phrases like: "He is the very pineapple [i.e. pinnacle) of po­liteness ...

The Lamb' s Players set makes use ofthe theater-in-the-round, where the audience surrounds a revolving stage. The problem with this intimate stag­ing is that you often watch the back of the actor's heads and miss parts of the dialogue.

"The Rivals" suffers from a sac­charine sweetness that downplays Sheridan' s clever wit. But there are many funny moments in the play that redeem the fizz and foam, like a caf­feine high.

And sometimes, when all the real world offers is tragedy, you need to seek out comedy wherever you can find it.

When: running thru Mar. 30 Where: 500 Plaza Blvd.,

National City. Tickets: 474·4542.

Darlene Trent, Kerrry Cederberg Meads, and Cynthia Peters act out their rivalry.

"The Ri ­vals" follows the familiar format of the romantic At best, there is Darlene Trent as

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14 FEATURES The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 25,1991

Prof. Dan Hallin Wins First Prize in Media Studies Essay Contest By Ron Morris Guardian Reporter

It's six o'clock, and time forthe evening news.

Tonight 's main storyisa peech by a candidate for public office. But as the news begins, it becomes obvious that the most important element in the tory is not the can­didate, or even his speech. Instead, it is the anchorman, the on-Ihe­spot reporter. and other personali­ties who are seen on the evening

news each night. [n fact. lhe candi­date is seen for less than 20 sec­onds. making the joumalist, not the "newsmaker." the star.

This scenario i not a grim pre­diction of the future ; it is a proven trend in the media today according to Dan Hallin. a professor of communication at UCSD.

Hallin. a national expert on media coverage who has been a professor at UCSD for 10 years. won first place in the 1990

Woodrow Wil on Center Media Studies Es ay Conte t. His essay discusses the difference between media coverage of elections from 1968 to 1988.

Entitled Sound Bite News : Television Coverage 0/ Elections, 1968-1988. Hallin's essay was se­lected from among 45 entries submitted by academics, joumal­its, and broadcasters. It will be published by the Woodrow Wil­son Center this spring.

"It 'sa relatively new prize given for essays [like mine]. " HalJin said. "But it is one of the ric he t or best known prizes. It' s a very special reward for me. "

Besides being published by the Woodrow Wilson CeOler. Hallin's essay will appear in a book called Blurring the Lines: Elections and the Media in Vietnam, an edited volume that will be published some time this year by Free Press.

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ha\~llg t close your account and rc-open it when if ' timc for school.

And if you feci like getting a little extra credit in communication , u e the frel' phone we're throwing ill t spi c up that drab dorm room. You'll a1 be getting a urpri e free gift that'll help you organize your finances.

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say for the book," Hallin said. "Then I thought the essay would be perfect for the conte t."

Although the es ay wasn ' t rec­ognized until 1990. it was an idea Hallin has had for quite a while.

"[The essay] had ilSoriginsback when I was working on my book about the media and the Vietnam War," Hallin said. "I had started to notice something about the basic structure of the news coverage."

A version of Hallin's essay was published in 1987. which he has used in his American News Media course. But it was not until a year ago, when he received funding, that Hallin was able to look into the topic more intensely. Wi th the help of a graduate student, Hallin spent the summer reviewing videotapes of news broadcasts.

Hallin found that the length of a typical clip showing a candidate in a news story on television de­creased from an average of more than 40 seconds in 1968 to less than 10 seconds during the 1988 presidential election campaign.

According to Hallin, techno­logical advances and changes in the economics of television have caused sound bites, which are bits of fi 1m that have sound, to shrink. It is this shrinkage that has led to journalist-centered news.

"The reporter has become the primary communicator. not the candidate or other ' newsmakers.' HalJin said. "We have gone from passive television journalism to a more acti ve, critical, but packaged form of TV news coverage in which the public never has a chance to hear the candidate for more than 20 seconds. "

Besides teaching his American Media New cour e, Hallin is cur­rently studying the transformation of media in the newly-formed de­mocracies. particularly in Eastem Europe and Latin America.

Hallin is also examining and prov iding commentary on the news coverage of the Persian Gulf War.

"[ generally think that the me­dia coverage [of the war] looks like the traditional coverage of a war - very dependent on the mili­tary for information," Hallin said. "The most important thing [ see is that so far the news has looked very clean; we see very little of [the] human cost, and when we do see it. the media takes a lot of he a!. People say that the media shouldn't be there and that the media is onJy causing more problems. That's a very dangerous attitude to have."

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ACADEMIC SERVICES

Monday.Friday

.:GI ..... : ...... - The OASIS Sllldy M __ , C ....... provIdes _.10 all _IS _ willi 10 iInprow Ibdr _i< skill • .

Mae .. oppoi_ for ... indlvidlW conference, or roliSl« I'ar our worbbop; on time manaplnelli. noteUk:in,. re.adia,. IeJuboot lIIaIyli .. memocy. e.wn prep. CIe. Call 534-7344. USB 4010. Free.

...... _ :.10 .... - The LIn,uqe Prapam provides 1Ui_ 10

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inJ .......... lso1l .... SpMillland Fnonch. A diqnostic ""011 wril .... En,Ii'" II. _1..,_ i. Ivailoble 011 rcq ..... Call 5)04·2214 for mae infonna ..... SIUdenI Ceo ..... Bid,. A 1214. Free.

1:00 '-:.10 .... - (EYOfIin, IppoinllnelllS ""0 Ivaillble.) The OASIS Wrili", Cenler i. I m.t l<fVice for all UCSD swdenu. We offetone",onewrilin,COI1fera1CCS fOf ony Iypeofwrilinaprojoct­oc_ ~ pcnona\ s .. _. even .1Ories ond poem •. Our 1lalf0(1rIined tIIIderpad ....... who"""", fTom I vari"yofoc_ diJICipli ..... can help )IOU bocome I men .ffeedve wri ..... Call 534-2284 10 mike an oppoin"'-l elf drop by our offICe in tho aid S,,"lenl C ....... Bullm", A. '214. Free.

3:.10 p.·5:OO .... - Galalhel COfnmunily Service1VlOri .. f>Ivsr.a .-w .... If you Win( 10 IUIOt eJemenury ",hooI S_IS in ..... ond radin, ri,llI here 011 ampu .. call Michoel Tin, u 5S1-8411 . Revelle. ClaIaIhea Res. Hall .

Monday. Feb. 25.1991

11:00 ... ·11:51 ... - Te.tbook Analy.ls: Undertinin,.IIlIIOWina. IlbeU ... USB 4010. Free.

1:00 ,..1:50 p. - Oraduale/Professiortal School EJwn Prq>: Rudin, comprehenSion. GRE. MCA T. LSAT. GMAT. USB 4010. Free.

Tuesday. Feb. 26. 1991

11:00 ,..·11:50,.. - Graduale/Profe .. 1onaJ Exam Skills: Loaical ",uool",. USB 4010. Free.

3: ..... -3:50 .... - EJwn Prep: Objecllve e.wns. USB40IO. rn...

Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1991

1:00 p ... l :5O ,.. - Perceivinc Oraaniulion: Lineninl and llOICIakin,. USB 4010. F .....

3:00 ,.·3:50 ,. - Grllduale/PfOfesslODll EJwn Skills: !.oaic .. _n,. USB 4010. Free.

ThW1day. Feb. 28. 1991

10:00 •• ·111:$0 •• - T.xlbook Analysis: Crilical "'lIIin,. problem sol,ina. USB 4010. Free. -

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SERVICES

MondoY. Feb. 25. 1991

10:«1 .... 11:00 .. - Lesbillland Bi ... ua1 PoerCouruelin,. Have • question1 WillI somconelO IIIk 101 Need. oupportive envi......-? Drop by tho Women'. Re-... CenIer. For individlW I~ willi I lninod peer COtaISelor. call 534·:1023. Free.

2:00 P~:OO pm - RES11UcroRS (RED) GROUP: A """'" provldi .. support and expionlioo 0( .. If i. Ihe diflicull journey 10

recovay from on eaUn, disorder where Ihe pIlICr i. reslricllon 0(

inllb 0( food. Leoder: Reina J ........ 534-387 5 (sI .... ""). !ISS 2126-Free.

]:00 ..... 5:00 .... - AOULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOUCS PSYCH().EDUCA nONAL GROUP: Desianod forlllldenlS wanlinJ 10 expiolo Ihe _ 0( &JOWl", up in an aI<OhoIic home. Call Usa Hinz, 5)04·3755. OH 1003. Free.

4:00 ..... 5:30 p .. - MEXICANA. CHIACANA. LATINA SUPPORT GROUP: Informol poop 1Y*lin, _Iy .. diJCUiS ~ic.porIOIIIIllldsocialexperieace •. Leoder: UnduyCalcloroo. 534-3755 (sI .... ""). Price Cent.er. lrvine Room. F .....

4:00 pill",. .... - AIcoboI ol Subswu Abuse ...... CounseJina: Nicole BlIIlC:bard. peer """nselo<. 5~lO. Academic Support B ..... 2110. rn...

n..ctIy. Feb. 26.1991

8:JO __ 11:00 _ - ORADUA'l1! MEN'S AND WO/ofEN'S GROUP: For _ .......... SIIIdeaIs in_ .... in uplorin, ......... 1 .... lICOIIemicl ,.--i .......... penoIIIl_l.eaden: Miriam IoIupovici. NIIICY WIIIIi&. CaD 5)4.37551'ar. preliminoly in .... Ie ... GH 1003. Free.

11:OO_ll:ID .... -AIcoboI.lSubaanceAbuse ...... CAlunsoeIiq: Cecelia ~ peerClOlftClor.534-1015. 'l1IinI CoIIcto DeaD'o 0fI\ce. me.

I ...... ·IL ..... - Ak:oboI .... SubsuDce Abuse Peer CoomaIl!1J. Douc Sbna. Poer CounIeIor. 534-3585. HSS ~ Free.

U'" _I ....... - COPING WI11I WAR: A.-, poop for _ widl_ ...... in ....... zone. Led by Miriam Jocuporici. 534-0255 .... Dovid BIoIboDd.5J4.3917. CoIl for In_or jual drop in. OH 1003. Freo.

1:GI...-J-..... -11IERotMNTICCOPINOSKILLSGROUP: WUI MKII woys", .... aDd moIauIn rolOlioDshipl1llll1O OWI'OOIIII

\not • . ~: a-rty HIrju. MIry MeN ......... Sip .... : 534-2237. 0H 1003. PNe.

l:ID ,........ ,. - RED I (RECOVERINO FROM EATING DISOIUlI!RS~ A .... worbhop for -.... _ 1_ 0(

.......... HoJilollraki", oelf_. os-._ ....... _ ....... ~: ..... J ........ N_yWIIII".Si"' .... : 5J4. :lI75. HSS 2101. Freo.

J:JI _3:31 .. - Gay II1II B_IIII ..... CcIuDseI .... Haw I ~1W __ IO ...... ,_.IIIJ'IICftIw_bc 1 Dnlpby" w ... u.a-...... Roo. 32A7 orc:all 534-lO23 b _.......... ... .. • widI.1niaod peer........". Freo.

The UCSD Guardian CALENDAR IS

1:.10 p .. -4:G1 p. - WOMEN MOlES'l1!D AS CHILDREN (AMAC): A ,roupfonn women who ,urvivedchildhoodOf IdoIescenI sexual lbuse by .l1li\ ..... lCquainlance>. oncVor family members. Call U .. Hi ... 5)4.3755. J>n,liminary appoInoneru necessary. R.....,11e Formal loun ... F,...

4:00 poa.5:JO p. - UNDERGRADUA'l1! llIERAPY GROUP: For underlfldUl.e """"IS who 1Ia,. had indIvidual counselin, ond 1ft now ready 10 e1plore islUeI in a IrouP cornell. Leader: EquJlla Luke. 5)4.3585. J>n,limiury oppoinlmallnca.sary. GHI001. _ .

4:00 ...- .... - RED III (RECOVEJUNG FROM EATING DISORDERS): For SlUdatIl who OR beyond reluJar pluoms of binain,. di .. in,. or purJi", but ... ho WillI 10 cont ..... dleir self developmeru Ihroualt inert ..... levels of sharinaand INSt Si,n.up: '34·2237. New lit BId,. 3247. F .....

Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1991

IJ:JO ... 1:. pal - AIcoboI.l SUbslll1Ce Abuse ...... Counselin,: Cecelia Nq>omuceno. peerCOUNelor. '34-3035. ThiId Colle .. Dun'. OfI'u.Free.

l:JO .. -4:31,. - AIcaIIoI ... S_AbuoePoerc-lin" DooIa -. -~. 534-3,.". !ISS 2056._.

l:OO .... -4: ..... - PROCRASnNA TION GROUP: Over<>Omin, dell~'''' ICtivides In order 10 bocomemoro IocUKtd and """"etrecti.., in Sl"'yin, and wriun, papm.1ader: HupPa .... 534· )0456. Revelle Provosl·. Bid,. Free.

4:00 p.":OO ..... - MEN AND WOMEN MOlESTED AS CHILDREN: MeeIS weekly. led by Miriam 100upcwicl. 5lW255 aDd JoIwt Wu. 534-lO35. Call for sian·up. Third Colle .. Dean's Cmfemlce Room. rn...

5:00 p."':3O po. - AFRICAN·AMERICAN WOMEN'S SllPl'ORT GROllP: IlIfonnai discussion """" meelina wtel"y. focusin, on in_IS and concerns of Africon·Amerlcon women. Leoder: EqUiUllul<e, 534-3585/Si",·up. !ISS 210'. F .....

6:00p"""OO pIIl - lesI>iIII .... BI ... 1111 Women·.Suppon Group. Led by peerCOUIllCIorsOleiiond 0eIIbie. W.·",aweotly.conIi_ ~Irt poop for .......... i_ In c11ICU11in, penooaI concerns ODd social 1_ in a ..... fonable. supponive envIronmenl. Call Da,id II 534-3987. WIlIIICII·. Resoun:e Ct:nI<r. "'-

ThwtdoY. Feb. 28. 1991

__ 11:00 _ -AlcohoI.l Subsww:e Abuse Poereoun .. lin" CeatIIa Nepomuceno. peer ............ 534-3035. ThirdColIqo Deon'o 0I'IIcc._ .

1l:GI_I:JI,.-PAN ASIANC'OMMUNfIY RlRUM: Oro!>-\a ................ 10 ____ 0( AsiII\IPlCific 1_

-. II UCSD in • ...-,.·soIvia .... AI(IpOIli"" 1IIIIOIpbeIe. Leaden: lame M_ and /obD Wu. 534-lOl5. MousIIIin View l.Dunp . .......

1:00 ,..J:JI .. - WOMEN MOLES'l1!D AS CHILDREN: For _who survived moIOIIoIIon iIIchildboadlldoloice.~:

Mirtam IOIupovid aDd KIron <Apn. CoIl '34-37'5 for oppainlllllllL OH 1003. rn...

I ... ,..l:lI .. - OVERCOMINO COMPULSIVE EATING: For _ wilD boIJilll.lly dielllldblqa. """'" 011 ......... _ bui\duIJ ... f_iDcnosinI ... -. .... .-. Equlllllul<e, 534-3515. J>n,Jimbwy......---..y. H5S 214 • . fIooo.

J:tI poa.5:t1 .. - AIcdaoI .l u..-Abuse Poer Ccondin,: ErIc ferJIIIOII, peer _ . ')044767. ArlO HoII. Rm 104II0!J. --J:tI,...s:tl .. -ENHANCINGSELF·ES'I1!DI WORXSHOP: Daipod .. bcIp iadiv\dlllls ___ ......... mcre ....... 11111 ............. _oI ... f_Io_m-.I-. ReioaJ-. 534-3175. S;p..p -,. HSS 21 ... Freo.

4:00 p •• 5:3O p. - ADULT CHI LDREN OF DIVORCE: MulS weekly fOf 6 weeks. led by Nanc:y W.hll,. 534·37'5 .nd MirY McNlU,hlon, 534·1725. Call1'ar .i,n­up. New UL Bid, .. Rm. 3240. Free.

concert will be held In Mandtvtlle Reci .. , H.II and WIll be ........... by perfonnancc students in voice, piano. doubleb.us and precu sion. Fr<e.

Fnclay. Mu. 1. 1991

4:JO .... ..s: ..... -SOCIALSKIU,S WQIU(SHOP: A poup focu.in, 00 developln, skiUs for I1lt.Clin& other pcopk.conversaUons.asscn1vtnW.etc. Leoder: Unduy Calderon. 534-175'. GH 1003. F ....

6:.10 ...... :00 .... -O.y ond BI .. ,ual Men'. Support Group led by peer

COIIlIlCIon Tony ond Olau. W.·ro • weekly informal. contidallial peer """" for lIudenlS who 01111110 discu 5

I"'" and ...... concans.Corne lend yoursupponJ Drop-in welromc or call David II 534·3987 for mono info. Mounwn View Loun,. (by Ihe ..... is OOWISII ThiId Colle .. ). F .....

Friday. M .... I. 1991

~:OO ... · 11 :00 ... - Alcohol" SUbslll1Ce Abuse ...... Coun .. lin': Nicole 81111C1Iard. peer rounselor. ,~)O. Acad. SUPl'. Blda .. 2110. "'-

11:00 pm. I1:5O ,. - RED PEER WORKSHOP: Four wc<k WOf'<shop providin, skills 10 identify and imJ'l'O"ellabl1S ond luiludes ~lltrd &0 ~I.lnl and body imqe.. Leaden: SUDn Feiner. J~i fl"l'

J.,ielski. MAAC Conf. Rm. 202. Froc:.

12:15 pm·I :45 pm - llIERAPY OROUP FOR GAV MEN: Confidenlill dlerlpy &roUP for arltduale and under"""u,,. aay and bi ... 1I>1 men. Uoder: DlVld Bluband. 534·3987. Call David for slan.up.lIL BId, .. Rm.1240. Free.

11:30 .... · I:JO ..... - GlY IIld BI ..... I ...... Counselin,. Hlv.a que 1ion1 WillI someone 10 IIlk 101 eed I ,upparllve envlronmenl7 Drop by Ihe Warren Ulenlure Buildin" Room 3247 orclll 534·2023 for an indivldual appoinlment with. u-aincd peer counx.ior. Ffft.

L ....... ·3: ... - Et1'ECI1VE 1'ERfEC110NISM COPING

SKIU,S OROllP: Will fOCllS 011 IeomIna 10 "'" lhoualtlS. c/reants, actions and perfec:lionistic ~ndencies 10 successfully .ch~ye in~I.lCIdernic and car .... ,ooJ •. leader: Beverly Hllju. 5)4. 2237. loc.ujon Cml. Rm' 202 MAAC. Free.

1:00 pm .... :OO pill - ALCOHOL AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE GROUP: For .WdenIS who raise the question -Do Ilia.., a problem7' Supponiveand resourceful environmenl 10 •• """" die above lberrte. Leaden: Dan MtJDC>Z ond Equill. luke. 5)4·3755. Revelle Pr""",,'s Off'"""F,..,.

3:OOpm·5:OO pm- Alcohol" Su ....... Abuse ...... CounseIi"': Eric Ferauson, peer counselor. 534-0767. ArlO HilI. Rm 104/105. Free.

. :00 p,,"':OO p. - CAMPUS BLACK FORUM: Informal disc .... ion! support &roUP Ioculin, on Is ...... concems •• xperi ...... IIw IffecldIe qualily oIlif. 0( !he Africll1' Americon communily .1

llCSD. Leaden: Pllil Raphael. Equilll Luke. $34-3755. Moomain View lounll". rn...

ORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGS

Wednesday.

5: ..... - Pre·low E4uc ..... AUocilllon meed_,. Worried abouI die LSA 1'7 SpeokerfTomPrincewn Review lI .... neJlJl'lEA meedn,. 00W Ann ... !'ret.

1'ueIday. Feb. 26. 1991

5:JO p.-6:JO ,.. - TOMlIDUWS COlI be your.-.p 10 oontIcbnl IIId succaslW publi< speoId",1 Come villI our friendly ""-am .... _ldy.-inp.CoJJ DoveIl274-91461'ar ..... 11l1o. MAACCoof. Rm. 111·1< (soudl 0( die Price Ccncor). PNe visit

ENTERTAINMENT

W ..... y. Feb. 27. 1991 • Sunday. M.. l . 1991

"' ....... ,&_, ......... " s. .... ,. 7:00 .... - UCSD ",... praenu PEER GYNT II .... M_U Weiss TheoIrt. A _adIpcocioaol_t~·.c\usic_IIn"", PoerOyDI

........ willt Ihe mysury 0( exl.1eIICe while w-.!n,lhroualtellOllc 1_. Mandell Weill ~. S6, 1lUdenIS.

'lburaday. Pcb. 21. 1991

....... - PEItPOJtMER·S PORUM CONCERT AT UCSD: The puIIIk: Is bmIOd II> 0IIj0y • ~ music __ ""_ in dlis _ Ii -": _ ......... tour ___ lIo<h lDlIartN:r. The

11:00,.. - REVIEWI Fun filled mu ieal revi • .,. Brin, your insulin s/lou! UCSD Sludio 'Thelt". 4095. Free.

Salurday. Mil'. 2.1991

.1 :00pm -REVIEWI Fun filled music:ll review. Brinlyourinsulin shotsl UCSD Sludio The.". 4095. Free.

HEALTH & FITNESS

Monday.Frielly

Mllintl inine health is the key 10 a long and prosperous life. Do you know how huJth)' you are? We can tcll you in one hour! FiLnop is FREE and •• y1 Si,n up now before all of llIe OJl<nillJl' for. FREE filJ1ess evalualion are talten. W. are locOled 011 die 2nd I100r of lite Sludenl Health Cenlel'. See you lite",!

Monelly. Feb. 25.1991

2:00 pm - As your lo\'c ~ows for eKh other mike )ure your beU)' doesn't too. Come 10 I binll COIlItOI info session and discuss the I!IdVlnlJlid and disadvantaJCS of each binh cootrol choice with a Irtined 5,,,,,,,, H •• lIh Advocal • . Sl .... nl H.alllI S<rvicc •. 2nd floor. Free.

Tuesclly. Feb. 26. 1991

11 :00 1m - Do you know how 10 pro<ecl YOOf .. 11'1 Sludcm He.lih Advocatcs CIU1 how methods of prevention .,ainst pre&nanCY and STDs, Includml HIV Infections. Won', you aive us and youneIr I ehlr1Ce and come 10 Ihe nex! 8inh CmIrOl Session ., Ihe Sludcnl He.11b Sendee. 2nd floor. F ....

1:00 pnI - FREE SEXI II No. 1101 "",lIy. bUI if you come", thc ""XI Binh ConItOl Session .t Stud<nl H.!l1lh ServIce. S,udenl Hellth Advocates can show ),OU how 10 protect yoursel r in the event you may decUk lO panicipate. Student Ueahh Service. 2nd floor. Free .

Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1991

10:00 am - For beuer understandin~ of lite f.m.l. specie . h.!lIth conccm'i.mmeIQ u.e Well Woman Scs~ion spomored by !.he Sludr:m He. 11lI S<rvlce. Sludenl He.lth Scrvlce. 2nd floor. Frtt.

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Thursday. Feb. 28.1991

10:00 1m - liow much? How of len? Hnve these selual dilemmas been pllaum, you'] LLI us, the Student liealth Advocates. answer Ihe$c queslion and mOllY more al • Binh ConlJ'Ol Scs!tOl1 II llIe Sludenl Health SeNice. 2nd 1Ioot. F .....

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RELIGIOUS SERVICES

Tuesday: ThW1day-Sllurelly

CA mOLIC MASS. Sponsorld bylhe Cathohc Sludenl Communuy • UCSD. Please note there Is NO 5 pm m3SS on Wednesday duling ....... Ulllivenily LulMran Church. Comer of N. Torrey Pints and La Jolla $bora Drive. Free.

. II :tI ... l :00pm - JEWISH CAMPUS CENTERS TABLE. Price Ceo .... Plaza. SlOp by for information. F",e.

Tuesday. Feb. 26.1991

4:00 p .. -JEWISH CAMPUS CENTERS l.ehrtt.us Talmud SuJdy with Rabbi Oou~ SIOInick. S02 Mlllhews. Fr«:.

7:00pm-UNION OF JEWISH Sl1JDENTS meeting. Price Cen ..... Ber1tel.y ROOflI. F .... .

7:OOpm-CAllIOLIC BIBLESTUDY. Each week we hear. ~neCI m . discuss. ond pray die upcomin, Sund.y Seriplu", •. Plcase jotn u •• Univmily Lutheran Otun:h. Catholic Loung •. Comer of N. Toney Pines and Lo Joill Sbon!s Drive. F",e.

Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1991

10:00 ... ·2:00 pm - ISRAEl. AcnON COMMIT7'EE Table. SlOp by for Infonnallon. Price Cenler Plaz •• ln fronl of the EDNA office. !"ree.

12:115 pm - CA 1lI01lC MASS. Sponsored by lhcCatholic sludcnl> Communily u UCSD. PI .... 1I0IO wlthi. replaces lite 5 pm mas. on Wednesday durin, lenL Revelle Collcle. USB 4OSOB. Free.

7:00 pm - Union of Jewish SlUdcrus ""' ... " PURIM: Meglll.h Readin, and Celebmloo. The Old Pub. Free.

t:JO ..... - CANDlELIGHT MASS. A qUle~ mldi .. ,ive lime I'ar s/larin, withClhen. SponS<nd by tho Calholic Studenl Communily II UCSO. Univmhy Lulherut OUll'th. Comer of N. Toney Pines and La JoIII Shores Drive. Free.

Thursday. Feb. 28.1991

11:oopm-JEWIS H CAMPUS CEN'l1!RS. l.ehrttau. BasicJ udaism Class with Rablli Slotnick. SOl MOIlhew •. FRlC.

5:45 .... - THE llIURSDA Y DINNER. Homemade foocllnd pell company. SJIOIUO«d by die CllhoIic Sludenl Communily II UCSD. Univenil)' Lulberon Otun:1l, CaIhoIic Loun,e. Comer of N. Tomy Pines ond Lo Jolla Shores Drive. Free.

Sunday. MM. 3.1 991

.: .... -CAmOLIC MASS. Sponsoml by tho Catholic SWdenl CommunilY II UCSD. Un""'n"y lulherut Chun:b. Comer of N. TOrTeY Pines and La JoIll Shores Drive. F .....

5:00 pm - CA mOllc MASS. Sponsoml by lite Catholic Sludcnl CommunilY II UCSD. Uni..,nily lulller." Chun:h. Comer of N. Tomy Plnec and Lo JoIlI Sholes Drive. Free.

. 5:00 p~:OO JIll' - UNlrnD CAMPUS MINISTItY sponsors a _Idy pdIerin, 0I1lUdcnIs. Come ond sin, I fe .. new 1011", Join us u we suppon Chrillian commllllily Ihroualt lOD,and prayer. MeeIS weekly. PoIiceSWlon TrlininlRm, U.C.M.ls IlteClmpus Minisuy 01 .... Pmbylerilrl. MethodiSl and Uniled Chun:b of ChriS!, and Disciples of ChriSl churches 011 campus. Pol .... Siluon Trainin, _F .....

". .... - CATHOLIC MASS. Sponsored by tho CatholIC SludcnI Community .t UCSD. llnivmhy lulberon Church. Corn« 01 N. Toney "'- and 1.0 Jolla Sholes Dri..,. Free.

16 SPORTS

Women's Lacrosse Drops First By Doug Shaddle Staff Writer

The UCSD women' lacros~e teann knew that Saturday'S home game against UC Santa Barbara would be its first real test of the year. It knew that UCSB would be bigger and faster. but the Triton thought that they could outplay the Gauchos.

In the end, however, ize and speed were the telling advantage ' in the Triton' 10-5 loss.

The previou Iy undefeated Tritons (4-1) kept the game close in the first half. UCSD scored first on a goal by ophomore Kim Pierce, but allowed the Gauchos to run off a tring of four goal .

UCSD tightened up the game before the half by scoring twice, including one by leading scorer

BITS Continued from page 24

• Foot tep of the past. A young Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher throws over 200 innings one sea­son, and then prepare him elf poorly the following year in spring training. The result is a visit to Dr. l obe's Office of Rotator Cuff Re· pair and a eason n the injured re erve list.

Talking about Orel Hersheiser?

The UCSD Guardian

Rimes UzglrlslGuardian

Deekla Marshall (r) scored one goal Saturday in UCSD's 10-51055. Gretchen Rubel.

The second half. however, was all Gaucho. as UCSB took advan­tage of it peed to control every loose-ball ituation. According to UCSD Head Coach Matt Holman, the problem wa stamina.

"Weplayed well, but we ran out of steam at the end," he aid.

In the fir t 15 minutes of the half, U SBexploded for four goals while the Tritons cored only once,

Could be. But you could also be talking about Ramon Martinez in two months if the young phenom holds out for a long time.

• Tony Gwynn is a marvelous baseball player. He wins balling titles annually, plays the outfield like Willie Mays, and is a whirl­wind on the ba es. But his salary doe not belong in the Can eco­C lemenS-Strawberry zip code.

Gwynn can't dominate a game, a series, or a year like the other

on a penalty hot by Rubel. Despite the 10 s, the Tritons were stil1 op­timistic after the game.

"Our defen e was outstanding today, e pecially Igoalie) Nancy Reagan and Michelle Rei s," said Rubel.

Sophomore Deekla Marshall, who had one goal, agreed with Rubel. "We played up and down all day, but our defense was steady and kept us in the ganle," she said.

three, and hedocsn ' t fit in with the 'Terrible Three orne' either. Gwynn is a respected member of ociet)' and hasn ' t been locked up

in a playpen in the last five years. • Some people think they can

rewrite the IO commandments ... like the genius in Seattle who traded for Benoit Benjamin. Thou shalt not associate thyself wilh Bounc­ing Baby Ben.

• The Seattle Supersonics? Yikes.

SOFTBALL ContInued from ~ 24 walk to second baseman Stephanie Molina. After Kathy Fogg reached on a fielder's choice, forcing Chaiken, the Cardinal miscues first came into play.

First baseman Pam Harnack grounded a ball to shon. which the Stanford shortstop scooped cleanly, but herthrow skipped past Cardinal first baseman Tamara So nick. The resulting three-base error allowed both Molina and Fogg to score. Hantack later scored on another Stanford error.

Triton staner Kim Stutzman scattered six base runners over the first four innings before allowing the first two runners to reach base in the top of the fifth. This brought Jarrel to the mound, and junior Dianna Moreno into the game. Moreno shut the door the rest of the way, allowing only one hit while

HOCKEY Continued from page 22 NHL minor league teann or some­thing. We just want to play well, and have a good time."

The teann currently has a deal with the San Diego Gulls. In ex­change for ticket sales, the Gulls aJlow the Tritons to play in the San Diego Sports Arena after Gulls games.

According to the players, the turnouts so far have been small, but enthusiastic.

"We have a core group of fans who come out to see us every game," Hsu said.

Monday, February 25, 1991

striking out two. For Moreno. it was lhe icing on

an excellent weekend of pitching, as she also posted a win in Friday's doubleheader.

The pitching was olid all weekend. In the second game of Saturday's doubleheader, fresh­man Lacie Mounger pitched a complete game to notch her first collegiate win.

Once again, the offen ecame in spurts, thi time with a fifth-inning rally to break open a tight 3-2 game. The highlight of the inning was a steal of home by Chaiken. on the back end of a delayed double steal.

] arrell said after the game that she was impressed with Mounger's first win.

"She had good speed through­out the game. It was good to give her a complete game, to get her confidence up."

The Tritons upped their record to 4-2, while Stanford fell to 9-7.

"It would be nice to get more people out to see us though."

"People who talk about the need fora football team at UCSD should come out and see us," Gould said. "As a spectator sport , hockey is as exciting as it gets."

Regardle s of fan attendance, the growth of the hockey team is just in its first phase.

Future plans include moving up in divisions.

Andreassi, however, wants to make sure that the players don't forget the bottom line.

"Weju t want to take things as they come, and have a good time doing it," he said .

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Monday, February 25,1991

M. V-BALL Continued 'rom page 24 spectively, on the nighl.

Whereas the blocking stood out in game four, a resurgent offense led the charge to victory in the decisivefifihgame, in which points are scored by winning a sideoul.

" If we play sideout volleyball, we're going to win," Graybill said, adding that the Tritons are much bener at getting the sideout than scoring points.

The offensive catalyst for the decisive fifth game was junior Gerry Goldstein, who led the way with 29 kills and 13 digs.

"Gerry played another hell of a match .... He's lhe nail of the team right now. He's doing it aU, and doing it well," Graybill said.

Other keys to the Tritons' suc­cess included the improved middle

BASEBALL Continued from page 24 wasted a brilliant pitChing perfor­mance by junior Bryan Thomason.

"They couldn't touch him for 10 innings straight," catcher An­thony Sanchez said.

"At the same time, we were swinging at bad pitches all day, and couldn't seem to get anylhing going offensively."

Thomason (0-2) surrendered a solo home run in the top of the 11th that proved to be the difference in the game. UCSD came up score­less in the bottom halfofthe inning, as it had for the entire contest, and dropped its sixth game of the year.

On Saturday afternoon, the

The UCSD Guardian

Brian Morrl8lGuardian

Chris Romey (I) and Lawrence Werner teamed up for this block.

quick -set attacks, which the Tritons practiced for an hour before the match.

Brent Couture added 23 kills, made even more impressive by his mere four errors.

Graybill noted that Couture may

Tritons lost 8-3 to Southern Cali­fornia College in a game that saw UCSD'soffensive difficulties spill over into other areas of the Tri­tons' play, as lhey committed a whopping seven errors on defense.

"If we hit lhe ball like we're capable of, I think we could over­come our defensive problems," Sanchez said.

"Our pitching, unlike we ex­pected, is holding up pretty well . We just need to get our bats going, and we need to start playing fun­damental defense."

Brent Hansen (2-2), coming off an outstanding performance against San Diego State, took the loss after pitching on only three­days'rest.

have benefitted from his platoon­ing with Rob Crotty. Unli.ke the first Slug contest, Graybill changed his substitution pattern to keep a Triton setter in the back row when needed, allowing three taller players to play up at the net.

W.HOOP Continued from page 24 opened strong, riding their defense to a 19- 11 lead.

"I think that we shut them down early and forced them to get out of their regular offen e," Malone commented.

But the Eagles managed to get into a groove and began their shooting assault.

Behind a barrage of six lhree­pointers , including one at the halftime buzzer, the Eagles look a 37-32 halftime lead, and never looked back.

"I think it was their outside shooting that hurt us more than their inside play." Malone said.

SPORTS 17

Triton Swimming Tunes Up for National Meet By Brian Itow Senior Staff Writer

The Tritons made a splash in their final IUneup for nationals at this weekend 's Pacific Collegiate Swim Conference Championships in Las Vegas. UCSD qualified six more swimmers and all IO of its relay teams for next monlh's na­tional championships in Georgia.

[n addition, three of its swim­mers broke school and conference meet records. The men took third placeintheeight-teamevent, while the women finished fifth .

Several Tritons posted career bests, the most impressive being

M. HOOP Continued from page 24 stead travel to face third seed Wartburg (IA) on Saturday.

But it's not as though the Tri­tons will be navigating through completely uncharted waters Sat­urday.

UCSD traveled to Claremont earlier this month, defeating the Stags 97-86 in a hard-fought over­time contest.

Tim Rapp led the Tritons with 40 points that night. but perhap the key to the Tritons' victory was senior point guard Darvi n Jackson' s II steals - including five in UCSD'sdecisive 19-8 overtime ­against the Stags.

The biggest obstacle in the Tri-

Sabrina Lum, who broke the con­ference record in the 200 fly . Travis Mil1er also set conference records in both the 100 and 200 back troke events while Christy Parker broke the school record in the 50 freestyle.

The six people who qualified completed the Tritons ' national championship roster. The men will take IO swimmers to nationals and the women 16.

Perhaps the unluckiest Triton - and the one who had the best meet - was Judd Glasser who swam career bests in three events, missing qualifying times by a grand total of less than half of a second.

tons' wayen route tothe next round come in the person of Claremont's 6'8" shooting guard Chris Greene, who threw in 33 points on 13 of21 shooting in the last meeting.

Assuming the Tritons do get past Claremont, they will have a tough road ahead in order to reach the Final Four, no les win the NCAA tournament, because all of their remaining contests would be on the road .

The winner of Saturday night's game will travel to play the winner of a second-round Great Lakes re­gion match up between Wittenburg (26-2) and Otterbein (26-2).

The next round would probably be at either another Great Lakes venue or at another Western Re­gion site.

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18 SPORTS The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 2S, 1991

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No one can faul! the UCSD men's tennis team for trying, but effort i n 't always enough when it comes to facing a uccession of Division J opponents. In the Tri­tons' second match of the season. they managed to wrench only two matche from the University of Hawaii, in a 5-2 10 son Thur day.

The Tritons won only twice again on Friday afternoon, falling 7-2 to USD.

Thur day afternoon, Chad Morse picked up one of the Tri­ton ' win , defeating Hawaii 's Mark Willman 6-2, 6- 1 at number two ingles. Caner Hendrick knocked off Lee Killell4-6, 6-0 , 7-5 to notch the other.

The worst new of the day for the Tritons carne at number four singles, where lohn Cro injured hi ankle. According to Head Coach Jon Hammermei ter, the injury was a severe sprain.

"I'm not really urpri ed [with the 10 ]. They are Divi ion I after all. but we did beat them last sea­son," Hammermeister aid.

Friday at USD, Morse again pocketed one ofUCSD's two wins, beating J.J. Shoba 4-6, 7-6, 6-2. Chris Belloli rruggled, and was blown away by Frederick Axsater

I 3t number one singles 6-3, 6-0.

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He was vindicated somewhat at number one doubles as he paired with Morse to beat Akiotta Mar­shaka and Axsater 4-6,6-3, 7-6.

The two losse dropped the Tri­tons to 0-4.

- Andy Gayton

WOMEN'S TENNIS The UCSD women ' tennis

tearn defeated Westmont 6-3 in a

Brien Morris/Guardian

Chad Morse notched wins in both of his singles matches, but the team remained winless.

five-and-a-half hour marathon Saturday in Santa Barbara, despite dropping the top two singles matches and the number one doubles match.

The highlight for the Tritons came at number three singles, where Janet Whalen outl~sted

Christen Abby 6-7. 6-3, 6-0. Whalen also combined with

Nancine Hayden at number two doubles in a 6-3, 6-3 win over Abby and Shannon Griffiths.

The win upped the Tritons ' record to 3-1.

MEN'S LACROSSE The UCSD men 's lacrosse tearn

dropped an imponant conference matchup Saturday to Arizona, fall­ing 12-11 in ovenime at Tuscon.

Juan Millan led the Tri tons with four goals and one assist. Chris Hodge added three goals. The loss dropped the Tritons' record to 4-4

overall, and 2-1 in conference.

TRACK AND RElD At a four-way meet in Los An­

geles. both the UCSD men 's and women' track and field teams finished second.

Among the individual high­lights was Scott Sargeant's harn­mer mark of 196'9", which broke his own school record, set last year.

Erica Wa hington broke the school record in the lOO-melerdash with a time of 12.10 seconds. Washington also qualified for the NCAAs in Ihe 200-meter dash.

Other qualifier included DebbieHargroveinthedi cus,and Bobbie Octavo in the javelin. Octavo' javelin mark of 133 '5" broke the school record.

ICE HOCKEY The UCSD ice hockey team

defealed SDSU2-0 Saturday night, to up its record to 13-1-2. Leigh Hsu led the Tritons with a goal and an assist.

FENCING The UCSD women's foil team

finished second in the Southern California Conference after Satur­day's meet in Long Beach. Men 's foil finished third, and men 's epee placed fourth.

The women ended the regular season at 11-7, and the men fin­ished 10-8.

According 10 Head Coach Alison Reid, Grant Dawson and Chris Moody had outstanding perfonmances.

UCS D will travel to Long Beach next weekend for the Western Regionals.

Monday, February 25, 1991 The UCSD Guardian SPORTS 19

~ THE WEEK IN SPORTS/FEBRUARY 19-24 SEASON RECORDS/ NOTES

.... MEN'S BASKErBAll ,.. 22-3/hosts Claremont in second round

.... WOMEN'S JASKETBALL ,.. 21-5/15-game winning streak ended

.... MEN'S VOLLEYBAll ,... 5-7/defeated UC Santa Cruz in five games

.... BASEBALL ,.. 2·7/has lost two in a row

.... SOFTBALL ,... 4-2/has won four in a row

.... MEN'S TENNIS ,... O4/I05t to USD and Hawaii

.... WOMEN'S TENNIS ,.. ~l/defeated NAJA Westmont

UPCOMING EVENTS ,

INTERCOLLEGIATE SPORTS

DIlle Event TImt

Feb. 26 M. VolIl¥>all at San Diego State 8:00 p.m. Baseball v. Cal Baptist 2:00 p.m.

Softball at Redlands 2:00 p.m. Feb. 28 Softball at CSU Dominguez Hills 1:30 p.m. Mar. 1 M. Tennis

at Pacific Coast Doubles Tourney all day W. Tennis v. Claremont 2:00 p.m.

Mar. 2 M. Basketball: Second Round West

Regional, hosts Claremont 7:00 p.m. M. VolIl¥>all v. UC Irvine 7:00 p.m. Baseball at CSU San Bernardino Noon

Track and FIeld at Aztec Invite 9:00 a.m. W. Tennis v. Western Michigan 10:00 a.m. M. Tennis

at Pacific Coast Doubles Tourney all day

XTRAMURAL SPORTS

DIlle . Event TIme

Mar. 1 Rugby at Arizona State 1:00 p.m. Mar. 2 C}<cli~ at UC Santa Barbara all day

Saili~ v. USC at l.A. Yacht Club all day W. Lacrosse at Whittier 11:30 a.m.

Mar. 3 Ice Hockey at Cal Tech 11:30 a.m. Rugby at Arizona 1:00 p.m.

Mar. 9 C}<cling at Long Beach State all day W. Lacrosse at Claremont Noon

Mar. 12 Rugby at San Diego State 5:00p.m.

TRACK & FIELD

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_ JAVELW- L c.oo... _ (CSl,Uj.

140·I·:2._OttMiUCSOI.133T:1 Nrct­(l.CSO). loe-S·. TlII'U Jl.U'- L ...... LXI> ~ 33',': 2. Don rru (\ICSO!. 316 1/2': 1 8ecII c.r (CSruj, 31'33/4', HIGH W- LOrwot KiIoan ~ 5'6';2. SusMlCIrist'(IJt$OI . 5·01/'·:1~W_ (CSUlAj,S'2I1" , U 100 WETEJIRIlAY- L<l'I'. 09.33; 2. OCSO 49.~: 3. UCI! '" lITO, 1lOO IIETtA$-L Nt ..... '_(Ia).,,0l.29;2 DeroscMcfO)(lMI\.CSO),,:U84: 1 I ..... "'" ICSOUI. 0:.a98. 0ISCU5- L _ 0ucJ0y iUCSOI.155· 4': 2. 0e0Iie Hope I\ICSOL 146' S': 3.~I'NIipIICSI.IAj.I05'5·, 100 MEl£R 1UlCU5-­LO"" ..... I\ICSO, 1&16:1 ~w.iOOI). \8.48; 11....., Kem lIJCS(l). 19.50- 0J IIETtA$- L ...... cnt(CSl.Uj.5IA5;2. __ tuCII).57.56;1 lIlJI ~ (CSI.Uj. ~~ 8l) toI[1(JI5-- L _ __ (CI'!'J. ~15.6t; 2. Socom> v.., ICSUW ~16.89: 3. I ..... "'" (CSU\.\). ~19. n. \00 MmRS-L Enci W ..... I\.CSOI. IUO; 2. ........ RcIpI

(tSW), 1131: 1 CtoI)I _ ICSI.UI. 12.35. 0J MEl£R HUIIIIUS- L _ JJIiOlSkI (UCSO). LO&. 70; 2. ~ IMDIor iUCSOI. L1)l.\4: 1 .....,. W. ~,

L'OI,49. 1Of«i UI'- t .... 11ft RJliIIlCSUW. I9'3 3/0'; 2. Din ..... (\JCSOI. I~O 3/" ; 1 8ecII c.. (CSruj, 16'2 31" lOO II£TEJIS. .... 1- L .... <nrt (CSUlAj, 24.93: 2. Er<I W ....... I\JCSO). 2$.08: 1 Cl*!I _ (CSlMj. 25.43. JIOO M£1V15-- L IIo$a

Cwts iCSW). UU1JO: 1_ ~11CSt.U). IIUI.]); 1 Yolrdal ..... iUCSOI. 10;.a60. 0 x 0J N{I[!! RIlAY- L CStAA. J:51.~ 2. <l'I'. ':02.10; 1 UCII.'-'OI,4().

IIEJt __ L ScoII s.&tti (UCSOJ.

196~'; 2. w ..... W-..... I0'I'l. 184'S'; 11'oMl1lNt1 (CSILI). 114'9' . .IIV£lJI<.- L J ..... _ ICSW, l8!I'I': 2. _ s.....ets ICSILI).l83'I·: 1CU1a c.s iOCSO~ \58'3'. LOM; AM'- t ZObnIllftonllllCSW, 2O'11/'·:2. PhiI,..,., (CPP),2()·53/'·:1ItJarR.dl (CPP), 20'33/4'. SHOT P\II- L lion WI1tn iCft'). 46'6 3/0'; 1 o.o,nt W-_ Icsw., 44'8 114': 3. MarwI _ (UCSO). 43'10 3/'" ,X 100 RWY- L CSW 43.~: 2.l.CSO. 41B5: 1 UCR. 44.54. 1lOO WET£R$- L

W. BASKETBALL R£SUI.TS co 11 UCS063

BOX SCORES

CIItsI CciIIII ~ IniII n, UCSD 63 ca.Iot~,,_

MilR;.\fT~RApr CaooI __ 7 H 04) 0 0 2 <nil __ 29 J.4 2·2 6 5 9 Itotde _ .... __ 2 ()() 04) 0 0 0 _ _ 20 :Ii 04) 0 8

Kido ,_32 4-12 2,3 3 1.1 Geisler • __ .29 3i 04) 6 6 R.cII • ___ 25 2-5 2·2 6 _ _ .. ___ 28 !HS ~5 , 21

... _. ___ ~ 4-7 04) 4 0 5 8 lCUiI . __ • ___ . lOO 2958 ~12 2' 16 20 73 ~ AoId .,.., !50.~ ... IIIoWs. ~.Ol

~""'-S15(1Qth3i._2~.Gdf I· 1._GILT, .. _-I~ __ -5 (lltjlr2. __ ~T"'-'-211.7. QoII6._1f1ich2,_,MidI.~_-

41Gn112. Milll.fIich' r_Wl- ...... - Mil R;.\ fT.I R P T _ __ .. __ 39 Sl1 ~5 I 1 20

~_33 "S ()I' 2 0 IUIo ____ 8 105 04) 0 0 2 Jonvn • ____ 34 2-5 2-2 5 1 6 c. ... '1._ .. 4 ()() 04) 0 I 0 0 Y .... ' ____ l9 HI 4-1 13 , 3 18 SchoII ___ 1 04) 04) 0 0 I 0 _ _ 2J S12 H 5 , 5 1.1 0iG0II> ___ ._ 19 ()2 04) 2 0 0 () TCUiI __ , 2002451 12,19]) 20 13 63

S/1ootic; Roll .,., 42.1" ... IIIoWs. 63.211. ~",,-J.4~J.4' 1 ... _-8. _ ..... -I IV....,. T_ -18 ~ e. Jonvn3.~2. Y ..... 2._2._2. Cno'fIj. _- u ~3..-1 Y ..... 3.Jonvn21 T_IIUII- ..... c:a J7 .- 71 _ 82 u- II

~ .. ·························~I I UCSD SPECIAL! / I ",. "-.. a warm, party • r As til"'" ~ • .. «""VI atmospbere .. ·for ,...-~~. , ....,. serious pizza eaters ... " p,,,, .1 , m...... Jack Wbltc, Channel 10 ''''-'I~''

....... restaurant critic • M-Th II.-Mid- •

i F-Saf.II .. -I - Tired oifthe same 01' cardboard hizza? • \ Sun. II;3OGr11-Mid ):,..

.r:or."'~'IIII'I'!II""::I-:- Call B1's for gourmet quality. • • r-----------r----------il •

I : 'I!!!! I $2!!:!!: .. 1 • I 1"--~'0fIII0't""~ I ,,*-~couponwbtmorrWfng. I •• I L __ ~·~~~~ ___ L __ ~·~~~ __ ~ • • • 8873VWalaJoIIaDr- fAJoIlaVfl~geCenler 455·0662 • I UCSD's Original Pizzeria ts still tbe besl! F..>pIrrsYI1191 I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

s.......,.,.(Ia).l:S8.59:2._SpnoI~4:OO.46; 1 c.,.. (cpp). 4:05.00, UOM£TERS HUlllU5- L-' Ntadow1 iIICSOL 16.18; 2, Esom 1tl'P). I6.29. 400 II€T£RS- L p"", !nI;o (CSUI.\). 4UJ; 2. _ (CI'!'J. 49.88; 1 UrtlI o.o.iIICSOl. 50-'5, 100 I4mRS­L f1o}d (cpp). IL~ 2. ~_ (CI'!'J. 11.20.1 JoIn HonsIey (CSIAAJ, ILl!. 8l) M{T~ L _ID'!'). tS1.l0:2· S/InI1_(UCRLt~69;lwt.da

(CI'!'J. L"58.95. 1tGH JUMP- I an..1tkaHtJ (CSW). 6'U': 2 . ..., C«IIo (ucsoL 6'3'; 1 Cleo 1'IIIl>I11JCRl. 6'3' . lOO 1I£TtRS- L Jam HnI!y (CSUlAj 22 35: 2 AeedI<l'l'L 22.' J:1FlojdItCPI. 22.51. OISCV5-I. Con W ...... ~.I64·8· :2._Sa1Hi(l.CSO).I5JT: 1~_(CSWj,151'8'lRI'lEAI"'-I_

SIodo Il.CSOL '3'8';2. St", ~ 1IJCRl. 4110 3/4': 3. PIIiI """'ICPP), '1'1/2'. l:XIO MElERs-I._ Ilodo!dIItCPL 10:07.)):2_ Jooys..t<ll(SO!. UUS,CO; 1lfllHillooI\JCSlll.IUII!8.

M, BASKETBALL

DfYlSlOlif III RANIlINGS • '" r.o.a, Xl. 1991

L _.'''NY) (210! 1_'_12·11 1 SIIom SUllo In U .. Hope c..,. i22-U 1 UCIoo.,.. lm) 6. CoMn CoI$ III) (22.3) 7, W<lIttItllIOH) 125-3) 8. RnIo/Pl ...... (22.2)

~ W-lIOIIbIt&lQtln21 IO,W_(2IJ)

DMSIOH III NCAA TOURNAMOT RnI ... __ -....

_.-""" I1u1cItr _125-J)aCMo(22J) 8e1tIeI1I1-IO!.CelltliII~ s.~ W'mr~. Hope 124-1) - terctaI/lle1ilef a w.u..q (22.4) -... s.MIor Wi1!rtool (l&l) alllt_Il&l) _(22~).lCSD(22,J)

WOMEN'S TENNIS

RESUlTS

INIIMDUAlIlOUlTS ucso ... _ SIQ£S - 50I00I ~ d. INbaIUCSOL ~2 , 60: 1b'C~4_(UCSOP6. tKl, I·S:_ IOCSDI clloill1f (Wr!In1n). S7, 6160: IjrdIIl.CSDI cl GtIfh (WesItrar), 4'- tKl. ~3; I'm iUCSOI ~_ (\I'estI'IIonI), 6-4. 6&. 0InIer (UCSD) cl _ ('I/t5ImoIl). 6-2. SI OOUBUS - SeioeI/OIIIrI (WeSln'OlI oS. NbI/WIIIIen IUCSOI. 2~. 60. 6-4: 11'III'H.,.,.,,(UCSOIG./lt1f{:Aft1"ts (Ij~. 6-3. 6.): Y'mjHouw (lJCSO) 4 ~/ Enrdoon~. 2~. tKl. S2.

MEN'S TENNIS

RDULTS

Howtid. UCSO ~2 ~ d.l.CSO J.2

INDIVIDUAl RESUlTS OCSO ... _

SlNGlL\ - SoI'In l\1li) ~ 8tII>Ii 1UCSO).l~, St Mcnt (lCSO) 4 W-j..., (1.11). ~2. &1; IWcl {\lit) o. Y .... I\JCSO). &3. &2: IUoVnIs (\JIt) cl ()Qu (IJCSO). 46. r. 1 ~3: Oil (\JIt) d. -IOCSDI. tKl, 46. 7~:_ IUCSOI ~ Met! (UIt) ... , tKl. 7~, 00UIlES -1\iIeIV!MI {\lit) cl -/!mil) I\ICSOL SlU UCSO ... ~ SIIQtS - _ (USOJ! _ (IJCSO).6-3. 6&. Mcnt IUCSO) o. _ (1Sl),4'- 7~. &2: -. (USOJ 4 Y_(\JCSOI.6-4.&~r.otiUSO)d._IlICSO).6-I, 60: -IUSO!! -I\.CSOI. 6-1.&2; __ IUSO! d. -liJCSOI.6-2, 1>1. OOla.£S - 8t11>1i/lble IUCSO) d. ~_ Iuso), 46, 6-3, 7~ ~ Iuso) 4 YmI/IIiUII iOCSO),6-4, 7~: SewftlSi!oom(USO)o. ~

iUCSOI6-2. U

IN THE BLEACHERS by Steve Moore

' •. " .......... .. U MQl'1t -. .... ~

'~ --

Catcher Cindy Murphy chases a foul pop vs. CSUSB.

BASEBALL

IIEIUlTS CoI$ 01_ I.l.CSO 0 III ....... , Sdom Coifor'III CoIeee a. OCSO 3

SOFTBALL

RESULTS l.CSO 1. CSU Sal _ 0 l.CSO 3. CSU Sal_I l.CS06._2 l.CS06._3

$9 HAIRCUTS HAIR COLORING PERMS FROM $40

XTRAMURALS

MEN'S lACIIOSSE .wmo 12. UCSO il iOn WOMtN'$ LACROSSE UCSIIIO. UCSO S

M. VOLLEYBALL

RESULTS OCSOcl OC s.u0Ul17,15.1H5. ISIl . I~1l. 15-12

PACIFIC BEACH: 1447 Garnet Ave.

".. COlLEGE: 273-CUTS . .1..tJN" 6686 EI Cajon Blvd.

t-\INI \,oV'" . 463-5052 OC EAN BEACH: <lB82 Newport Ave.

HILLCREST: 222.3777 <109 University Ave. 291-CUTS

"

20 CLASSIFIEDS The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 2S, 1991

ANNOUNCEMENTS YOUR JEWISH ADDRESS AT UCSDI J_lah Campus Cenlers provides warmth, educ;alion, prayer, sodallzlng, Conne<:! with Unkln 01 Jewish Studentsl 502 Matthews; east of tile Price Center. Call Rabbi SIotnk;k, 534-2521. (lfl-3It5)

CLASSIFIEDS CREATIVE guitar player looking to Iorm bend or enter existing one. Needs IIddiIionaI gullar, ball, drummer , and alnger. Ke~ welcome. l.ooking to playlwrile origNII n do cover songI . No Reggae, Dead or BealIH lanatics. Call Dave at 558-3705. (2125-314)

"You <:an no more win a warthan you can win an earthquake: Jaanneue Rankin (1880-1973) (1117-2124)

Boost your resumel PicII up an application fOl the Golden Key National Honor Society at USB 4000. Applications due March 20th. Juniors ar>d seniors willi minimum 3.4 GPA are eligible. (1128-3114)

When seconds counl, blelthe a little easier with MICRO·MED. The ml<:rolilm medk;al 1.0 . Card that could possibly sav. your lifel MICRO-MED Is an asset 10 everyone's lile young/old, Ill1web. Call Gabrielle (619) 546-8014. (211/-2128)

Classified advertising is sold in i5-word incremenls. The rate per 15 words is $1 for students (for personal use only), $3 for faculty and staff, and $4 for others. Payment in advance is required; therefore, ads must be mailed with a check (made payable to The UCSD Guardian) or presented in person_ Deadlines are 3 p.m. Thursday for Monday's issue, and 3 p.m. Monday for Thursday's issue. The Guardian reserves the right to refuse any advertising including but not limited to companionship ads. For more information caI/534-5416. Mailing address: UCSD Guardian, 9500 Gilman Drive, 0316, Lalo/la, CA 92093-0316. Actual address: Student Center A , top floor.

Wanted: Subjects from the New England Irea needed for mus ic percepUon ~Nomuslc;.xperience~. $10/h0ur. Cd 558-1385. (2125-2128)

loYely WUhlngton D.C. TENNIS CLUB NEEDS 1 .. I.tlnl pro. for summer. EJq)IriInce -.ching junior ~ Ind rocaIfIa reqund. Teach member1 01 oongraa. While Houee, n media- Very exciting. Coach Kemper - Box 2228 RanCho SanIe Fe, CA 92067. (619) 759-0735. (2125-2128)

Medical n Graduate slUdents-heip tuIOr Medical SIUdents In Bask: Sc:Iencea SIIrIlng March 18, llM11. Eam $1 Mv. ConIactDave Hadler 714-856-4037. (1131 -314)

Third College students Interested In writing for and worklng on a eludent run college newspaper, stop by tile Third College Dean'. Office, or call 534-4390. (2114-2128)

JOB SECURITY FORTHE RESTOFYOUR LIFE. Laarn sales from a true professional and you will never worry again aboul your next paycheck. Sophomores - Juniors -Seniors - Attend Bob lalrate's seminar March 2. See ad pg. 3. (2119-2128)

Wednesdays are UCSD night al U Btewery. From 8:30 till closing you can get S 1. 75 pints of Ihe besl beer in San Diego. one laste and you'll come back for more. And don't lorget. lell 'em tile GUMdian senl you.(2121 ·3114)

Fr .. Fr .. Free The Ethnographic Film Club Presents "The Gods MUSI Be Crazy" with "N 'aI :TheStoryOfaKungWoman,"Tuesday, February 26, Peterson Hall 104. Free Free Free (2121 -2/25)

FreelAikidodemonslration and open house, Saturday March 2nd, 2-4 p.m. Spacial Introductory course during March, MW 6-7 p.m., $60 Includes uniform. Leam the Japanese martial art of Aikido at a tr adlllonal school. Sunset Cliffs Aikido Is affiHaled with tile UCSD Aikido Club. Sunset Clitls AIkido, 5085 Santa Monica Avenue, Ocean Beach, 222-5085. (2125-2128)

DISSERTATION WORKSHOPS

Mosl docloral studenls (&4·9t %), after compIeling their course work. remaUl w~h

a dissenalion pending ~tlon Indef .. nitely. Among lhese ABOs (AII-B: 1-lhe­Dissenalion) are generally found the brightest and mosl crealIVe candidales.

Addressmg lhose elements IOvolved In de­laYIng completion, the workshop guides panlClpants, from beg"''''ng to folloWing Ihroogh and co~lellOn, panocularly aher years ol lnaclfVIty and regardless 01 where they are In the precess.

Workshop Information

985-0426 Poslgraduale Group

ANXIOUS? Nervoua?Tense? Volunt .. r lor FREE r .... rch sludles evaluating medications for anxiety. All sarvlcel art fr .. to suitable volunteers. 18 or older, c:alf Felghl18f ..... rch In8Iitute -' 554-0100. (2125-317)

Use my word prcx:wsor (WP 5.0) In exch<wlge lor sitting In my ar1 gallery In Del Mar. Neatness and ple.,antness required. Regular schedule and 3-4 hour time bloc:ks preferred. Call 755-2494. (2125-2128)

SERVICES Olga Bari- Electrologist 1200 10 1500 halrs per hour. 3256 Holiday Court. Student DIscounts. 558-46441226-1962. ( 1 / 17-31 1~)

PASSPORT PICTURES II New al Cal Copy. Only 15.95. While you walt. Xeroxes ar>d more. Near SI. Genmalns. 452-9949. (1122-616)

WORD PROCESSING: Papers. Theses, Dl5sertatlons, Resumes, HlgheSI QualIty ­Lowest Prices, Laser Jellll , Campus Pickup. 632-7974 . (214-2/25)

COMPUTER RENTALS. Dally. weekly, monlhly rates. Hourly renlals on-she by appoIntmenl. Close 10 UCSD. 581 -6892 (21 7-2128)

FACIAL, BODYWRAP . WAXING, LASHTINT. 20% off first time clients . Pinwl1eels Costa Verde. 558-1858. (2119-31 7)

TAX PREPARATION. Very aecurate and reliable. Close to campus and studenl discounts. Call MIKE: 558-7853 (217 ·~11 )

TyplnglWord Processin\r- Fast, Accurate. Pick up and delivery. Call Sandy, 755-4316. (217-2125)

Have you received your W-2 form yel? H not, notify your employer because you may qualify for an income tax refund. Find out more. JuSI look for the Student Tax Servioe ad irfloday's Guardian. (2114 -2128)

JOB SECURITYFORTHE RESTOF YOUR LIFE. Learn sales Irom a lrue professional and you will never worry again aboul your next paycheck. Sophomores - Juniors -Seniors - Anend Bob latrale's seminar MarCh 2. See ad pg. 3. (2119-2128)

Roberl'sAuto

...sA' " !' , '\ .. "

German, Swedish ' Japanese Service

• All Work Fully Guftl"8l1teed

• Factory. Trained Specialists

(619)275·1132 Mon."Fri. 7 am-6:30 pm Saturday. 8 _-6 pm

• .. _-

4630 Mission Bay Drive (1-5 to Balboa exit) San Diego

--------------------10% OFF on all repairs· with this coupon

• ... t moIor' 0IId t_miNion oou!told. Nut uoUd willa any otIa.tr 00IIp0fL

Bmm TRANSFERIII Convert 8mm films to VHS. For one low prlcel Call nowl 619-272-0868. (1128-2128)

Math Moring. Competent, caring, help 101 those overwhetmed. 0001 be distressed. Sludent ratel, cd, 483-7816. (2119-~1 1)

Moequito Auto RepaIr. Subaru & Hondas_ By appointment 6est rates In North County. 15 years prolessional experience. 758-2332. (2121~11)

UPHOLSTERY BY GALE. Boats, Fumlture, Cushions, Pillows. Reasonable rates. Oceanside 758-2332.(2121 ~11 )

GET YOUR MOTOR RUNNINGI Low COSI tune ups- 4 <:yt . $29.99, 6 <:yt. $39.99, includes sparIt plugs. timing adj., carburetor adj. Smog Check only $19.99. C&D AUTO CARE. 558-2436.(2121 -3114)

WORD PROCESSING everything from term papers to resumes. 24 HOUR SERVICE AVAILABLE. 7-DAYS A WEEK. 450-0812. (2119-317)

GREAT DEALS IN EYECAREI Daily solt conlacts SS9, extended wear lenses $89, selected glasses $39 - Include. exam, care kil, and follow upl See Guardian ad for Dr. John McDonald- locations In Clafntmont 279-5858 and Kensington 283-5858. (2125-3114)

ANXIOUS? Nervous? Tense? Volunteer for FREE re$Garch sludles .valuating medications 10' anxiety. All services are free to suitable volunleers. 18 or oider, call Felghnef R_rch lnalltute 81 554-0100. (2125-317)

TyplngIWord processing. Term papers , theses, resumes. Near school, reasonable prices. 453-05921291 -9008. (2125-3114)

TYPING AND EDITING. Rafse your grade with a professionally edited and typed paper. Fast. 755-9498. (2125)

Your lime Is precious - leI me do itl Word processing, desktop publishing - papers, flyers , resumes, newsleners, etc. Plckupl delivery. Student rates. Call Sue al 291 -1355. (2125-2128)

Word Processing: Tenm papers, resumes, dissertations, RUSH J06S. (20 years). 453-0656 (leave message; promplly answered). (2125)

THE WO~!) PROFESSIONAL: Word processing, reports, speeches, dissef1ations, manuscripls, pr.sentations. Experienced. Laser. Siudenl Ratesl 753·5964. (2125)

WANTED Need c.h? W. dellverl Domino'. PIZIII Is now hiring for all poIitiona. Management opportunities available. Complete training program. II you are 18 years old, have a YIIId driven 11cenae, auto Insurance, an .xcellent driving record, and acx:es. to a <:at , you can: Earn up 10 $10/ hr. (total comp.) Enjoy the freedom of being on the road, work flexible hours. APPLY TODAY I Domino'. Pizza UCSD 3211 Hofiday Ct. 452-UCSO. Please apply Ifter 3p.m. (1/10-616)

Summer rnanagemenllntemshlp Interviews now taking place. Gain valuable experience managing a team 01 employees, customers, and suppliers. Succeuful applicants will undergo extensive training. Average summer earnings range 58-15,000. Call "Student Painters" for Information. 1-«lO-426-&441 . (1122-3111)

Beet Fundnileera On-Campua. If your fraternity, sororfty or club is Interested In earning SSOO.OO - $1,000 for a one week, on-i:8mpU1 marXeling project? You must be wefl organized and hardworlllng. Lena (BOO) 592-2121. (2125-2128)

Tlred 01 low wages and long hours? 00 you want to eam more? (619) 758-4602. (214-41 25)

I need 200 people desiring wealth without the corporale rat race. Call 271-4940 lor Informallon. 271-4940 (217-512)

FULL TIME RESEARCH ASSISTANTSHIP PSYCHIATRY DEPT. UC IRVlNE 1-2 YEAR POSITION. Slatisticaf, computer, cUnk;al, research experience prelerable. Work with PET, MRI data. For more Infonmalion call: Chad (714) 858-7861 . (2114-2125)

Wanled: Subjects lrom Boston area needed form~Ic~~ooexpenme~No~ experience necessary. $10/h0ur. Call Dina aI558-I385. (2119-2125)

Pan time help needed for . busy postal businesa. Appfy 7770 Regents Rd. "13. (Von's Center). (2119-2128)

College Pro Plfnaer.- North America's largest studenl house painting company Is now accepting applications for summer management Internships. Successful applicants will '-"'" eX18naive training and gain valuable managemenl experience. Average summer eaming. range from $8000-$12000. Branches are fU11ng fUl. So act now. Call College Pro Palntara today 1-800-882·2762. (2121-314)

NEVER WORN CONTACTS? VoIu"...,. Of d .. needed lor FDA Research Study on us. manuaII. Earn $20.00. No riIkI. One hour only. Call 535-1661 . (2125)

Realauranl at La Job Beach hiring, <:OUnI8r help, pan lime S5.25111d up, no experience necessary, KEVIN 454-6038. (2125-2128)

FOR SALE FUTONS BY WEIGHT. California AdmIniIIraIIve Code-Tille 4 Chapler3, Ar1icIe 2, Section 1120. D-lO-requlres aluton'. filling net weight be known. We add IIcIdng (naturlll) and sell futonIlor $1 _4()( pcxrd. (Gross weight on our sallied Oetec:to scale.) An 8" queen, 70 pounds, 6 layers, is $98. The number Of layers In a futon Is hogwaah. Always know the weight 10 compare shop and be sure. For poIycore add S22 ($210). Rolli's Warehouse, 4807-F Mercury Street Thursdays, 12-7 p.m.; FridlYS, 12-6 p.m., Saturdays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sundays, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 292-<4673. (In-2125)

F utan - beautiful color, special Irlme, upgraded features, includes tables, ~, sacrifice $95, c;an dellv.r 226-1398. (214-21 28)

VESPA for sale. Rallye 200. Runs wefl. Good shape. $6OOIobo. Call Jeremy at 454-8189. (2114-2125)

Heyl This Is tile car lor you ..• N_I Rebuilt Datsun wagon. GREATI $110010b0. 299-2561. (2114-2125)

'81 Jeep CJ7 4CyI. S3K runs greal, soft top, many x-tr~. Must sell to pay lor Spring Otr. $4250. Call Daroid 271-6811 .(2114-3114)

Bose MAS speakers. Never used (still In box), pUj $750 will HHfor1575. 270-8918, 6 p.m.-12 a.m. (2119-2125)

Hey Beginners I 2 used surlboatdll: 6'4" only $75 each. Wetsults 1001 Call 558-$)37. (21 21-317)

DISCOUNT AIRLINE TICKETS I Anywhere in the world . Great for vacations and inlervlews. Call Randy 558-2168. (2121-21 25)

DESK -large, locking file drawers. wood, highest quality, extremely solid, excellent condition. $21510.8.0. 558-2376. (2125)

Red Horida Spree. Immaculate matching helmet, U-Iock, 80 mpg. $450. Francis, 755-5856. (2125-2128)

PARIS CELE

SUMMER PROGRAM 1991 Intersession: May 27· June 14

Summer Session: June 17· July 26

• More than 40 r"llUl8r o".rino' 'rom IN University', I ........ _ curricufum.

• A 111, __ FrlllClI language InwMrsion program. 'Hturino cultural .. 1111119 tout. _ conYlfSllloft - .

• II lIIor! cour .. on German unHocatlon culminating I .... live­da)' sludy trip 10 ""fn.

.. W_nd liCUfIIont:

Normandy, Cl\ampegne. LOIre v.tley ~I., .ndo,-",.

Send for our 1981 Sum_ Program Broeh,":

The AlnerIcan Uniwrslty 01 ""'­Summet .....- U.S. 0IIIct 10 Easlm" SIIwl. SuM 434 _ YOItI, _1'OItI tOOO3 Ttl. (2121 S"- 4110 1'.1. (212) 475-52115

.. Seminar lOUrs on France ancIlN European eomlNlnlty witll .... York Unlwfllty. l1li U~ 01 rlus, lilt lJnl-.IIy 01 .... Hanlps/llre • 1nIerhoetIt, l1li UnIted ,..,..., 01 TNcIIerI.

TIll AMDICAN UNIVIU.TY or.AaII

Monday, February 2S, 1991

STING TICKETS I For MIlICh 30th conoert. Call 297-&457 (~). (2125-2128)

IBM compatible UOM Supreme 286-Turbo 12 MHz, 2SERI2PARlGame port, 250W power, expandable to 4MB onboata. 65MB Fast·28WS hatd-drlve, 1.2MB floppy, Super EGA display, 2400B modern, menus, any soflware you want, only $1200. Wilkie, 558-6474. (2125)

SCOOTER. 1985 Honda EIit. SOcc. UCSO parking pennit $450 O.B.O. Heather 559-2374. (2125-2128)

Sootpions concert March 11 . Firslrow, ~ level seats next 10 stage. Call Alex 458-9845. (2125-317)

'89 Red Honda Elite LX (SASO) ; IN EXCELLENT CONDITION. Parldng permit included. $650.00. Cat11 (4~1) . (2125-314)

Nissan Pulslt NX 1984, P.B. PIS, moonroof, MW tires, ballllry, 111,000 miles, $1950. MIle 453-2288. (2125-2128)

HOUSING Del Mar Condo, 2 br/2ba, 1umIahed. poof, spa, ulllllle., beach. 5425 firat , 5850 !hereafter. 931-69n_ (In-2I25)

Townhouse av.aable Immedlatefy, near UCSD, $800 per monIh. Cd 272.e508. (21 25-3114)

LAJOUA CONDO. Own room.tIath. 2 mifea from c:ampuI: $39OImo, 113 utllilies. 535-0715. (2111-2125)

M/F Nonamotcat 10 aIwe 2 bdr., I 112 bIIh fumIahed~apl"'<*!1pW, pool, jacuzzi, canyonYIew. S35OImo., 112 utIitiea plus deposit. Available March 1 II. Call Uncia al 558-9025. (2111-2128)

FREEl NOWI La JoDa Colony. Bedroom! Bath. Who: Clean female, no Smoking/pelS. Brian 455-1212. (2114-2125)

S27Stmo. Female roommlll8 . La Jolla Shore. 151& lasl plus$100 deposit. Fulon$50. 459-1371, leave messages. (2119-2/25)

Room In Clalremonl 10wnh0use •. Laundry, pool-spa. near busline. 1245 + 1/4 uti\. jack 534-2591. (2121·2125)

l.argemaslllrbedroomavailiblenearUCSO. Privale bllh, sundeck, wisher/dryer. Avaflable now through end of June. S430 slnglel$5OOdol.Cleoccupanc:y + 113 utilities. 259-1829. (2119-3115)

ROOMS FOR RENT In HUGE 2-Story 3 Bedroom Condol Only 5 minutes to UCSOI Washer IIId dryer in kltchenl Patio, pool, dishwasher, and morel Only $345IJ.Aonth. Call 558-2376.(2121-2125)

RoomrnaW Wamd (M/F)II Own furnished room InspaclousbHeveioondo 15mln. from UCSD. In-house washer/dryer, cable lV, pooVjacuzzl; all amenitiesl S310/mo., no utilities. Call Stev. 271-6811 . (2121-314)

LA JOLLA CONDO: 3 bedrooms, diahwuher, laundry, morel 5 minute. to UCSOI,1 050/month. 558-2376. (2125-2128)

Roommate Wanted. Own room In 3 bedroom condo. 1315, 113util. Avail . late MarCh. 558-0571. (2125-2128)

UNIVERSITY CITY S275. 1 or 2 females to ahant nice 3 bedroom house (own rooms). 10 mIn.toUCSO. Wuher/dryer, patio, piano. No amokenI, drugs, pets. Call MarX al 534-2391 (message: 534-3383). (2125-2128)

Single room In CIalremonl. Avail. March 1 at. $21UStmonth. 274-11242. (2125)

FREEl UTC. Bedroomlbalhlpoof. For female who will leech me JapaneM. Message 481 -2087. (2125-2128)

Mira Mesa. ReaponsibIe sludent to share 4 bedroom horne. Own room S280. call 549-3971 . (2125-3114)

Female non-smoker wanted for 2B012BA condo-apl Part. fum, tennis, racquelbal, volleyball, fitness center w/sauna, poole, jacuzzis, bbq, gated community w/alarm on apt $550 + 112 utlUties + depotIl. Cd Sandy 587-0918. (2/25)

LOST AND FOUND LOST CAT - LIGHT ORANGE Female long hair$IOO r_ard "OPIE. "Mesa housing area. Jack 558-0938. (1/28-2128)

LOST Gold ring, lamUy cresl and inscription on face. High sentimental value, reward . Jim 554-0373. (2119-411)

The UCSD Guardian

PERSONALS Third College students Interested In writing for ar>d WOIItlng on a student run college newspaper,stop by the Third College Dean's Office, or <:all 534-4390. (2114-2128)

JOB SECURITY FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE. Laam sales from a true professional ar>d you witt never worry again about your next payche<:k. Sophomores - Juniors -Seniors - Anend Bob Ialrate's seminar MarCh 2. See ad pg. 3. (2119-2/26)

Louie- Good lucklomonow, Swing through II. Love Danielle. (2125)

Carwash • Gas Station • Dry Cleaners • Grocery Store· One Hour P~oto· Florist • PostOffice • HairSalon • VideoStore • Bank

• Restaurants • and many other retail stores.

Hey Beginnersl2 used surlboards : 6'4" only $75 each. Welsuits tool Call 558-8037. (21 21 -317)

Had enough of weak, walered down beer? Want a beer that will sclnlillale the old laste buds? The La Jolla Brewery makes four beers thaI will please the most dlsceming palate. Check II out, and leilihem that the Guardian senl you l (2121 -3114)

Renee, you rocked hard during Derby Daysl Congratulations Derby Queen Irom all your PI Phi sisters. (2125)

After Finals. Sting concan tickets. March 30th, good seals, need money, muSI sell, Alex 458-9845. (2125-314)

CLASSIFIEDS 21

Sigma Pi: Sunny slopes and hotter nightsl The ski Irip exchange was a blast. Love, the ski bunnies of ALPHA OMICRON PI. (2125)

ANXIOUS? Nervous? Tense? Volunteer for FREE research stud ies evaluating medications for anxiety. All services are free to suitable yolunteers. 18 or older, call Feighner R_arch Institute at 554-0100. (2125-317)

Spend Spring Break in JACKSON HOLE with RISCI Five days 01 incredible powder, sun, and fun lTickets available at Box Office, but they're going lastl Delails call 534-4482 or 273·2145. (2125-2128)

22 SPORTS

• UCSD hockey team works at sticking H to its opponents By Craig Elaten Staff Writer

"UCSD ice hock.ey." Pardon? This is, after all, the land of fun in the sun,

where rain is a front-page story and ice is found only in mixed drinks.

Times are changing, however, as evidenced by the emergence of the UCSD ice hockey team, an extramural team with a decidedly odd mix of inexperienceand talent.

For Revelle College sophomore Tom Gould, hockey has been a lifelong passion which began when he was a child in his home stare of New lersey.

'There is something about the ice that' inyourblood," Gould aid. "Something that just makes you want 10 get our there and kate."

Gould's thirst for the game is matched by several players on the team, including Revelle College junior Leigh Hsu. Hsu, the team leader in goals scored, says that hockey at UCSD is small, but growing.

"Everybody who has come out to play has srock with it," Hsu aid. "We have people who put on skate for the fir t time one month ago."

Junior Dan Meade, one of the more experienced players on the team, said that the inexperience of orne of the new player has shown through on the icc.

"In our first game, we were out [for a face-off] and I had to stop to show some of the ncw players where to stand," Meade said. ''The referee got mad. but I told him Lhat some of our players had never played hockey before, never mind lining up for a face-off."

Given such handicapping factors, the Tritons hould be struggling to keep their necks above the .500 line. Hardly. Witbacurremrecordof 13-1-2, UCSD has been at or near the top of the Pacific Collegiate Hockey Association (PCHA) all year. Not that the team's standing determines the players' every thought.

"We' re just out there (playing] to have a good time. win some games. and have some fun," Gould said.

To this point, hockey has been a well·kept secret at UCSD, rarely drawing large crowds, or press coverage. Part of the reason, the players feel. is the negative image usually associated with the spon.

"P.R. for hockey has gone sour lately," Gould said. HMost people think that you go to a fight, and a hockey game breaks out."

"We don't go out there [on the ice) looking to drop the gloves and fight. We just want to have fun," Hsu said.

Don't for a second, though, drop the image of hockey as a physical spon. Picture, if you will, a 2LO-pound madman flying at you at 20 miles per hour, intent on knocking you off a 'puck the size of a mouse trap. The thought alone is enough to make a person wince.

"We come off the ice dripping with sweat," Hsu said. "After a game, your whole body is sore, and you've got

The Game

The UCSD Guardian

A SPECTATOR 'S GUIDE;," I' ." "

your share of bruises." The PCHA includes traditional ath­

letic powerhouses USC and UCLA, as well as crosstown rival SDSU. The league gives UCSD a rarecbance to strut its stuff against the big boys, as evidenced by a 13-1 pasting of UCLA earlier this season.

"It's a great feeling to check somebody [from UCLA] and see them lying there," Hsu said. "They're such a big 5(;11001, and here you are beating the pants off them."

"We're still pinching ourselves in disbelief some­times," Meade said.

UCSD's head coach is Gary Andreassi, who came to the team under rather unusual circumstances. An equip­ment manager, he was contacted by Hsu, who was looking for some goalie equipment.

"I got to know the guys, and then they asked me if I wanted to coach them," Andreassi said

Accordi ng to the players, Andreas i brings a pleasant. Jow-key style of coaching (0 the team, something that is important with such an eclectic mix of talents and styles.

"II's good to have a coach who's not full of rah-rab, pressure talk," Gould said. "After all, we're not some

See HOCKEY, page 16

The Goalie

• k:e rockey is played I:¥ Iwo teams on a playing area calloo a rink (wtlctl is 200 feet long and 100 feet wide). Five players iYld a !J)alie for each team are a1IC7oVed on the ice at any time. They play three 2G-minute periods, trying to put the puck into the opposition's goal. The team with the most goals wins.

• The goalkeeper defends a goal that is six feet wide and four feet tall. A team may have only one goal· keeper in a game at any time. However, another player may be substituted without goalkeeper privileges.

Jeff QU8n1Guardian

Monday, February 25,1991

Some Tools of the Game

• Headgear is mandatory for most competition .

• Shoulder pads, shin pads, and elbow pads are worn underneath the un~orm. In addition, goalies wear chest protectors.

• Skates must be of an approved design - skates specifically built for speed are illegal. All players (except goalies) as well as referees, must wear skate heel guards.

• Sticks are made of wood or other appoved materials. The length of the average stick is four feet, five inches. The length, however, can vary depending on the height of the player. The length of the stick's paddle area is one foot, two-and·a-half inches.

- Goalie stick

- Normal stick

Jamel Collier/Guardian

..." a..M3U811:1ian Source: Rules of the Game, McMattIn Press

Monday, Febmary 25, 1991 The UC D Guardian

Reggae Festival March 10

Joe Higgs, Culture, Cardiff Reefers, and Mrican Stars

E ents ... AS MEETING

Every Wednesday at 6:30 pm Price Center-Third Floor-Room 8 All Students Are Invited to Attena

HENRY AND JUNE AS FILM SERIES Thursday. February 28, 6:30,9:00, II :3Opm Price Center Theater $1.00

"THE BUSINESS OF AMERICA ... SHOP TALK" cwo POLITlCAL FILM SERIES Friday, March I, 7:00 pm Faustina Solis Hall Free!!!

Insi hts ... HAWAII CLUB

ALOHA!! ! The Ohana I Aikanes are having another fun, informal, gathering. Wednesday, February 27 5:30 pm at the Santa Barbara J L.A. Room

Luau season coming soon!! Fun! Fun! Want to learn to Hula? Eat Ono food? Bring your friends and some food and get ready for fun!!!

MEChA Are you a graduating Chicano/Latino Student? Well, come and participate in this year's MEChA's Chicano/Latino Graduation. It is going to be held on June 15th at the Revelle Cafeteria Interested students should come to the meetings

Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4 pm MEChA office (in the SAAC office ,2nd floor Price Center)

For more information call MEChA office at 5344994

GENERAL BODY MEETING Monday, February 25, 5:00 pm The Cove Topic: Immigration and Migrant Workers Speaker: Dr. Fenner Lopez Film: "Promise of America"

PRE·LA W EDUCATION ASSOCIATION Worried about the LSAT? Speaker from Princeton Review at next PLEA MEETING.

Wednesday, February 27 Oasis Annex (Old Bookstore)

PSYCHOLOGICAL & COUNSELING SERVICE· REVELLE Dream Interpretation Workshop Tuesday, February 26, 7:30·8:30 Why Not Here? in Revelle Open to aLI interested students

AS NEWSFLASHES is produced by the ASUCSD. Use the NEWSFLASHES REQUEST FORM 10 place an advertisemenL Ads are subject to Ivailability of spacc. Deadline is every Wednesday at noon for the following Monday paper. Drop off and Pick up of all Newsflashes fonns are 10 be done with the AS Secretary - Third Aoor of the Price Center. Con1aC15344450 for more infonnation.

RISC··RADICALL Y INCLINED SKI CLUB -Ski in short s! We're going to Jack on Hole. WY for Spring Break! March 23· 30. Tickets at the Box Office. or call our office at 5344482 Tuesday-Friday lOam· 2pm. For additional info call John at 273-2145

SEAC··ECO-SERIES PART III HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT A dynanlic presentation on the problems of rcducing and disposing of hazardou waste.

Wednesday. February 27.7 pm Soli Lecture Hall (SLH) 104 Free Refreshments

TIPSY TAXI WILL GIVE YOU A SAFE RIDE HOME FridaysandSaturday 1 Opm -2am (February I-March 16. 1991) Call 234·6161 *Must Have Student 10. (Radius 15 miles. additional miles will be paid by tudent) Spon ored by ASUCSD.

AS MARKETING A special training e sion will be taking the place on Friday at 3:30pm. Call 587-7987 for location. Mandatory attendance by manager i required. All taff are also encouraged to attend.

HENRY & JUNE

'"ANEIIOUC MASTERPIECE. R~markabk. A ~nuinch' trul~ m., ",,1 (clc:bntcs • wornao's lUual .... a~nins _i(~ 1I!lIbashtd rnthmia..m.'

.. ,.,."". ..... AIUCID ........

,.",. ... ..".",. c.II.:t ..... 'o

'--""-..... Executive President Vice President Administrative Vice President Finance Vice President External Affairs

Senators Sophomore, Junior and Senior Senators for: Muir, Revelle, Third, Warren and Fifth

Commissioners Communications

Programming Public Relations

Academic Affairs Operations/Services &

Enterprises

University Center Board

23

24 SPORTS

BITS & PIECES / PETER ~O

The Moon, CIA, and East New Hampshire

J UST A FEW NOTES:

• Before the NCAA committee perfonns it

annual ritual of losing all sense of geographical proximity and the U .. map, and ends the University of Eastern New Hamp hire to play New Mexico

tate in Seattle, orne predictions for the Final Four: Duke, Loui iana State, Arkan as, and UNLV.

UNL V i a given. Only an idiot or Pete Rose would bet against college ba ketball' favorite ex-con. Anything can happen in the tournament , but there ha n't been uch a prohibi ­tive pre-tourney favorite ince Kareem Abdul-Jabbar signed hi check Lew Alcindor.

Loui iana tate for one rea on. One BIG rea on -Shaquille O'Neal. If Danny Manning can lead Kan a to a hampion hip, then the Shack

can carry the Tigers t the moon.

D UKE ALWAYS manages to find a way into the Final

Four, regard Ie s of their talent level. ot that the Blue Devils will win of course. Nobody imitates the Denver Broncos better than Durham ' fine t.

rkansa has the neate t logan in sport : "94 Minutes of

Hell." Sound like an invitation to an anthropology lecture.

Other teams to keep an eye on: Ohio State, Indiana, and U LA.

The Buckeye are an excellent team, but they're young. Never count out a team coached by Bobby Knight. And UCLA plays dumb, but the Bruin have more talent than any team in college hoop not under inve tigation by the NCAA, FBI, CIA, BMW, or the Nevada-Rello-Lake Tahoe Register.

C AN YOU imagine the commotion that would

re ult if UNL V couldn't partici­pate in the tournament , because its conference doesn ' t permit it? That ' exactly what's happening to Hamilton, the top-ranked team in Division ill. Hamilton ha ' more in common with the Rebel than you would think.

Hamilton is undefeated, and (putting the proverbial 'wri ting on the wall' in crayon here) it ha n ' t lo~t a game ~ ithin it divi ion all year.

The only other team in the en­tire 40-team tournament that can make that claim is UCSD.

See BITS, Page 16

SPORTS The UCSD Guardian Monday, February 25, 1991

UCSD Invited to Big Party • Men's hoop named top seed in the West, but will have to host number two Claremont

of eight NCAA regional divi ions - and will receive a bye in Thursday' first-round matchups which pit the founh and fifth seed of each region again t each other.

By les Bruvold Associate Sports Editor

March Madne is coming. But don't worry, thi isn't

orne hamele s promo for the CBS telecast of the NCAA Fi­nal Four later next month.

You see, Division TIl 's ver-ion of college ba ketball's

po tsea on "big pany" will be making a top at U SO thi weekend, as the UCSD men's basketball team (22-3) will host the Claremont-Mudd Stag (22-4) in a econd-round NCAA

Volleyball Revenge Is Sweet By Joel Kurzman Staff Writer

If victory i sweet, then revenge must taste even weeter.

In a five-game match ver u UC Santa Cruz Saturday night, the men's volleyball teM1 defeated the Banana Slug to avenge an early season 10 s.

"Winning i n' t everything, but it ain't too bad," Head oach " Digger" Graybill aid after the Triton' 17- 15,11 -15,16- 17 ,15-11 , 15-12 victory.

Earlier thi year, the Banana lug knocked off the Triton in

Santa Cruz. Saturday' s match wa full of

marathon rallies, but none a sus­penseful a in the pivotal fourth game. Down one game to the Slug , two, and 5-4 in the founh, UCSD turned the tide at the net behind the blo king of Lawrence Werner, Matt Brigham, and Chri Romey. Werner and Brigham led the Tri­ton with 10 and nine block , re-

See M. V-BAll, Page 17

tournament game at 7 p.m. Satur­day night in the Main Gym.

Un Ie you've been living in a cave for the last three month ,lhi development hould come a no urpri e.

The Triton have been con i -tenlly rank.ed in the top 20 nation­ally all eason - they are cur­rently ranked fourth - and have run off a program-record 14 con­secutive win to end the regular season .

UCSD j the top eed in the NCAA' We tern Divi ion-one

Nonnally,theregion'sfirst eed plays the winner of the first round games. But, for some reason known only to the NCAA election com­mittee, the Tritons will face the region's second-seeded team , Claremont, instead of the winner of Thur day' contest between founh- ceded Central (IA) and fifth- ceded Bethel (MN).

ThewinnerofThur day' West Region first-round game will in­

See M. HOOP, Page 17

Head Coach Tom Marshall and the Tritons will host Claremont Saturday at 7 p. m.

Left Out in The Cold By Srinath Sanda, Staff Writer

and Heather Holtzclaw, Associate Sports Editor

It's tough to say goodbye, but that is what the UCSD women's basket ball team had to do Friday as it bid farewell to its 15-game win streak, as well a any opponunity to make the 32-team NCAA Divi­sion ill tournament field, falling to Christ College of Irvine 73-63.

The selection committee an­nouncedthat this year's field would include the top four teams from each of the eight region . UCSD finished fifth in the We t.

"Chri t College was kind of our last chance to redeem ourselves," Head Coach Judy Malone aid.

Malone said she had expected to make the tournament de pite the Tritons' number five ranking. She based this on la t year when the top five team from the West made the field.

''I'm very di appointed for the team," Malone said. "We really deserved to be there."

Michelle DiGuilio and the Tritons lost for the first time in 16 games, 73-63 to CCI, as UCSD's hopes for a playoff berth evaporated.

Friday against CCI, the Tritons See W. HOOP, Page 17

Baseball Drops Two More By Rex Grayner Staff Writer

The members of the UCSD baseball team left the field Saturday shaking their head in disbelief. After nine games, a 2-7 record is not what the Tritons had in mind.

For a team that marched through the gate on opening day with a national cham­pion hip in mind, the Tritons are consis­tently being hot down by one opponent after another.

But what should they expect? After all, scoring an average of less that two-and-a­half runs per game isn't going to set the world on fire.

On Friday, UCSD hosted College of Idaho with thoughts of avenging two losses they suffered last year. The Tritons fell shon, hov.ever, in an Il-inning dogfight, losing 1-0. The loss, the re ult of a listless display of hitting on the pan of the offense,

See BASEBAll, Page 17

Softball Gets Back on Track By Craig Elsten Staff Writer

the team a a confidence builder. "After 10 ing our fir t two game , we

really needed to get our confidence back .. .. We became more aggre ive and confident at the plate."

Greg Benes/Guardian

Doran Yount rounds third in Saturday's 8-31055 to Southern Cal. The Tritons dropped to 2-7 in 1991.

The UCSD softball team took advan­tage of poor tan ford fielding to weep a doubleheader Saturday, 6-2 and 6-3. The pair of wins capped off a 4-0 weekend homestand. On Friday, the Tritons wept CSU San Bernardino, 1-0 and 3-1.

According to UCSD Head Coach Mel­i sa Jarrel, the four win were imponant to

The Triton tarted off quick in the fir t game Saturday, coring three runs in the fir tinning. Shonstop Dana Chaiken led off the game with a single, followed by a

See SOFTBAll, Page 16