I February 13. 1990 Volume 34, Number 67 2S percenLojaILstudents--Who-flJiJ-Ul) WPE-are!rem EG8 school 8y STEPHEN LOPEZ Staff Writer Test scores lrom the past six Upper Division Writing .. PfOliciency Examinations show that the school of Engineering ..-and.-Computer· Science has a higher percentage of lailure than other Bchools within the univenily. According to daw taken lrom the past six UDWPE lest dates (October 1988·June 1989), ... Computer -:---- Science maJOrs account ror .. approximately IS percent of all -students who lake !tie exam. Abwt 12 percent pdaSed while as manyas 2s percentlailed. Test scores lor the, UDWPE, which aU CSUN students must 9roef 1.0 graduate, also Vodoun art showcased in exhibit By LYDIA OFFORD Staff Writer' An art exhibit titled, "Ceremonies and celebrations 01 the Vodoun in Haiti," a 10 year study by Dr. Dolores Yonker, professor and chair of the art mstory department, opened Monday at the North GaUery in the Fine Arts DillJdliljf The P, ...... 'oocumiiiiliition oillie stu'dy and' will showcase drawings which llliUbeon-rubituntil "'<!IHl2.· According to Yonker, the Haitian culture is dne rich in spirituality. However the is prscticed by 5 million people. is the most persecuted and revUed 01 any religion. "There has been a grea t interest in lhe suppression of this religion. II has been demed ita slarus as a religion. The word Voodoo i5 an anglicit.liUon of the .AlricM ",Qfd Vodoun, which in the language of Fon, spoken by people in Dahomey {Betunl, means .5pi.nl," she said. Yonket" noted that the use of terms such as "Vo'O<1oo -- ""Eetmotrilcs n create a negatIve image of !.he reHgIOfl "Hollywood has prt".!ioen\.ed II (Vodoun l as maliCIOUS and <... I have nOllound thls to be true VoodooisUi them5t"Jves have never (fought) against or hurt anyone. I want to commWllcHte to yoo that t.h.iB is nol an evil show that the greater number of limes the student attempts the lest, the less 1iI<ely the student Is to pass. Dr. Marvin Klotz, cooidinator lor the UDWPE, said the aehool has had lrouhle In' the past. -'Consistently, the school 01 Engineering and -Computer Science is In !.be red," Klotz said. "In the June ([989) exam they represent a lourth 01 aU the studenlB who laUed." One reason lor the high rate. of lailure, according 10 engineering senior Victor Lopez, is t.bat students in.the Engineering and Computer Sci"""" major have a stroggerWlclerslanding lor mathematical and scientific ideas rather than those regarding sentence struc1:tlrl'. Lopez. hall pe.... fttreUDWPE· . AssocIate DeaD of Engineering and Computer Sci..... Laurence Carelto said that the department is trying to incorporate more writing ....ignmt!Dts ill depart- ment cwrses ill order to improve UDWPE results. "ave,. the' past lew years, we've tried to illtroduce more writing Into wr course work," Car<!tto sald. "10 the past, wr studenlB have looked at the UDWPE as something to gel around." Caretta aaid tb in the computer-science-engineering werkplace, good communication 8kilIs - which lhe UDWPE exam emp!laalzes -ate needed. "l!1the actual engineering and colfr'puter sciene<! workplace. basic como1unicalion ikiII& are very important," Cuelto said. Cuetlo does DOt feel that writing requirements need to be increased to be admitted to CSUN, but that wri!iDg skllIs should be laught at the univer· sil}'. • "It's no! whether the studenlB have it (writing skills) belore they gel here or DOt. but give them the opportunity to learn them, I' be said, Writing Across the Disciplines, which is offered through the Leaming Evaluation Center and is avaUable 10 all majors, is a worksbop to help studenlB and laculty develop better writing skills FaCUlty members attend worksbops which help them deslgnwurseasSignmenlslhal require more "Ti ting lrom their Srudenu, e .... l1lng (clln Lot J allen fmd Wi:l!\mg t1' !tITt' to ledvt' HOWt-','f-! 1'll' 01 d t)u$lne::-.::-. comple). students. In addition. students may consuItwi!.b an advisor from the wnrbl1bp and have their writing critiqued. Other departments w..... p1agued with I ..... UDWPE llCores lor the Febuary 1989 exam Finance, aCCOW'lting, physical education, mathematics and sociology all had a higher rate of (ailure than pa.. Addilianally, statistics show .tudents bow a better i::Iiance ol passing lhe exam on lheir flrst attempl . people who CaiI are the ODe!! who don't write W<!U," KIotz said. "So they take it again and hall of them pass. Then, "'l's ..!eft,,,,,,, ....lIy don't write W<!U. " ,. favor Coin lot to be replaced by business complex By MARY RUSSEU 01 problems recenUy the end of lhJ.s,,)'eaI" Contnbutmg Writer Wilh !.he increase, a dollaT Q{ ma·ctrrne··W"S-s------a-lfirea---whJ"Cb--- -aepB.rtmenr. -aIf"leeS. feeuJty of- TIle con .... eruent COUl parlung lot, the onl)" lot on campus where no permit 15 reqw.red. will be a UU.llg of l..he past as early as Fall of 1900, liccordmg to 8 CSUN o!flelal Corn L01 J 1:5 loc'B led oo.rth of the Ad.m1.DUltral.ion buildi.llg and IS orten used by parkIng permil frequently bre.ak.s do\l.'D, causurg many long lines and some shon fust':S As a result, students and \'lSIt.oMi have been WUibJe to gei 001 af !.he lot or end up wa.iling In hrw ·When 400 people try to rome t.hrough two gates at sa,Ole fices and some classroom space While the comple.I \11'00 't u...;e the entire lot, 00 OecLS.ion has been ma.de about the rema1n1OS space Thr proj«t IJj scheduled to be C"omplt'tf"d 1n the FaU Of 1m .. coin lot I.S bemg Con.slc:ief'e.d." SBtd Watker ··But no deflnLt{> deets',lans M\'i' been - it's s.c.bedu1ed to Jak.e at least stntdUl"t: &1 the south end of lot C \II·ill bes'.tarted ·'The is due to be comp\e(oo by' the FaU 01 t991." L...ohr !laId "M.ane)' far aU '.M proJ't'iC''tS 15 CQI.UI.I1g from ava1lable fUJlli.t!; roIJt'!Clt'd from last year'S parkJ.ng-iN' LOC.reue, " he addt.'rl religion," Yonker &aid holders ...·hen space Lsn't 1.1Int>, there will be a ue-up," lUade yet," he Bdded "AU of these reference5 rna y Ei\'ailable In othff lots Walker said Kim Speed. a 3J-)'e.u-Qid I' I £Sting frenzy appear to be harmless but they According to samuel 'Walker, Michael Sugar, Operations Lt psychology major '.J t.hJ.nk · CSlIN 011ers programs to I are nol Taken together they· P arkinB Manager, .'The for Pubhc SsJe-ly, s.ald that 1.1 El t.ht"). s.h:ou1d keep II U'S dC$::' a.nd are: demeaning and destructive ...·tuch pnman..1y &en!e:!l part-timf' llt"W COlfi lot were added ad )'OU dOO'1 h.:a \'e to 'W-$..Lk (i\'f' bk)(:'b help students control I e,abng habits. to a people whooe only· crime ls students and people ,.'ith bwiiness dHlonal exlUi and other lm to Wishing to retain flDd celebrate In the AdminiJaralion building iii pro\'t"ments would need 1.0 be Owr (''(\f'lSlruc!.l.lll) - their African tTadiUO{1!l," she sd>eduloo to be clusOO and lb. lllade .5 i CloM,ace ! added. nla}arlt)' 01 spaces turned 111tO .!l. Acrordi.rlg to Stt'\'eo Lohr, I!ilnJCtl.1:l"e, \II'tuc:b "'ill be bUll1 00 I I Basl<"'tb&fl, voueyOdli and I A slide presenlallon business complu ' d,lnXlor 01 facUltld plaWll..ng, the: the r)Ql1l) illdC' 01 l...ut C 1II,1q pres<!nted hy' Yonker srwwed Lot J, which na5 st'Jen Its (('it, Ile\ll' compleJ;o whkb will bowie' 7..e114h 3"Mue \liflll lH'"'O't!d>e i t>a""ball t""",,, Mv" busyI I w'ook",><:l, double in the put two yean from lhe "'hools or )lmu- and nesrlyl.«Xl ..... ....ces 1 __Pl pqce 12 Plea.. It&t A.\t;r, p.g. 6 7S cents to $1 50, twu had i15 I5luu'e edocalion, will be sLartOO bel..... Once the proj<!cl is cunpJ.. oo
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February 13. 1990 Volume 34, Number 67
t~~iiim-e_-ana=coufpU1er~scienCTtr-=oomeCrDymexam2S percenLojaILstudents--Who-flJiJ-Ul)WPE-are!rem EG8 school 8y STEPHEN LOPEZ Staff Writer
Test scores lrom the past six Upper Division Writing
.. PfOliciency Examinations show that the school of Engineering
..-and.-Computer· Science has a higher percentage of lailure than other Bchools within the univenily.
According to daw taken lrom the past six UDWPE lest dates (October 1988·June 1989),
.. approximately IS percent of all -students who lake !tie exam.
Abwt 12 percent pdaSed while as manyas 2s percentlailed.
Test scores lor the,UDWPE, which aU CSUN students must
~_itl 9roef 1.0 graduate, also
Vodoun art showcased in exhibit By LYDIA OFFORD Staff Writer'
An art exhibit titled, "Ceremonies and celebrations 01 the Vodoun in Haiti," a 10 year study by Dr. Dolores Yonker, professor and chair of the art mstory department, opened Monday at the North GaUery in the Fine Arts DillJdliljf
The ,e_~hibi,tio~_ ,i~ P, ...... 'oocumiiiiliition oillie stu'dy and'
will showcase drawings which llliUbeon-rubituntil "'<!IHl2.·
According to Yonker, the Haitian culture is dne rich in spirituality. However the
is prscticed by 5 million people. is the most persecuted and revUed 01 any religion.
"There has been a grea t interest in lhe suppression of this religion. II has been demed ita slarus as a religion. The word Voodoo i5 an anglicit.liUon of the .AlricM ",Qfd Vodoun, which in the language of Fon, spoken by people in Dahomey {Betunl, means .5pi.nl," she said.
Yonket" noted that the use of terms such as "Vo'O<1oo
-- ""Eetmotrilcs n create a negatIve image of !.he reHgIOfl
"Hollywood has prt".!ioen\.ed II
(Vodoun l as maliCIOUS and ev~1
<... I have nOllound thls to be true VoodooisUi them5t"Jves have never (fought) against or hurt anyone. I want to commWllcHte to yoo that t.h.iB is nol an evil
show that the greater number of limes the student attempts the lest, the less 1iI<ely the student Is to pass.
Dr. Marvin Klotz, cooidinator lor the UDWPE, said the aehool has had lrouhle In' the past.
-'Consistently, the school 01 Engineering and -Computer Science is In !.be red," Klotz said. "In the June ([989) exam they represent a lourth 01 aU the studenlB who laUed."
One reason lor the high rate. of lailure, according 10 engineering senior Victor Lopez, is t.bat students in.the Engineering and Computer Sci"""" major have a stroggerWlclerslanding lor mathematical and scientific ideas rather than those regarding sentence struc1:tlrl'. Lopez. hall pe....fttreUDWPE· .
AssocIate DeaD of Engineering and Computer Sci..... Laurence Carelto said that the department is trying to incorporate more writing ....ignmt!Dts ill department cwrses ill order to improve UDWPE results.
"ave,. the' past lew years, we've tried to illtroduce more writing Into wr course work," Car<!tto sald. "10 the past, wr studenlB have looked at the UDWPE as something to gel around."
Caretta aaid tb ~tiOfi in the computer-science-engineering werkplace, good communication 8kilIs - which lhe UDWPE exam emp!laalzes-ateneeded.
"l!1the actual engineering and colfr'puter sciene<! workplace. basic como1unicalion ikiII& are very important," Cuelto said.
Cuetlo does DOt feel that writing requirements need to be increased to be admitted to CSUN, but that wri!iDg skllIs should be laught at the univer· sil}'. •
"It's no! whether the studenlB have it (writing skills) belore they gel here or DOt. but give them the opportunity to learn them, I' be said,
Writing Across the Disciplines, which is offered through the Leaming Evaluation Center and is avaUable 10 all majors, is a worksbop to help studenlB and laculty develop better writing skills
FaCUlty members attend worksbops which help them deslgnwurseasSignmenlslhal require more "Ti ting lrom their
Srudenu, e .... l1lng (clln Lot J allen fmd tnems(:ll,ol~S Wi:l!\mg t1' !tITt' to ledvt' HOWt-','f-! 1'll'
01 d t)u$lne::-.::-. comple).
students. In addition. students may consuItwi!.b an advisor from the wnrbl1bp and have their writing critiqued.
Other departments w..... p1agued with I..... UDWPE llCores lor the Febuary 1989 exam Finance, aCCOW'lting, physical education, mathematics and sociology all had a higher rate of (ailure than pa..
Addilianally, statistics show .tudents bow a better i::Iiance ol passing lhe exam on lheir flrst attempl.
~''1be people who CaiI are the ODe!! who don't write W<!U," KIotz said. "So they take it again and hall of them pass. Then, "'l's
..!eft,,,,,,, _~·who ....lIy don't write W<!U. "
,. favor
Coin lot to be replaced by business complex By MARY RUSSEU 01 problems recenUy the end of lhJ.s,,)'eaI" Contnbutmg Writer Wilh !.he increase, a dollaT ~~!TIpl·ex 'lli:'gJ_~~L Q{
TIle con ....eruent COUl parlung lot, the onl)" lot on campus where no permit 15 reqw.red. will be a UU.llg of l..he past as early as Fall of 1900, liccordmg to 8 CSUN o!flelal
Corn L01 J 1:5 loc'B led oo.rth of the Ad.m1.DUltral.ion buildi.llg and IS orten used by parkIng permil
frequently bre.ak.s do\l.'D, causurg many long lines and some shon fust':S
As a result, students and \'lSIt.oMi have been WUibJe to gei 001 af !.he lot or end up wa.iling In
hrw ·When 400 people try to rome
t.hrough two gates at lht.~ sa,Ole
fices and some classroom space While the comple.I \11'00 't u...;e the entire lot, 00 OecLS.ion has been ma.de about the rema1n1OS space
Thr proj«t IJj scheduled to be C"omplt'tf"d 1n the FaU Of 1m
.. A.no~r coin lot I.S bemg Con.slc:ief'e.d." SBtd Watker ··But no deflnLt{> deets',lans M\'i' been
- it's s.c.bedu1ed to Jak.e at least .<IDe.~ear ~ a.~,·.-..IIel
stntdUl"t: &1 the south end of lot C \II·ill bes'.tarted
·'The S~ is due to be comp\e(oo by' the FaU 01 t991." L...ohr !laId "M.ane)' far aU '.M proJ't'iC''tS 15 CQI.UI.I1g from ava1lable fUJlli.t!; roIJt'!Clt'd from last year'S parkJ.ng-iN' LOC.reue, " he addt.'rl
religion," Yonker &aid holders ...·hen space Lsn't 1.1Int>, there will be a ue-up," lUade yet," he Bdded "AU of these reference5 rnay Ei\'ailable In othff lots Walker said Kim Speed. a 3J-)'e.u-Qid r~ I'I£Sting frenzy
appear to be harmless but they According to samuel 'Walker, Michael Sugar, Operations Lt psychology major iA~d, '.J t.hJ.nk ·CSlIN 011ers programs to Iare nol Taken together they· ParkinB Manager, .'The ~ol, for Pubhc SsJe-ly, s.ald that 1.1 El t.ht"). s.h:ou1d keep II U'S dC$::' a.nd are: demeaning and destructive ...·tuch pnman..1y &en!e:!l part-timf' llt"W COlfi lot were added ad )'OU dOO'1 h.:a \'e to 'W-$..Lk (i\'f' bk)(:'b help students control I
e,abng habits. ~I'to a people whooe only· crime ls students and people ,.'ith bwiiness dHlonal exlUi and other lm to d4~
Wishing to retain flDd celebrate In the AdminiJara lion building iii pro\'t"ments would need 1.0 be Owr ?.ll:ln.f:~ (''(\f'lSlruc!.l.lll) - ~"",,,,,,*.7,
their African tTadiUO{1!l," she sd>eduloo to be clusOO and lb. lllade l[1cludt"~ .5 4~le\'el ~,f'k.ln@ i CloM,ace ! added. nla}arlt)' 01 spaces turned 111tO .!l. Acrordi.rlg to Stt'\'eo Lohr, I!ilnJCtl.1:l"e, \II'tuc:b "'ill be bUll1 00
I IBasl<"'tb&fl, voueyOdli andI
A slide presenlallon business complu ' d,lnXlor 01 facUltld plaWll..ng, the: the r)Ql1l) illdC' 01 l...ut C 1II,1q pres<!nted hy' Yonker srwwed Lot J, which na5 st'Jen Its (('it, Ile\ll' compleJ;o whkb will bowie' 7..e114h 3"Mue \liflll lH'"'O't!d>e i t>a""ball t""",,, Mv" busyI
I w'ook",><:l,double in the put two yean from lhe "'hools or )lmu- and nesrlyl.«Xl ..... ~ ....ces 1__Pl ~ pqce 12Plea.. It&t A.\t;r, p.g. 6 7S cents to $1 50, twu had i15 I5luu'e edocalion, will be sLartOO bel..... Once the proj<!cl is cunpJ..oo
a friend a Valentine's Day surprise! MBA will be selling candygrams In the Sierra Quad Feb.
.13,14.Makesomeone's<ley special!
EIemerItarY Educrrtlon o.pertment __ Multiple
~subfects'credenti81-candk:tates-wnO~Will'begrfi student teachIng In fall, 1990, are expected to attend ONE of two orientation meetings, whtch <
are sCheduled to meet in the USU santa Clarita Room Feb. 13, 8:30 a.m.·9:30 a.m. Students
In·trie Concurrent special education program who wm begin elemental)' teaChIng in f811.
199O•.are also expected to attend. Dr. John W Junior journalism. major Trina Clark gels a free piece of cake al Cartson, 'COOTIJlnStDf of elemen18ry student lJniversrtyStudent lJnion's 12tt11J1rlMay i>artY~Mi'-ndaYaftemoori ~:;I~'m~~~~;~~eq~~=="-t= ~=.-;;_;;;;,;._;,;-;,;-;,;-;,;-;.-;,;-;,;-;;-;;.;;~;;.;;----;;;-;,;--...;,;;.;;;,..; ..1
p.m.. In OViatt Ubrary room 5 A brief discussion, led by a UCS clinical psychologl~T
~----1""'-'~"~S3:pollSOied by-tfTf!""·
StudbTlt SuICide Prevention Program. UniverSity Counseling Services
Tomorrow
CSUN C)'cHftI Tum - Team (oSlt'r an(l race 5chedule to be talk-eCI aboUt Training f1ae to
',"low meeting. Please be on nme -- Ilelrnen. lJre requ~red. We are meeting In Ihe P E gym lobby at 1 p.m on Feb 14
CSlJ.N £ar1bDe., CodUon _ CSU1'-;l urth Oat Coelltion InvItes you to lOin the mtllions 01
~e Who are concerned about me fine 01 our planet Come by the UnlVer$lty Stu-dent
Union Fe-b 14,9 a m "I pm. S-lgt'l me pledge
8~.g6t some IdBttl> on how to t>ecome d pan of the soluH(1fi to the envlronmfl'nta·j problem foced by our fragile Earth
EOSHA - The EnvtrunmeT1tl!ll &. anlJ.l}c cupatl0n.61 Heattn Student AS-5QClation IS
IHivlng ItS tlJ1:it meeting 01 the spnng semesteor
81 12noo'l1,Feb 14,InUSUAl12 Speaker Bill Kromer w'W btl discu:ss.if)g the humfl,;n genome
project
LaI.,... StuodIM St':u:6ent ~tion - We are havll\g lJ VaI6Nlne':i< Day bdltOOf1 salt' (1-1'\
Feb 14 III t.he Slo-rns Quad
Rdntry Procr--- - AU IlU1",.I1 ~tuOcnt~ a/t"
invJttK1 to the RcEnrry Adult \;ogr-am '5. Open
House. RefreShments will be served. We will
meet on Feb 14,2 p.m" 4 p.m. In AD 124. For more ihformation. please call ex. 2366 {o'n
campus ::::::::.g!Lc_a~PLJs:885-2366J. _
Continuing
A.5. Greek Affaln Committee - We are currently taking eppllcatlons fot commlne-e members If Interested, fill out an aPPll~I]On in the Associated St\Jdents Office or cali Steve
Groode at (818)831--0867 Meetings are held Mondays, 6 p.m ·6.30 pm In \he uSu Ver
dugo Hills Room
Amne8ty International - We have 8 meeting
every Th\Jrsday In USU A116 a~ 5 pm At! people Interested In human ngJ1t5
welcome
Art Hlstory Stu-dante A..eoc:letton - The
exhlblt10n "Ceremonies an~ CelebnJtlOns'
~:=:~~:7:~~:~~:::~S:~=: Yonker of lhe ceremonIes 01 vodoun lr\ Haftl The satlery IS located Ln the Fme Art'S building
J PcHl ·,4· 30 p nl m,w !X'(,)pJl:! /io~t!' a1wl-3-jiS
",,~coy(e
.1'1llused~~~tee!lCjIf_ in a c:IalllIrOoIn' Jost aver camedi!mandII ·WIllle· Olheni seem to have
, lIJ.l'lC'1aIlnsigbt I lack, Bullalely these ~!I!1IllISt bave __ Illrough the
Urln8rVlngOlhers~!leIIlilw. ~-No~~~·~-tIIe _, \bey never seem to be in <!if• liellIly. '!bey be1allee five c:IalIs:elI and'a ~l!utJlre.ahYayarelased.'!beylleYer. i'u8lI, no _uer boW1a~tbey Bl'e. They·amble.-····· .
'lbeIr good lorbme andjlOSltlve atlItudts extend beyoIld the classroom. They're the IItlldtenb wbD ~y have trouble atIdiDg or dnJppiDg c:IalIs:elI but
't gel upset if they have problems doI.Dg either. ..' .._
'!be AdmlDlstralim BulItIlDg is DOl equatedWilliU:iillatiiMOliliisil:iltfor 0Iher studeUts, nie-buiiiDeoa of stan· dlng willi hu6dreds of _ people in
c the·~_~~L.lobIIy.to Illlr~ryelalll"fgivelilliem lim.
dIeIIIly wailing in line tar a ba.i< _commodi!y.ln_sber'taB1l$ B'!\'BY , to better understandSoviellife. '
.~~:su:~mm:r,,: j =::.~if"::,,';~= I away !bey don't care because they i eJljoy the exercise. I
They approve oJ liberals, con· I servativ.., Iefl wing speaters, tiber· ' larians, Marxlslll and _ palltical I persuasloM totmd on roIlep eampust'S. i n.e ~1.Ohing ideas give: them people on ,I campus. to listen to and debates to at· l«ld during lhelr 1Wlcl1 boura wi>icb, I ~. are ,afwaysneaU, And- i wjcbed between ml3l"'l1ing and afterooc i
~===:ttE1~1 4:15 p.m. lunch-- times --the rest or us are ".!,
stack with when the classes we needed: ~ were~-----_· _._--.-_..__._~=,~
E\'eD if they are unable- to sign up lor !
a coorse !bey want. !bey always fmd an I s:Itirl weaving, to rw the time aDd gel three eaay unllll.
Tbeoe lItu<Ienta also -..- bave trouble f\t1ltiIlg !be prtlp8I'_.
lbey ate DOl 1:nllml<!lIte<l by the DlllI:lt>erlrc IIldbod In the Sierra llIliIdiIlg, a ayatem known to brIlak doom Ph.D.'. wbD ........ """,pie:< plIZltie~ O!Illelil~aus;lheY2Vii-~in
wbell a tll8l:bor "')'11 there wi!I be t_ papers clue llils __, DOl two as WlOIIlate<lln thesytiabra.
Pt1p qtlIas are fim, they say, , .........m projeels are ... ~ , -~aridewn II tbey mlii$~ 1
_ ~ of l:1rmdIilia they i alwaya II>8IlIlll8togetcau&!>tup.' I
Questiol> tbem and they .,. they do i the best \bey OJ) at1d llim>o!d 111m" 1 ......-lhltlO~-.taat_ !
, But don't bl!:Im> Uleoe clId>t!s, I tblJ:Jk ! !bey ba<l these atlfultloe ....., botare i
~ a>llllIe w feolIld "" .". ~ II'btft they ~ best """ . tbem Wlle d:rtviDglbe rllII\l d. lIS aa:)' I ....ldIB!II~, i
ADd ... tlllISe d. UIl wbD $pOJl>I _ :
~","",,"'~~lllld~, rube<\."'Oril-. tmally ~ m _ j<ltlI and In 0llI'
Il_rram~lllld~,~
......uutly ~ to dll -. the , ..ay!bay al"lI,ysdlllbl!m. Calmly.
I~,;:;::ti:=/· eDell.!' s-t141
By DAWN PIJRCnL Staff Writer
SllldenllI need to bee expo
telI<:hlDg In arder to lear . dlseussioo of hi:liHfil:diti
Iearuing. '!be dlscussloo in the Lo
second In a Iix-part aeriO! lllslructiooaJ Developm< leadlng the discussion we sl1ldl.. ; Elena Marcllisol ebemistry; and Edda Sj> 1lle.rB1:lIres.
ODe oJ the methods d:i which two prol""",,,", l< <:hIsollD told the group teaching.
"When I was teaching tt!8ching lhe class 1 sa t i ques,tion me lik:e the stu really got the discussion I DOl at the same time."
"p ~~'''(/'''' -;'--';X~ .,..l!.h olh.J td,,,_,, I
COUJl'OHMUST ~R~ri::::V~. I 101 JJtUEHT(O NO~ I
AT f'M.1 0' URIJICE U"-.44n I
~~~._._--------------~
~te grades. It is also less expensive for the school than team teaching. McIntyre s&Id. ThIs program allows two professors to be paid for teaching six U!!iIll, wb.ill!..iIl-.. Ie8lD ....effing .two~paldJorteacbi:nlltllree-unilll. " ., ~Sktivlin ...... li paIred lealrilrig sYStem to get students
active in the Iearnlng process. In ,bIs cluaes an problem solving, two students pa.Ir up and one lrles to soJve a problem. wiUle the ather listens and challenges lllbere ~
a mistake in the reasoning. "Teaching students to think is an invisible process, (it is
necessary to) put studenlS in a situation where they bave to think out loud." S1tovlln said.
"Students oeed to be active, to IIlart from square one," SItovllnsaid, ''tIleR is no IectuImg on my part."
S1tuvlln said one student bad told him, "I esn'l .l'@lem!lerthela.llitimellllayedawake in" clan Ilk" tllls' -this is fun. II '
ThIll type of teaching can be a~ to writing courses also, aceordlng to SpJelmarm. "Bad wriLing comes from nol thinking clearly." she said, adding thatstudt!nlS would be forced to expIaln their line or reasoning.
Lam-Easton teaches In a similar fashion - through "responsible learning." Students form groups 01 four or flveand must discuss the readlngrnatEriaJ.~..lQml.u1aJ.e
. . !heIr own lbeories. "U you would read and compare. you could come up
with theories more important than (established theories)." Lam·Easton said
Studenl$ can determine !be content or the course if !be)' ,become g",,-~Ll!'~ted.Jlla..,tollic.loUched upon ill claaa. Lam-Easton said. She saId she tells her students··U the class is a disaster. you did It"
The ~of thettiscussions tsotor_ty-lo-p!'emOte project Ideas to improve teaching andlearning. Project ideas were required to meet one or more at the foUo-.'ing criteria: improving general education, lntegrating """",. cultural perspectives into the curriculum, promoting student learning through non-tradItiCJQlll methods or teaching.llIIlearningmo1.olJaw-upsl<>prevjOUSprnjeds:-
CALL SUG,CESS CENTER- f 20 years experience helping students i
Terry Hopwood Registered Hypnotherepist, ;
~"" .... .,_~~:_~~o:~,~~~..:~,~~?" .oo •• J
;, START THE SEMESTER'RIGHT =
~ WITH SELF HYPNOSIS FOR ~,
, BETTER GRADES. LESS STUDYING
"Tnstruct/m-zallJeve{()pment Program
, or us who spent our ... wOITIed, rushed riad, ruahed worit..... n our jobs and In our Uon and humout. they aue to do thlnlls the 10 them. Calmly.
" f.t a Dally Sundial or,
fIll the lfrne and get
I also never have 18 proper claaaroom. InllmJdBted by !be >OlI in !be SIerra Om known to break rho create complex lB,l!ieYnever CODil'l"iD ')'I there will be four ~I not two &S
yIlabus. .... run. they say, , are an .8.lIveI1lure. even It they mlB8 iwo of brnndiltlll, they~csllllhtUP. and they II8Y they do t and Ieamed it lBn't ien<e const.a.nt stress. these cliches, I think ItlilUdel e_ before
and folmd an enthey couJd best use
III the rest of us oruy
of liberals, con"!nil speaker1l, llber· ,'and other political on culI"lle campuses. ,give them people on to and debates to at· . lunch boun which, always .....Uy sand· . noming and afteroon er.. lql!!!l.tlranlicallY'-mem are the four· ,een classes or 3: 30Illes the rest or us are bec~~...,ed_
, unable to sign up for t. they always fInd an
two ye8llIlIgO•. liking feelloof llilting .; l08t over eotmle :Jlherii seem to bave Iaclc. But lately these Ive ionellJrough the I graduateseminar. ow~-d8JiIanding·~the
er seem to be in difJlCefivecJasseS and'li
~~.' tune a;wposltlve atoynod the claaaroom. !Dts who rari>Jy have dropping cJasseS but
, iheyhave problems • 'f, ,," '
.tion Building is not ~teii MOtel as it is-for be' bUSlnes8ofstan· cis of oIber people in "~'.a..ioIibfto .'gives them time ~~.,.
they don't experience
, experience 01 en-in line for a baalc Bl'eJ!lortalle l1li a way nd Soviet We, est of US spend mote inglotsthanllilting!ll ')'1 seem to find tha t on II the spot is a mUe
esre because they
Marchisotlo said. . It was alsO a learning experience for her, Marchisotto
said. "We learned from one another." she. said. By
~!~;:;:===t~I_:~'$ICIen;~~l&~need~~to~beco~~m~e~a~c~ti~v~e1~Y~in~V\OI~V~ed~i~n~th~e~_~w~Oli<i~_.!"IS~·~~'r~wI~u.-..- p11lfeS1l<1r,~!'!JIjulfu !!!l1(iSJll;:;' exposed to innovative ,lIlethods of -.Ie8rned new methods of teacliing that-could'onIybe teaching in order to learn•. proless<Jrli"'!idMoilday in a Ieamed lnJm working with 1lOlDeoneclosely overaiong dlBeUssIon of DOiI'ffad11iODil",etbods of teaching and period of time. learning. . MachlBotto ""id that she and her partner would often
The discussion In the Learning Resource Center was the take different .l\des of a debate in order to generate second In a s",-parI series of discussIOns sponsored by !be discussion. Inslructional o..velopment Program. The professors "Students appreciate that people come from different leadlng the discussion were Linda Lam·Easton, religlous perspectives. they can see U in action," she said. studles; Elena MarchiBotto, mathematics; DeanSltovHn. Spielmllnn proposed a connections program, which chemistry; and Edda SpIelmann. foreign languages and would ''put back-to-back two' courses for which you have literatures. the _~sltlden.t enrollment.·· It would lnvolve combining
One of the methods discussed was team teaching. in a baai" subj.ci wfth a geneiil '<iducation course; fur which two professors teach !be class together. Mar· example. teaching math throughex:posII<Jry wriLing. , chisotto told the group or her experiences with'1l!llIn The program could also be expanded 10 e0W'Se8 within teaching. the major, such as mathematics comblne<l with a course
"When I was teaching, he <the other team professor in Women's Studies, teaching the class) sat in with the students, he would Integrating courses would 'lserve the general education question me like the studenlS would." 'he said "That ptll']lOSe - to give broad knowledge (to students I , which really got the dIsl!ussion gOIng. We 'hared the s!<lge. but 'tudenlB miss because (courses) are so depart, not at the same time, It mentallzed," Spielmann said.
With one of the two professors always silling with the Combining courses within the students~ major would studenl$. !be stu~en~ were ~ot afraId to ask questijlns, 'provIde_ and -ne<!e5sary re1e'vllnce for learnIng.
SpIelmann said. " A pilot connections program IS being planned for the
fall, which will involve 6-12 connection courses, Spielmann said.
RolUild McIntyre, coordinator of the Instructional _ ..Development-Program lll\<faj)i'Of....orOi pltikiSOpby, ..1£1
he bad laught in the program and was very supportive of it
"Attendance is much better to the end." Mcintyre said. adding that when s~ts are taking severai classes together, they..lmow when one person is missing. so a type of peer pressure evolves
lbere must be some differentiation between the combined cla.sses, Mcintyre said, so that students ~eive N'O
i
J
Dal!J Sundial
BytJNNEWlWAMS Jafl.e-r~ Get your tJ1
leaving. PrfaQnBr:- Fin:aUy. 1 What"tooIt so long? JailBr: We realued tho: here did" 't worlt.. Pri.Boner: TwentY'SE'Vlll
life are gone btcaw:iP 11 justice. Jailer: You or.. f~"f!, MI Prt50ftt'r: You ~\iI
minority can no I01\&E Africa if J am freed Jailer: We ...·iIl .see, will',ee.
The weekend's b1storic prison of Nelson R. Mand South Africa '5 anb-apart National Congress, leaves future in limbo.
Shoo. Medfly, don't bother Vle~te!lllrelllll:
Which pre!s!l In eredJeab pests By dropping clIemiw.up
~~ Of !be pesticide used in a S Of hide lUId.seek that now In about 50 cities thai apra)'ed.
The .tIlte ""YO !be spray d cancer, And~ alllet "" ~ Buill !be spray presl!nto D
Why drop it OIl !be city a farm:
"'It is. otter aU. !be ere &&..ing. ~ th<: agri,,",ture ranting and ra"'ing About the EZ)) million 8 j"E
belOSl. IT !bey caD't '''''P !be to them. farms, DO matter tiM
A S16 billioo SUi te fa !"TIling Whkh Deukme)w and that W'tl,
Letters 1 T ",u.s b<.Jtbe-ied bv the a"(
real issUe in lulDe Williams' VlCtim1!ed in rtlclally biased Sundial Feb 71. Isn't the wbetber Ql' not the mayor a CD pital uses crack cocaiD While- contending lnal 1 vestigallOO was mooy'ste WUliarns does 001 address d of _r he is gwl<y 0< "m<
Regardless of '6'htth Wuhirlgtoo. [) C's May"
t,l;;lir,sg'Jt'rg t:,'li,t(),1
News Editor
F.;x'~:!i E:d'~:"
F(':I.,'l,t;.'r~:t. [~i:1("
E.~~i~..tr(" [' C'~;2"
PU·b!l~r
After being.damaged In a January windstorm. the Sierra Tower CJ~,S.k has been lOopec.able H lwpver
repairs on _the_dock· are- ·schedlJled 'to'ne----duneLOl1ay:'----~---••••_
Sierra Tower clock repairs scheduled today' By LEE BARNATHAN I tt bends the ·hands out of shape or tears them loose from Contributing Writer !be anall. and !bey hang there loosely."
'!be hands are heaYJI sileet metal made at PPM 's . Late rnr ~q..YO\l.larlrunniug. You.figure yoo'lIl00k mellllllbop.Beltnl!J'....tll.•n·fQOt Of only • roupl~ hUh
upe.t the Sierre. Tower clock to see exacUy how much time dred dollars. Each hand wei.ghs about five powlds you have. BeHner said be ima.gines the velocity must get up to
TIle clock was installed about five years ago, Beitner said, and only a few- times has high winds kept the dOCK out of operation
The last time there wa.s damage was two years ago. Beltner said, "We took down the hands and remforced them with (U-shaped Uun) lo make the hands more
Career Opportunities
Our bank is looking for crfeW"speaal" people.
\~t' rt' ~ Irsl Fedl'••111\.imk oIl .1ldHfma unt' ot the IMIII'll .. nlo... l n''''pl'\ It'd !lndm litl ms.lj[uIIHn~ \\'1""
,.\...II;,JJ..u~,.I-t'#''i~''\-'''*~i;;~;:::~~;:::;::-.lt-1~l!:l~!'~~~~~lIL,I,·d In ~ h"i1l'll~l' ,Hll! I1kl-' the Idt:it that rt' .... a.rds ..._ •.~.u~l'Ill(t ""'HI <'11\ t!){~'l'nfrn:r"-~--
v,llll<lblt' t)U"itll· ..~ 1"\perWn( l' ..... h;l(' in (ollt:gt' and ,UI-' h.appv 1,1 lake til(' t'l;tri'l "'lep in St'f'\-'ICI-' thaI In 11~<' "llldt'" In lht, Idl't:<;; of hank CU"lomer"" (lur 11.1\ <,( ilil-' ,10(1 t'mpillyee l:wol-'flls reiJect thi;' empha~, ...... I-' ~'\l' lu <-juall!\-' (lU'l-of~)rale headquarlt>rs l~ It'lalN 111 :'anta Munu.:a. and we ha\'e branch lJlJllnLhfou~hLw:.Ith~~nqulrt'naw about \-'\lllll\~ <IN)llrlunllle~ by (allln~
Manna (13) 319·563,
ngid~" J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~')IL:"- v " I { OI~l'OlUltt'd ""O"llii, b<to,.' f't:"'u,..U. P,.iL~s ,Urttug;l,t • 'HI ,t)o J) 'v' I:'n;q,thlng i, {-crttflC'd iU'td ca.rrtr, ,ll,.lr lUr\ia:lot ft\tlit,f"\ti't:lrc
(V-'ill, jY G '''1;1 tIl) , (tl'm~'lnlO our P'ri,'ltt:c' :Shqllll'n,(,HD or cui tn vuur lU'\1,C'r ". - to l!lu,a.r.U11rC dcU~,.rr b, \'dC''f\t.lu;~·& D-:a,'
~~~~~~-~ 'In Latex • ....._--_.... lR G tex + One 18~__o_~ n -J-ea!!~i~Hl urge<Htrinterpretin~oullrmrican'reform
ByLlNNEWIWAMS Although most of the world is applauding De Klerk IuuJ initiated Il-Dwnber 0Ilhes<! de KlerI< Ia ~willing to give blacks a ~9.95 C Jaffer: Get your things, you're the freeing of Mandela b)i;lSouth African r<!fOl'IDB, Including the legalization 01 the vole in national affainl as a W1lY to feavln,. l7esident Frederik de Klork and his ANC and the reIeaBe 01 jailed priBoqen. maintain white minority nile.:hi Omega Booth <3
C> PrLeoner: Finally, I am leaving .. lifting of the government ban on the ANC, SO on the swface, it appean lImt cbange While the ANC'lnsiBts on nationalizingWhat~tooJt so long? many questions remain W18D8wered: Are has swept away some of South Africa's the mlnini and. banking induStries, the Jailer: We realized that lieepln, you the anti-aparlheid refonns announced by racist pollci.... But blacks wonder about goverrunent is in the process of privatiting
ferro Quad t ,L BAUOONS here did" 't worll:. de Klerk two weeks ago real or symbolic? the SUbstance 01 de Klerk's reforms. stale-<lwn<!d indU$lries.
Prlsoner: Twenty-aeven years of my And does the reIeaBe 01 Mandela mark the Although lewer reslrictiOllll are placed on In"lIdditioo. the ANC envisi""" a'UFFED ANIMALS ~ e only life are gone becaW'e I wanted racial end of apartheill? the media, the government continues to mullinclal government with a COQStiluent ,xplres 2-15-89) justice. Observers of African affairi agree tha1 control television pi~tures and assembly to replace the right wing
Jailer: You are free, Mandela Go. the freeing of Mandela --&bow8 a new photograp/18 01 unrest viewed both National Party now beading tileCO\llJIJ'¥~' Prisoner-: You know the white wtll1ngness On the part 01 the white South domestically and abroad. Even though Hence, even wil.h mooumenla] changes
J St. 349·7998 "
IALLOONS ..
mlnarlty can no longer rule South African governmenl to negotiate with many political priBoll86 who participated in racUll policies occurring in South ow CSUN C) Africa If I am freed blacks. in opposition groups will be lreed, those Africa, the questioo 01 whether lhes<!
Jailer: We wlfl Bee, Mandela, We Mandela bad stated publicly that belore that resorted to violence remain under dovelopmenlB will strike at the bear! and wllfBee, he would walk out the galeB of Victor lock and key soul 01 the invidillUB ,ystem 01 apartboid
The weelumd's historic release from Vester prison near Capetown that de Klerk More importanUy, there is a fun remains to be seen prison of Nelson R, Mande)a, leader of must eliminate the ban on the ANC, lift the damental disagreement between the ANC South Africa '8 anU-apartheid African state-of-emergency against anti-apartheid and the government over who will
C)~~~ )rtunilies National Congress, leaves the country's proleBters, and a1Iaw exiled political <lC ultimalely guide South Africa', 1lestiny. Unne WiIlia-rns UJ a Daily Sundial 8-taJf.
future in limbo. tivi,<llS to retUrn III JJleir bomeIand... While-tbe~iJlacktltlljoritynil., wfinr,ooIdngfor
.
aFpeopIe. (alJlofOli1 one tif';tij:> rint lal Illslllullon~ We ,
Shoo, Medfly, don't bother_, Is worth gettlng sprayed on lor our WllUllde whilt' If) (olll>gt' Mid jji'OlIiiCi: . ,Vlctlmsofrlltllll!bQreaueracy, .JSlIlii(~ ",bOa maLathion is.. tep In servin' that Which prof.... to eradJcate some toBtly sprayed on our beadB.
}elils r('Ilee! tht' "Illpha f hank Cllslollwr" 'JUf
peslB II our Department 01 Food and And tboullb Deukmejian may not ur'j)ur ..,!(· Iwadqu,trlt·r ... By dropping chemica" upon our neslB. Agriculture can osy While Ihe ErA IuuJ claimed the reD1<!mbeI'. md we halte branch TblifB'ij)I'iDkl" II clayl:eeps 1lll! Medfly 'I'bel'e- will be B new gavd LiW' cmne ~"n(""ln4IJHe110W ;.tbouf M:aJ;;ihI;;;;"~-U;;ll8tIle aWAY, ~~::''l.wewog;s.. w;';d Novenber, i111l1~ Of the pesticide used in a game Then why will .praying an infESted that's up lor debate, And he wOll't be helping the 319·5637 01 hide and seek that now is played area incn!alle And those who'"" been sprayed have fIepuhIicans mucb.,
In ahout 50 clties that have been From once every 21 da)"B to once every begun to complaln If lIB a lame duck be ~1lB 00 sprayed. week? Of Ou-like symptnms and bead· agriculture's crutch.
throbbing pain. The slate says the spray does not cause And ilsome cities are sprayed 12 limes A crutch wblch ouppo<U llWf 00 the cancer, byJtme, To say notblng ol those who mUBt go Soutl1IaDd'. bect., And dJslribuleB a mer flO quesliOllll are Shouldn't the stale bave jU$t as soon through the lnlwns . One wblch mJghl splinter and c:noek, answered, ShoWn the resldenl:o some men:y and Of reliving the horrors ol Vietnam U we were llJ Bend our ol&le'. produce !lut if the spray presen.. no hann, taken their Inllt, dramas, bad<, Why drop It on the city and not on the And spray it jUBl once instead, or 'stile As belicoplenl drop chetn.lcaJs OYer Beca""" ...,..... Bid< of beil>g under farm? '- point moot? . lhelr beds, attacll. .
~1P'l'6 within lhelr beadB, It is, afler all, the crops they are For the state _ms to ..y. "1I's too Andlfaslaleproduceboyallt<loesnol saving, late, we'"" begun, The only tlamage the state admJ.. may bavemtldllllek, Because theagnculture indUBtry is We should lei the natura I course 01 come to our cars, Maybe some lIIedf1y wiI1 bitch a ride 00 ranting and raving lhinga run. " Which illuminates best this spraJ Jl.lI:'Ul:S.....- ...~...~_..-- About the $200 million a..Year in trops to Theywil1 wail until June ro .... if campaJgriu·.laree, And end up In Sacramento in the belost, they've won, For" if we shoUld COVeT our..can from governar'.tl'Uittree., II they can't keep the bug from nor· While we act a, guinea Pl8S lor tests the spray, SO they can spray the true pest _
_~they~~'v~e-"no",ttJrun:"":..... ~Hot~~C1l~n~m:,::-::-;~",w,m_'9"sl-6l",,,""'''"' oibaoatt-----ttluhrEea!lltltm!l!ll!lllW'UffiY.....thern farms, nomatler the-cost .•"'e.... ...-.=l The tests on malathion they've done" rusts cars away? " A $16 billion state larming indUstry,
Which Deukmejian and the state say you see, But the wind L5 shifting as protests Je.ff 1t4ftjio·Sc:,hr\i:U<lJer i.t a Daily Swrdtal
lhat we, Say it's safe when sprayed d:trec:Uy an arise. staJfwnr~-r
IJ "'f' moraU". We sbould sup'jXln these people in order to help black. polHJCUlns gel Lbe help tDe-)' desen'e Let's' stop blindly supporting people like Barry. '" lha t he gets what he deserves ~ well
Char!es'~' Ht.:[cn.llon ) l..l-lHOr. engIneering
- . Professor Mtdwel Paf"entJ s.&)"s thal lads)"! students Lir't' nol as MI'o'(' a.s some
'T wa, hotnered by tbe avoidan",,·olth. real iBsue in Lmne Williams' "D C_mayor victimtud tn r~Uy biased sling" {Dajly Sundial Feb 1l. Isn't the question of whether or not the mayor of our nation's capital uses crack cocaine important"' WIillecontending lhat the FBI in· vestigation W8..S motivated by race, WUliams does not address the main UlSue
of whether he 15 guilty or lnnocent Regardless of whether or not
WashinglDn, DC', Mayor Manon S
barr~ l~ ··consid(,~n ..-d~ a dynamiC ma)'or fO-r the c:ity," it doe§ not gIve him the right to break the law On the contrary. bec.ause o-f his public office. be shou.ld mamLain higher moral standards
Because Ba:.rrj WWi aware of the FBI invesl@lfioo, he should have been more careful about his actions The FBI s.hould be commended, not condemned, [or developing a good case and catching Barry red-llanded
'!"here are many o.lhe-r black leaders who
SharOn Kaplan
Ju(le Manh
nm ...."Ir.or CUOUM MlrllJ'\<D
Jefry 8Je-Q~t1"mon
".Rox Blake RamMy
"'''1 L&ng Su.ttnn~ Pal'b,t
Out. BennoU [~J~!"\t'<:$S Coonjin..-'l!or [J1:.both WtWte<fvo II In your urder
John Sl.llhlwcry E~"J~,"'I't~l>,5 Orhec A5¢!t>-I:t-n1 Krlstl And'-fllionJlC'!ll)ay Jose-ph L C1Gr", Cl.:H)~n~ t..~!lgo'f Goot g1t R.'n-o:r
political leaders m,ght beli.," HopeIl.II)· students ar-en'l as nai\'e as Parenu must tiun.i. the)' are Ac:cording to one of h.ls (S.llS. Parenti i:s ' an advoe-.ste of true democraC)' - th.at !:S, democracy free of capll,l,lli;m .
To- belif'\te such utopUm stuff even as the socmhs:t 'Ili"Qdd LS ca:ll.aps.tng lD a frem)' of paliuc::aI r-ecnmi.naUons and C'OnSumer Ge-ma,od f"eq;Ulr'e the {alth of a c.hild
6 r,lEwSlTuesdBY, February 13. 1990 Dally Suncllal 'Dally Sundial
? \
ART---Coatlnue<! In>m page I
w,"""", men, aad chlldrendnlaaed .in·brilliant fealive lihalles of redo .. they prepared to celebrate Rara. a SpriDg celebration of life. Rara begtns on Ash Wed· nesday. which Ia the end of the E1lJ'opean celebraUon of Carnival.
There are three basic ceremonial evenla In the
vodoun religion: Calendrical, where ceremonies andcelebratlona marl< the 1leIlIIOtUl, annual evenla and -hoIidaYlt;"With """'" acquired from "l!Ie''Calhoti"
Left; Jed SmocK. founder and President of the Campus MInistry. USA. spoke ,n front of SIN'a North Monday llefufe being askedtoieave (Tight) by campus poHce otter illS talKs Instigated a fign' I;etween
tool to resloliDg order In """"" of illnesa or Iif~
~~~;::: :t~~~E~Z§f~; on her artistic ability and memory.
"Everything .... reconalnlcted In my mind, nothing w.. done on aite We artlala remember tlult way of
uslngvlaualmemory....be ..id. Yonker touched UJXll' the negative .tereotypical
ciiiiiiiiiB-uons often aasocIated with Voudon. "Zom· bie$. . plna In dolls are fragmentary ideas which give a dlatorted picture of Vadnun. In our culture we don', ofleo value .piritual value, lnatend we deal with the Gross National Product 8S an lndeJ( of our worthiness, " she said.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF NEEDED.
The 1990 Yearbook production has been delayed until a new editor can be appointed Qualified applicants must be journalism, English, art 2-D or speech communication ll1a~)rs
with at least thirty-one units completed•... You must also be facile in Macintosh desktop publishing. particularlY-in PageMaker to be considered for this posi bon Thl.' editor is paid $250 per month
----ir--t
The Sunburst YeartxxJk IS sponstJred b~'
Associated Studen" Inc
Roundll%l'from los Atigolos _ S nil
~- : :: PeN S 50 _ S '" T" AI'" S 778 ... S I,. Peru. $11" .....a~ S1161 RestrJ:l~~~F&M ~~,. ok:Jot Mtd l4~ar .b.Qenf rrft"d
MentIon th1S ad 9 i 35 F Alabama Ave Cr,atswont'. C,".. 91311
8r6709·5·55
FREE CATALOG
Tlr~\~r ~~~r(:~;\:LI~lo: 1~'~~~il~~fl~"a~:l:~~('dS/ I ilfld 1('1 u~ CUl your half 101 only ~'l';'~ l,
r C" "',.' ,.~ha'" us your s\ Udl'fll I IJ ,,~ .1
~ ....'''' ",'HIB~ <,,,;;;-~.~;....~. I
I. ' •..n.d.... [('(f"I\·('... afl Adl1II10n .. l. ~ !.i I ~("Oolf 01 YEllr ncx! thULl-til
IN ' •0 appointment necessary 363'1173
I 1----_.._------DISTINGUISHED POET & FEMIN.l~I.lliEORISI.
A Poetry Reading by
ADRIENNE RICH
Professor of Engli,h and - Feminm-SmdT~"'r:lJ1ford
University, Ms. Rich has published fnuneen boob of puems and thrt'e prose texts \Vinnl~r of numerous a\\"ards, she has read her plh..·tr~' and kctured al ('olkl.!,c ..... l'Ill\'cr-' ~itiC's, \Vo/lll'n's (\:'fllep, alld Clillr~r~n(c.... III (IlL" l 'nl[l'd
,lee!< society. CSUN c help ,tudentsl"", weigl their preoccupatioo wi thin.
CSUN', Coonseling ( -EBling Diaorders We:
Health Center 0_ Counseling program Anonymous.
Socialization greatly obsessi"" with being Macias Lettieri. a coun the eating disorders , 'BOB. there was a great d body image and periecti
"When I think o:l th Madonna and a materia ·.,,;:orjd:::"Mictas Li!tt
Studies bOY' co:ncludE ---more Ihafl half of aH co
some type at eating problem or Obsession cording to Macia' Lettie
MaciaS' Lettieri say concerning food are
- college because of the ,t from home. as well as so pressures
Kathet> Ross. a rE1 base<! i.n Tarzana. bel dJ..s.orders and weight pn: In C"Ol1e-ge as a result of c with nt'\I,' s~tlL9.Lions and ~
··Por m.an)' students, they are living away may be loneiy an~ fearll own and not fitting in
"There lS atQSS JlLs fa:mily and friends ba they're Imug With olhe: the stress of deahng sona.litie:s under the sam
Also, .. rollege is a \'trorune-nt 'olo--here 5
petmg \l,i th everyone grades," Ross siud, a esteem really depends often Ie-.ading to litde else btl:t studymg
To deal ...'iLb fears " defimtf'l)' pro't'lOes ('om!1
·· ..rom mfaocy fOlX ('omfort, we "felt be some-thmg to eat
R= 5JlYS WI' food II" re:l-ease (from probL-e~
Ilkeeff",,! ..
ll(li.!<~ Dc-el'(1S d('fl)
I 'urnailSI1, 1;13j;.)( ~,1ICI
cit CSur-..: s Hfdt~l1 Cen
------
Tuesday, February 13, 1990 7
feel that I was not alone. It waSiiiSuch a relief that others understood bow [felt and what I was going through."
CSUN's Overeaten Anonymous·chapter (OAl is also avaU.able as a means of supjX)rt for primarily C'Ompulsive eaters On oceasion, those suffering from other eating disorders do attend met-lings
Overeaters Anon)'mous meeungs are gatheringzs of two or more compulSive eaters who come together to s,hare their personal experience .nd the strength and hope that OA has given them.
experiences with others in a safe environment \1i-itb the purpose to stop ealing compulsiveJ)·." saId sandra Bermea a
or maJOnng m velopment. who facilitat.€'$ discussion at each meeting
Bermea leads the Stop Smoking workshop- the Health Center Qffers each semester. ~'ork:s at a social service agency and has been facilitating OA meetings for fow years
To lead mt"t'"Ungs. one must be able to Identlly ....'ith compu,bivE' eating. Bennea, '" a oompulsi_ ealer and also· attrnded Adult Children of Alcoholics lACAl, wblch LS based an the same p:1'"i.nciJ»es u GA.
(h."erea ler'S A.nOD)'lDOUS is a 12.-s-tep program. in 'iI;'hiclJ. the ftn-t step is admitling that one is powerless O'W food and that lire has become unmanageable B)' ",",orting with each of the 12 step! one day at. a lime. OA members can enjoy a fuller h~'lng expertence, according to lhe OA b)'ls\I"'S
Oo<ampus meoeungs beglO thLS Wed· nesday from 12 Xl tt.l} 30 p.rn and us.will~
l~ansis! at {L"e to 1Z students, \It·oo otlt'·.n attend ~ddJtlan:;,1 meetings atf (~ampus
dunng ather day'S of the ",'eek A 11"Slep program obtains men\bers b)'
attrsetlofl rather than promotion "We" lee peop-le i..n0\li' me pn.~m ~S- alfered and 1t i:s uW'-.1r l'::twi-ce "olo"hetht.r to ~'ame lm'o1\"OO 11 OA mt'lE'U lhe'ir nN'ds 1bef"t' lIi no ma)6r c.s..rnpaLgn fOt! mrmbers," Beo:rm~JI, SiB.ld
,st..,"lJt sHWIUntu In-t.l.'lrlr hlt", ""'hkh rnay or 111.:9.' !'lot c-aUM'- then, t.o o"o''t"ftllal Often ltus lS the llU.tr t,~hal~ lhe-)' 8'f'l [:() talk about thl''l.r problems, lfil11C't" the1r [rt~:ru:b don· 1 ur-.~k-nl:md, &.rmt!4 utd
JoAna Macias Lettieri. Counseling Center counselor
The Counselmg Center has offered the eating disorders workshop for about nine years with the hope that students will begin the often long recovery process, Macias Lettieri said. In additipn to the workshop, members ha ve the option of seeking mdividual counseling on or off campus.
Mac-ias Letuen stressed that an entmg disorder IS not about food. rather "It has to do with how someone fL"'els about them se-lves and how lhEoy perceIve-their body ..
As I.l consequence of t.hcl.r lCM' selhmage., l1J.ey fear being fat and, there-fore. lose control of eaung, Maci~ LeU.ien explained.
"For many, the '\lo'orkshop provides l1J.e needed support and the rirst time they art'
''IhereJ.s.iLgrea1 ~fsha'me-1lssociated with an eating disorder and the workshop gives them freedom "to feel safe. "
JOEL ANDER:SONtDaity SwIc:fial
A CSUN student grabs a qUick bite on The Roof In between s!boying and attending classes.
an eating d1s-order," ,ht> said "There is a great deal of shame associated with an eating disorder ~ the workshop giVes them freedom to feel sate '
Throughout t!le worlts.hop, MaCias Lettieri and Johnson help members de.al With seH-criticism and userth'e-ness so tht!y can gain control in \'s.nous areas of lbeir lire, in turn mcreasing &eU""'t<em and leading towards recovery from theIr eat.ing d~sorder, Maclas l..ettie.n said
The. works,hop ranges from abcut six to 13 members each semester and man)' continue participating" for several seme sters. Spnng semester sesslOns begin Feb I'} and intervl""" are ,till laking place for those lfiterested In the group SessIOns take place 00 Mondays from 2 10 -4 P m aod members \\'lU be accepted unnl the thlrd mee11ng
"It LS Important l.h.!lt S,[udf."nLS Kno'\!l' that (ht'lr c-onfldenuahty loS bonore<\. and that the" don't have to do lht.\i l s.uffer- ; Ofl their o",~.·, MaCIas Lettlen S3ld Tht' w(lrkshc:rp ts a pllil't:' where- lht"), c.an 8(1 \(l
be safe and slude,l1lS shtJuld k.no-w thaI -,?
thes.e \ e-.B uug d:lsorde-rs' art:: :itent.lWi oondwO:tlS', OO't the'yart" treat.able and people- do rt"{'ove-r .,~
Stacy I n01 her rt>.al name I, I.i JUIUtH
ml1jc.1nng m ht"allh S-l~Jrn-t.~t". l:i rtx'()ve-rtl1g
(rum bulimia Although St.Ac>· t1o:.U f)e'''o''("'r pAr\1cl~I('lc,1 In CSUN's e.aung d1s(llt'den WO~1 p, !hr l\4s soog:ht beJp oH e-:ampus :Ind saylS "II L'; 1f1\PC".raU"o"t:' tD gt"l -sornc son 0.( help 1)-0 ITU!ltl~r l'l'bert' '
."TIle l"i.lUIlSecling thA t I unOervi"ent U 1\ n ludl\'ldual and on 8 group b.u15 IlHllck- me
,11
and sometimes by excessive exercISe or extreme dieting_ Like those wlth anorexia nervosa,8 person '\!lith bulimia is afraid of bemg fat and of not being able to SlOp bi.ngi.ng voluntarily. ac-cordmg to the pamphle.
As a result of anoreXJ8 nervosa and bulimia., many suf,fer such heath ru.lz.ards as kidney dy-sfuoction, anemia, ruptur~ of stomaeh and dehydrafion
often leading to little time for anything else but studying
To deal with fears and stress, "food definitely provides comfort.·· Ross said.
"From infancy food was used for comfort, we felt better when we had something to eat .,
RoSs says Lhal food prOVides an "instant release (from problems)" and a "drugIlke effect."
----F6~g~obsessioD-com.mona~o~g sfuilents
ant af Sierra North ted a fTgtlf IJetween
---UsmgTOOd as a way to reli~te stress or other problems does not necesShi..ly mean
. .. .. .. ...._~tin~-However,--Whettier'rea'ding a magazine, watching it is the quantity DC lood and occasions on
TV I listening to the fadio or walking which one eats that can become abltSi through the halls on campUs, it's hard to one's emotional and physical well-being, avoid the message that thin is in. Ross explained.,. B~~~,~ ~.~~ege C!Te e;~~~Uy ·'The_behavior ..(.()f :'
'concious aboul-rUt:iD.g in today's slim and becomes addict' sleek society, CSUN offer> programs 10 brings becomes help students lose weight or gain conlrol 01 "Unfll1' their preoccupation with food and being goingtocba finals get closer, thin. pressures increase',a)1d the food quantity
CSUN's Counseling Center provides an gets higher and the addiction becomes -Eiiling Disorder> Workshop, while the worse:' Ross said,
Health Center O"Iersees a Peer Nutrition The Counseling Center's Eating Counseling program and Overeater's Disorder> Workshop is deSigned to treat Anonymoua. addictive behaviors concerning food. The
Socialization greatly contributes to an workshop is available to women who ha(re obsession with being thin, said JoAna anorexia De....osa or hulimia. -Although Macias Lettieri, a counselor who co-leads meD also suffer from eating disorder>, the the eating disorders workshop. "In the wori<ahop hall typically been comprised of
~1\ ' body image and perfection.'" Ross says that 90 to 95 percent of eating
U'-DI:CC I· __r.l~=~n~a~:k~;;,~=~~~:::~m==u:: '.-wurld",---, ,-.~'MiCfiiSLettierfaddea, their job, women compare themselves
Studies have concluded that, in general, through their figur"'.beauty andl.l)(I.ks.c"_ --mo-re-than--haH--tlf-tege- womell have --~AIUi~ are many ov.~~t
wmetype of eating disorder, -weight m""tncolJege, mal.. -don't usually con-problem or obsession about food, ac tend with weight problems unW they enter cording to Macias Lettieri, the job market and become less active.
Macias Lettieri says that problems Also, "women rend to do something about concerning food are prevalent during lheir problems before men." Ross added. college because of the stress of being away To join the eating disorders workshop, a from home, as well as social and academic student must attend an interview to pressures. determinethatsheorhed~,infact,have
Kathee Ross, a registered dietician an eating disorder and if the workshop will based in Tarzana, believes that eating be of service to them. Macias Lettieri or disorders and weight problems often begin Dr. Tony Johnson, who also leads the In college as a result of coping emotionally workshop, conduct each interview on a with new situations and surroundiIijUl, confidential basis
"For many students, it's the first time Anorexia Nervosa is arr eating dJ.so.rder they are living away from' home. They In which the intake of food l5 severely may be lonely and fearful of being on their limited, resulting in as much as a 25 own and not fitting in. percent loss of anginal wetght A person
"There is. a.JQSs,ol SUPjX)ft from their with anoreXJa nervosa has an'intense fear farriily· and friends back home, and if of becoming obese and feels fat, even when they're living with others. there many .be extremely thin or emaCiated. accordmg to the stress of dealing with several per· the eating disorders pamphlet aVlulable In
sonalities under the same roof," Ross saId the CounseJing Center Also, "college is a competetive en Those with bulimia often have recurrent
vironrnent where studenl.s.are .com- episodes- of binge e.ating, ug1.lAlly CQnpeting with e"eryone else for good sisting of large amounts of high calorie grades," Ross said, adding that "self foods. The binge is often followed by seUestee trade ,.
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Dally Sundllli
UNGERlE, LOTION, Potions, etc. Free gIftsJOI hos1essing a Toy01est home patty. Lob of fun. (818) 349-3959. LBdies Onlyl (2·'S)
DEAR SUSIE, Kappy 2nd AAniversary, The past two years heV'e been more meanIngful than 'yQv 11 ltvef know. All my love 10 you on Valentine's Day Lo",e AJways, Dave (2-13)
D£AA kCUER. fm,.rusJling __a real boss fraternity ealled lt1e Sig Ep '_5 '" SH, you _al __ ~he parlym-i'Biing tt1e old lady) For mfo n2-7284 Bart Simpson {2·16j
BARHYS TICKETS Alice Cooper, Aeros.mith, Tom
Petty'~'l'1, Smithereens Pham . t Express Kings . fe events Sluden discou"l! (8i8) 701. 6'53 12"5)
RESEARCH
TO ALL New KKrs! Cangratulaucns! We dtd Jt! l"m so happy 10 h<n-e you as my si-sters· f!ev'e-- you guys' Love Mel (2"3L
S-~<.AJ=tE" "Mast~r [)e'c!oom • 2 Bst~s Apsrtment In Rest'da
REPOSSESSED VA & HUD W=A7:N:-:TE7:D;-;:"FE;:":t.\A=L--::E-HC:e-a-:d-acC:h-' t10mes avaIlable lrom go",ern SuH-erers tor UCL}<, ment 1rom $twi1hout·-CTedl1 . 'HeadS:Ene:rn.u Study lijlng: ct1e-ck You fepail. AJs.o tal. c;:H'tdude..d nea.r CSUN Upon deliroquent forecJd«JMa, Cai(, .:~&bch p3JtIClP.'i"1!s ,",,,'I
1·005--682·7555 E'-:l H-1452 ~'."Pa~d $100 00 FO'1 :"1"',0lE' tOf r~DO I'st your area (2- 131 !Qormatl'C,n C;!i!l Dr Rot-f-11 L
Mt"rni:l S18 344--0189 r;-1€1 1
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PERSONAlS
MISCElLANEOUS
\ \ -\ l.A.V;E;DA Cdl :..~ p,>- •.,:".
~ he If alem,'t'-y C! r-.;:>nt> ~ I
t:-rcU-W'f!'";ood bwl we 0(:._"1 ~ '~... ,
ViSA OR MaSltHC-aJd l Even b'&J1krupl Lld Cft!-d,!' \V,..
gua! ante<$ yOu a C3rd o,r 60l.lb,ltl ,'Our 11K,nei-' b3C~ C~~!I
1-80S-&52-i"5SS Ell M-\1)51 '2-13)
1l"!'O,le 6et~,i" .:l~t'p.d o,-,'r r~ou:s.t! 0;1'> r et",-,"J). 14 $.1
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MARKF;T DISCOVER C,od" --cal~ OTf'-" your el!omplJ!l. Flexibfe hours. Eam as much as $10.00/houf. Only ten positions availabla. Call 1800-950-8472. ext. 3013, (2· '4)
EARN $10·$1S Hour1y guaran· teed part lime. ID-3O flexible houffi. Wqr.k evenings with other CSUN students. Not an agency. f\k) phone saJ-es. (818) 342-2121 or 342-7311.
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BE A !ead,e: c~ the 90's' H',e (J,en2.tIO!1 Pregram neoos B
dr....e-.. s.e 01 e-nthus,s$\}C sp;r:ted to CC'r"'!"
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HElP WANTED
CORRECTION Due to a Daily Sundd typographical errOf Ul the personal column of the 2/9 Classlfh:K! secllon, we misslated the host 01 the Dlllo SIsler Luau Par1y on
2/10 The pany was l'lOSltx1 by thl' Pltl Psi's, nOl the Phi Deils
EARN $$! "Register Democrats to vote. On campiJs and in the ValTey~ -S2jregislration. (818) 893·7634 or (818) 8939S33. (2"5)
,..."ANTED PEOPLE ,nl€fe$Ie-C ,ro ~C'Om:ng iiC101$ !o,r T V comr~,erc,aJ$ rl'Q.>e e~l'ss
and gam{l' sho... cc;;!es\ar;\s CaB 1-805-682- ?555 Er. l
1C-+S!Q,rJo:bll:i<ll2·1~J
CRUiSESHif"'-.b ~O.·"
1m Spl,ng Chr'SIP'.i$ r)e_l sumrT',er b!t'.'l.~S
~").O~I\ron$ Ca.!! 1 8O~f.-..!:.;'}
[II Sl046 (213)
STIMULATING AND rewarding Summer? 100 positions opening al River Way Ranch Camp. rated one of the better camps in the U.S., near Sequoia National Park. Counselors, Instructors, and more
----en--campus---in1erviews Maretr 14,1990 See Office 01 Career Pw,nning Jl,ld,PI;3.J::em.e!l!J.9l location and sign-up5. (2-15)
ATTENDANT NEEDED for dis· abled CSUN student must have own car Involves cooking, light housekeeping, errands, 8hlll/wk, Hrs. flexible. If Interested or more info. call Rebecca at 818 993-2380 nOw. (2-'S)
HEALTHY PEOPLE needed 10 inlrodl,lce all natural soft dnnk to oonsu-mers, Must be outgoing. antaC1l",e. health orlenled ParHlme (S 18) 888·
4605 12·'3)
CP,EATiVE M01IV;.,T£D Graph,c Mist ntl'e-d6d to ,",'OJ).: lor {;iSl -910... ,ng c-orTHl1frlc;,,1
(818134386:....1:) as.\. !or
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DESIQN[R OFFICE rr· Van Nuys Ne~a a reilat,)e p-erson lor office wor-k & custarne' serv,ce $550 p{·r ho"r ::-025 t1aurs a week (Jh~lI:.tI-k>' ;81Sj 968-0050 (2· 1~J
EARN EASY EXTRA $$$ Up to $360/month for only 6 hrs, of your
spare time Fertility lab pays $30 per semen sample to
qualilled donors - all races needed Call (800)226-5571 For recorded Info
Zygen LaboratDry, Tarzana
FOARENT
WOOD BURNING Sto",e <anti que, mica see through Cleor $27S,00. (818) 713-8446 (2
28)
PANSONIC PRINTER KX· P124, 24 pin, used once. In
box, cost $335,00, one month ago. sell fOr $29500 (alB) 713--8446. (2-28)
SAVE $ • Walk to Climpu.. i'iELP WANTED. Part and Full 2+2 Condo with WID, Rettig, Time, Aexible Hours. Tern· secure parki"i). More! porary and Permanent posj. Fum.junfurn. $975. Call to tions available. Call .... (5'8) 1lB6-51171. (2-'5) 9am-5pm. $9.oo/..art. (8'8)
BEDROOM WITH Private bath _567_.._'_47_...:.(3-_7}-'--_,,__
and' entrance. 10 minutes TELEPHONE SEcRES"ARles, from CSUN. Nice area. $400 F1e.r.ible part time hours, 4 Carl Lesjie 693-1551. (2,15) days/evenings per week.
INSURANCE WARI We'll best M st type Call 366-9997 (3anyone's prIces -Of don't want ROOM FOR renl In Sherman 2)u. . your business. Sports cars, Oaks. S450/mo. Call after
_l!1jJJ!lpt•. J[ok'18•.1<lllld3::III'lJfL__.~ (Slll1.7JJ8.Oll56. ~ - .. OEEICE,A$SIS+A"'l',-_••~ discounts. Request ·CSUN Thurs., Real Estate Company 1IIan." (8'8)992-6966 or (213) FOR SALE in Brentwood. Leasing.Dept. 873-3303. (5--16) -KORG--IOTPerforrfiTng Syn. TypIng eSSenlitl1:$7 slart. Ask
thesizer; one month old, one for Sheryl (213) 820-5891. (2· year warranty, manual with _28_) _ extra operations handbook, 2 additional ROM cards (300 patches). $425.00., Also, have brand new IBM Mid, card and PRISM sequencing software for $'95.00. (8'8)713-S446.
. (2-28)
WIN A HAWAJIAN VACATION OR BIG SCREEN TV PLUS RAISE UP TO $',400 IN JUST 10 DAYS!lI Objective: Fundraiser. Commitment: Minimal. Money:, Raise $1,400. Cost: zaro J
ANNOUNCEMENTS A FREE GIFT JUST FOR CALUNG. PLUS RAISE UP TO
~ $1,700 IN Om.Y 10 DAYS, Studeril groups, frats -"and sororitIes needed for marketin!] project on eatnpus. For details plus your FREE GIFT, Group officers call t..aoo--7655472 Ext 50. (2·'3)
~~~~ge. Sc~~i~~, b:~:~~ RETAIL HELP! Customer ser-English Comp. Resume to: ....ice. sales and marketing ProgrammIng Centers, 21115 department. 25 positions De....onshire SI. Sle 311, available, will train, flexible ChatsworUl, CA. 91311. (2-13) hours, full and -part time. Call
9-S. Valley 342-2612.._, West GENERALOmCE. MaMge / copy AND Customer;,e,· LA. (21J1392-'310.~-'5. organize literature & mailings ....lce. Ught binclry, ie as-Some typing and data entry. semb~e reports, etc &,me GENEAAL OFFICE. FT/PT, PC experience h-elpful. Must h b es Par1 t'rT)8 St rt LA Small co seeks self be detail oriented with good ~~/hr~xX.L Pri~1\ng.' ~_ motivated lodlVldual tor A/P organizational skills. Flexible S454_ (2.1-5) Inventory, purchasing, and hours. Call Anne 891-8054. (2 filing. Will train. Immediate 13) =_~EA,8li$¥n.$5fX1per, eek -, ~=ArF
Now hiring enthusiastic CSUN neMe (213) 870-2923 (2·16) students lor part and full time po~tions. No experience needed AJI tralnmg provided Come work wilt1 your lellow dasSma1t!S fiexible hOurs With raplCl ad",ancement Call 710--681 B for mtef\llew t2-16)
DELIVERY PERSON Yew! car, 2 openings - Mer; & Fr, UNUSUAl. PART Time Opp6,r. afternoons pluS Sat A M or ('Jnr1y Openmgs nD..... 101
Tues Wed and Tt1urs after motNated Sludents d€'s;!lng noons $.6 50 hr plus 2\..' 1200--$3OJ per week. work.lng cents a ml1e Rr\oerstde Pt!trf· 'f'! 8 iU1't. et"l"!!UeJ aHnO"Jp-httIE"
HELP WANTED macy . No Ho!IY"r'ood Cali V"Ie are 001 an ageney end 985-723D (2·131 :here are no phone s.alE'S Our
EARN UP to $150 per month offIce IS located across 110m Donate blood plaleletes WOODLAt-.JD HillS CPA hrm campus Colli ~odayl 8.B6 Hemacare 818 986·3883 needs Pi'T receplror\!st 15·2'0 %51 \2-16) Anna Stock (5-16) hrs MWF 8 30 12 or 1 pm L..EA.RNING
~~7~~~~~~~~~~Te~EY t ~~~~~ ;t:.~ 88~ e.:/io~~2.~~)Z-to ;~;~'~~S ~~'~I~ S In £. p(JI~~~ LEARN TO FLY AJrcraN lor ~~~~:7~.~:~~~~<~~SfD~Tj~C~ hr 1S-25 hrs weekly PalCl rUN PART Time lobNQ'~lrg ~~::~ ~S\~~~;i~tca '~ ~a~1 ~=~~2 AJ~O~~17{~18~~~ H-eMacf';e,i~.-'.J Sludy ~mg trarnJng (818) 993-4466 (2· WTlh childr~n In the SF\! Ql9fi is 6) C",?,rtduC1E-Cl near CSU!,:!-."y.£Q[!__._
231 . ~~.ttwARQ ~~~;S PosmONS no ... ih'ail .....:~.~.. ~.~l ~"":~~~~r~~~~~~~~~:tew;~I~~~ SECRE1ARY SHERMAN ~e~;:bleC~~r ~~:~ S(~idl) a~ able .'11 a No,rttn,dge !;.Jrn,lure LOST AND FOUND mat>on c.aU (}t Reben L Mer OAKS CPA office needs lBQl [2-151 store P1eastl cailto: appo;r,l EARRING FOUND D"ngl:ng 81"8 ~4--o189 (5- 16i
_ __~~~I'I5i~~~ta-"~:QI~n~'d~~~~C~'~5Qj7K~m~i:g:E>r-_~qu~i:rod=.c:a:II:_"e=I=S)~~c:",:::-_,~:=·'=3=1=2.:--~m,:,O~~;~~~~,O~!~::~':l;Sy~~~~'v~,;S;~~~':~:;;;r;:;;:'C1CN::;;.~_;.(:::;;~t;;:AP;;;-';:;,t::;';;:;N;;:,,;::;:;";:;,m;;.....-;t1~~~y(~nn's~~~T~~i~~1' $3.()(X) (818) 789-8083 It takes glv€ uS a Ci!11 btt",o,ee" Sf'('-'I<S rrlaflire sLJdent to Tues Dec 12 al 9 ~5 pm AM/FM Cassette With Sony BEST ON Campu.s JobJ paJl" 3 and 7 pm Man lr>_ru 53.1 a1 rna'l.!l.ge 8n-C:s.mpU'S plome Cs:: &85-31-:.0 (2cI6) speakE~s, (2·16) lime, flexible schedule Great 760-7464 (2-151 lions tOJ lOp ccmp,aJ""es rf"""s
CHILDCARE resume experience B'.,llid 5cr,001 year fle.<D'e t"'O'I.,rs your career no .... I Call RELIABLE FRiE~~C'-- 'l ... Jlt'l E'3lnmgs pelt-'-'!"'! 18
VOCAL INSTF ~ars teaching stytes, N_ Y_ Ci e!ubo and rnus Bondon.: 213-27
BEAR'S REID and tutoring p~_.these5 statement.s. Fel welcome. Sharl (213)470--5652
MATH TUTOR through CarOl. professional Ies: Math graduate (818)358-4525.
EXPER:ENCE of learning Ma fro-rn a tutor whl the material in 5ible mann-e-r. ( 9260 end ask to
TYPING THESIS, TERM ing panic and h\Jn~~. W~df
lll.'1CO. oseE: 7O!M4&l (5-'6)
lASER P ing!punctuatX>n 9yeaf> typmg stude,nts. Fast re,asor;·ab-Je rare
-I---------':>US.--=- {SIS 'SI
-+
;;: +t------ ---
I
Continued from page 7
She says that "each group bas its own perllODB.lity, and that's wbat's so great about an oo<amJlUS group. Students
. bave· similiar interests eJong with .simillar career, academic and social pressures." -
"At the meetings, they get a lot 01 identificatioo with ",bat they're going through. They realire !bey are _ al~_~~_' she said.
Kaihy; i_-ber'realnameJ; deel~llnltlena-iin,'snd ofl-campUS meetings alter bearing about OA from a friend.
"(tried a lot of diet programs. but knowing what to eat has never been a problem fDl" me. I basicallyeal lor emotional reasM5 and al OA evuyooe _ada and has gooe throUgh simillar cir'cWnSlances whIJe trying to control their weight and eating habits," she said. ...
Bermea said, "No matter how much knowledge you have about nutrition. when addicted to food the addiction outweighs the knowledge yoo bave and lood is use<! as a band-aid to cover emotions."
For those who lack. proper eating habits and cutritional Irnowledge, CSUN's Peer Nutritional Counseling program is available at the Health center at \'anous times throughout the week.
Thase enroUed in the program meet with a counselor, often a CSUN student majoring in nutrition, who gives them a well-balanced diet, monl~ !heir weight loss and providEs support while \bey sre reaching their g<>e!.
Wbilemony students wb<> a_ the program bave weight to lose, some wish to gain weight or merely learn about._ nutritiOlL '!'be program is off_ f.... of cha,.ge to students.
The Peer Nutritional Counseling program is useful IDI" getting. grip an poor eating habits o!len cause<! by a .tressful liIestyle acquired during coilege, such as not <allilg Ulroughoot the daY"nd latO'Uight jtmklood binges, Ross added.
For information about oo-campus programs aoevor referrals for off-campus ser'\-ices. students ca.n contact CSUN's Counseling Center at 885-2366 or the Health Center at 885-1666
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Cereal with milk. along with a piece of frUit. IS a typical breakfast recommended by many nutritionists'
FAST. ACCUTATE typing-term papers,re$umes edited by professional journalist/glad student. Overnight service. campus delivery (most cases). David (818) 909-0384: (818) 909-0401 (TDD) 15-16)
_e~tf)C>K-VOtJAEtEST'
li\fAN OUTFIT FROM How much time doelilll take? H.l-N 0 Well, Orrenlatlon lakes place June 19-July 7 and we ask you 10 conlnlillou[ Cla,'s to worR
Clurlng these dales Tlalnlng will take plaCfr M~' 3().June !2..!0.9_J.:!~,y,V.,-a;;!I>5LJ':<-Qj""'!JLl!lllli j'-:;:;::;;:=~:~'::::' ::::.::::~:-~=:!::~=~=~~ ..=""""=-~~:::-:::-~~~_-_-_-~_-"-_-_~_-_-L:tlml'mm'lUfnoursa~~ --- '"","1':~i;;
Do I nqed to have excellent gradu? We do ask thal you have an overall G PAlo a 2 5.-C! DeUel.
Do t need 10 know a IQIA,lwullho CAmpu& AM .ead'e1'ntC advts,tng7 No. you will go through 6llte-nSIV(l llBm,nQ to enabie )-·ou to give acaClcr('IiC advismg campus tout'S, coun5e'ling. and" spe~Ches Tnere ..'iiI bl' manaatolY tl8Jnlng that ta",,"s place In the mOunlalns
What's lhe IntervlEtw like? FlWly s.,mple. you lell us Ii 111110 abou! youlse!1 anCl roie play beIng an orlontatlon leader In III Spl>Clllcd SJ!uatlon
ORIENTATION~.PR()GflAMS The (en most commonlv ai$Red questions
about being an Qfientatior:LI"Jiader -·".;4.
Do I have to be a SenIor? "'. No, In facl, we encour~age all ~tude-nts 10 app:'y, re-gardless 01 clas:s s.tandlng s,.;::; \1181 lhoy may re-tum 10 the program In future yealS
HOw do I apply? Appkallons alB <wadable F<l1 il Dt.l and {elwin II 10 the OIf,ce of C~'i.njp",,:, A.::-lr"llfes uSU
A223, by Feb 23 You ne>6Cl 10 turn In two letlf'ls of IflcornmenClallon one b(!,ng !rom a lac-ullY member wllh youl appllC£lI,Oll Inll:!fVit~WS ..... 111 be hela Febwary Z61h M~ld\ 211d
Wr, are looking lor a div(,HSO staN 01 s\udems from all fac8t~ and majors to serVl~ as po-or adVIsor s d.nd role rnode-b lor incomjng sludents II you have any qur~stiuns Hbout t)Ow to apply or about tho pro~~mrn tTself pleus(l call 885·2393 or SlOP by the DUlce of C:lrnpus Aclivities. It)C31ed in tt'e USU, Room A223 Applications aro availablo and (jon'\ forge,' to Irlcl~e two leners of recCHllrncn{Jalfon ,I
WlUIl doer> the progulIll liB,,€! to offer mEt? LoIS FLlslly you g;!!n Ii mui:flude 01 s./o-lHs (e 9 coun~'J1I'~ Iisfe-nrng speJ.k,n-gJ trllougrl oUI e- .. ICln':i.IY6 teamIng retreat $;;;ocor.dl" ft IS a.n &duC.!lI.or,ai o.r.perienCt'! tOI }'Ou 10 Itl3J11
about Ihe camp'..I5 loglStlCS and how 10 tn~.kfl It wOllo: IOf you M.Q,\.Ionail
"
you go IhrOugh much D~I:iOn.aJ d.e~el.Dp.'ni1m t.'i;0u9" Utt':' eultunlf rnt""fScUnn and" profesSional nOll'o'O',,;ng Thloughout Ih6 plCgfam you W1:i gel the ,Ilj.nctl 10 h~]p others Flrd.liy yOu vnll be g,,'.:n
p',o"ty leg,~tl.'H,on to help en:>ure gen;ng ;J'~ ,i;i.~Sles. yOu d'lCO~
llllli tun? lr1cJeCllbly' You tUiVe the op.pcnul1'fy· to In!cHiiCI w;ttl .fiJI :;.o-r15 01 /lEw anCl t':a.:Ci!lIlQ peapfB who ale yell' bagel to get 1.0 kno ... you The ptoQ!lam plOmOl(lS s.everaJ tun aC!I,.. ILtts anCl Ihe ch[~nct> tor you \0 ~ .. pfCfe your Cf6<!h'tl sn!lbules
TUTORING: Help in writing-grammar . __~rm papers. Retired English Teactler (818)998-0374. (5-16)
SPRING BREAK· Ma..dan $349. Air, Hotels, Bay Cruise. S Cod Disco & mor.. US Tra~et Student Union. 8854740. (2·16)
TITTORING
VOCAL INSTRUCTION: 3B years teaching atl levels and sty1n, N.Y. City Opera, top eluba and mu&lcal~lchael Bondon: 213-277-7012. (5-16)
EXPERIENCE THE Pleasure of learning Math or Physics from a tuto, who eam present the material in a comprehensible manner. Call (818) 9059260 and ask for David. (2-16)
WORD PROCESSI'lG._6lh yeai:----essays~m.- research papers; theses and graduate proje:¢s. ,. Spelling corrected. High qUij.1ity. Near CSUN. Delod. (818)894-7924. (5- 16)
BEAR'S RESEARCH, editing ga.m. to Sp.m. Call 998-0211. and tutoring service. All :\5-:...1_6:...) _
__ e,~~ theses 8:"d personal LAST MINUTE papers &Ie 'lly
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(213)470-6662. (5-16) ---~=::l~r~~a:~p~sp~~~~ MATH TUTORING. A1gebre tion guaranteed! Call Marla through Calculus. Private. (818) 705-1176. (5-16) professionalJessons by CSUN Math graduate, Call John al (818) 368-4525. (3-2)
~.t~~4:~~ ~.-fiI:J --
Dally SUndial
FAST. ACCUTATE typing-termTYPING papers,resumes edlled by THESIS. T-ERM papers caus. professional journalist/grad. ing panic and aniexty? Stop siudent. OJernight service, hunting. WordPerfect, hand",_~PUs _~ (mos~
,e near CSUN Share e6 and house pfl\lilage-s ~la) 366--8375. (2·23)
Fl SUSIE, Happy 2nd An· rsary. The past two years
been more meaningful you'lI ever know. AU my 10 you on Valentine's
Love PJways, Dave (2-13)
R-HOMER,-l~"'~ boss fraternify called the Ep's, ~e-, you ...!~-.J_h~__
(1T!tsnng- the old lady) into: - 772-7284 Bart
Json, (2·16)
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ALL New KKr'sl. ConJlations! We did il!J!rn so 'y to have you as my rs· I love you guys! Love, (2-1~L
3ERlE, LOTION. Potions. Ffe8 glftsja.cbostessing a Chest home party: 1.Ots of
(818) 349-3959. Lad;•• " (2·16)
~E WATCH the end of the d! Join_ the PHI PSIS at !igeadon. Ail otCf1iHfPSl~
tion. Februa.ry 15 18116 IhoH. 8pm For Info se call 993·4228 (2-13)
/TED FEMALE Headache hers lor UCLA :lacnelTMJ -Sludy being lucted near CSUN Upon ptfrliO'n, partlclpanls Will aid $10000 For more In· ation call Of Robert L 111818344-0189 (5·16)
ITEO FEMALES With or )u1 headaches lor UCLA jache/TMJ Siudy being luc1ed near CSUN__ ~LJJ?2.D_~. pr~ partiCipant will be $100 00 For more Inlor·
on call Or Robert l Mer· 18344-0189 (5·16)
RVICES RY'S TlCKEl S AJ,Ctl ,bf Aerosmltll "1: om I, Oilty Joel, Smltht!leens 'tom/Starlight bpress s/Lakers. Marti E\l61l1S. ent Ol$count l81 B) 703 l (2·16)
1M FOR Rent In B hous,e l&lsworth s.3OJ r(lnt plus :J utilities Call 999-4967 <.... 12·16)
OMMATES j
'-----lillGHBOJlliOQJ),----+ te room and bath Onlyj minute drrve 10 school dollars a month, shared es Call 363-3917 (2-14)
RE 1·)1.aster Bedroom 1
Ihs Aparlment In Reseda Irlty building i under nd parking Greal place able 4/1/90· $41000 i
u1J1Jties - Call Nalalia at 7521 (2·14)
EARCH ASSISTANCE all s- all subJecls Foreign ems welcome (213)477· I, Mon 1hlu Frl (lOam I 15·161
IMMATE WANTED, lie non-smoker, shale ,e new CSUN. $350 pet III (818) 893-3736 (2-' 51
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FlY'S TICKEiS. Alice per, Aerosmith, Tom ~. Billy Joel, Smithereens. ntom/Slarlighl bpress sjLakers. more events. lent disCQunl! (818) 701I (2·16)
,
DBlIy SUndial
CSUNI
VOLLEYBALL-----------ConUDued from page .2
Kyman and Reznick. TIle fourth game continued the good play rrom both
l.eanui. The game was tied ai 7·7 when the 4gers were able III lake a smaU lead behind the hitting of Winslow. With strong net play rrom Ken Lynch, who finished with 13 kills, CSUN was able to tie 1he' game at 13~]3 With
m-omentum-and B loUd-'crowd on lheir Side It looked as though the Maladors would ....'in, but Kerins would not allow it. His kills and a CSUN misplay gave Long Beach the fourth game 15-12.
CSUN's next home game LS February:21 agamst IT santa Barbara, 'Ibis SaturdaY night the Matadors LTB\lel to UC Irvine to race the AnIe.atel""S at 7 30
Contact AS Dlm:tor of Pcr;;onnc! Sh.:>1tit-'Sn,irh lnTh-e Assonatcd 5tud('r:.~ Ofhce, \ocatN In USU "\-20,-'1, or phonc&'i5-24nMonday-Fnday.!HXJa m ·4 4Sr m For yeartI,')Qk and Matador Rcporh>r 1n{~)m\.ltlOf\ C'ctnt3,cf
r~~ Cal State Stanislaus, &-2, ' was walloped 1ll-3 by C Sunday,
For 'a team with nationt aspiTatiOTll!, wbat bappen< not expected and comes prise,
Cal Lutheran, which I bership in Division II B[}l
four runs in the first innil lead belore the MaUldon turn at the bat.
Cal Lutheran [2-<)) the! scoring in the fIltiJ inni batters to the plate and SO<
CSUN pitclH= Pierre AJ .Haendiges,'l"bat-leftthe-st1
After that the cIosestthe get ....as in the sixth inni SbartshiUsololJomerun. seBS9".
In.~Sat1:lroafs game. l Craig Clayton seemed to Clayton went. six mnings t win of the IleaSQlL His , e<>tfl"llging aRe~-way
him in his fIrS! start of the 1t--""'l!dn'!evengetoufiXl!re I
"The Ulought crossed IT
wouldn't get 001 oI-the first Clayton said. "I wid myse and things would turn aI'OUl1
Things did turn-around a som-e ra ....-es about his perfor
"I thought Craig had bett, #-~--4~fti=i'ilc'-.'~"~MlI
Kernen said. "He thre\li-' to was more under control .
Clayton also had contrl home-nng, singling twiC"e 31
I: runs Andy Hodgins slso ru k~'l\.'hie:h-C&me-ifl,tMfour·nm ]
1f.. With ('SUN 13--4) le.ading the eighth inning, ScQjt Shar home-r and ClarIon added !ll"elbe.Ma<adors lheiE lln&
Fnday's game lookedi; sronng a.ffair, \li'ith the Ma ~ 2-1 alter a third-tnning rally . Shock~~JllLQs;
r WOMEl Contlnuf'd from pagt" l:!
l_, ... rnlnu.te scoring drought that hlle neither team \ltantoo to'
Tht" Lady Maladors tumE'! tea.ID that woo the game LJ
s,t'K')()llng b)' Derma MUh"erl Grillith
BeSom~
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-----------------;-----_.Cont.i.hued. from page 12
MEN--"'~ -I
and lree-throw sbooting of Kris Brodowski.
'----W'lIheSUN1eallIlIgtiY'iffilYiliiiiliililt, 52-51, ... Brodowski Ilitll.. pair oltree· UliOWS to widen !be margin to Ibree with just over a m~.to play in !be game.
After Taro guard Raymond BeruIett made """ of two free throws, Detrick Gathers was louled in !be act~ of shooting, sending him to !beline
However, Gathers missed the Iront end 01 • one-and-one, hut Brodowski was under the' basket to put in \he rebound to wrap up \he victory,
"The lollow-up by Kris was • game saver," Cassidy said. "We missed f straight loul shots in !be closing seconds and anyUIJng could have happened."
Brodowsklfelttllat hewlllrjUSl in ffie' right place al\he.righllime.
"I was just lortunate to be under \he _baslte1." ~ "I-was-quil:k enough to get Ibere."
McDaniels had s team-high 15 points lor CSUN, while Brodowski finished "ithl~poinlS.. TbeTar03~ 15 points from Bennett and 1.2 points spiece Irnm Robert Barksdale and Vincent Washingtoo,.._. ,
thefirsthall,makingIOofI8shots(55 percent) from the field, By comparison, \he Taros made eight 01 22 attempts 136.4 percent!, but led 24-23, at halltime, thanks to a BarksdAle 17.foot jump sIlol at !be buzzer
"We soot 'W"elJ iD the IIl"'St hall." Cassid)' sai£L "I'll!ake!lml ~pereent
field goal s verage I every game. " Unlike the tl!'St hall, the ~
opened the second hall by ~ its first six attempts and nine of 11 overall
CSLTN went a.head ~ on a McDaniels steal of an errant ~ 'wtticl:l he con,'erted into So slam dunk with ,,: 28 remaining
':Kendell's steaJ was So grt'B[ pla.,)',-' Cassidy sa.ld "Plus, be s.ct!r<'d on the play Which w'as ev'en bigger "
The Matadors \li."m next see action F'riday wll<'n tM). bust Cal Poly Pomons and on Satl!l:llll.LlW""-"""4 travel to l'e fu~'erside
Lady Panthers had ODe last shot to \10'10 thE' game, but Betheflrlce's five-foot jumpt'T a l the bll1.2er clanged of( the nm
"I ~I .. the end ae .otrl&-pm!,__Q.o.-EI:ld.I~.&fl--~....!!'lJlc-g<>Hnjtltre:r--llus game out," Broline said "We'"e won CSUN struggled and trailed 3l}-22 st every game lhat was dose (m confe..n:>nce halftime. Domingu~~ Hills would oot play I It's good .that we've golten lOto relent 1O the second half, """hing its ad·
vanlB.ge 1,0 as many as 10 pomts \lith 3'24 these close ga.ml>s becaU5-e it makes us left, where H stared WluJ [he fi.nal ready (or the pJ.a.~'o-(fs "
Mulvcrlull led the L.sd)' MaLadors w'ith Arlolto led ,he L.sdy MaLadors w'jth 17 10 points s.nd Gnflith was dose behlnd polnU
J
Griffith hit one: of t\II'o free thro\lo'S With just under one minute left In the game to gl\'e the Lady Matadors a one-pomt ad· vantage Then CSUN got some luck
I akByama was fouled and went to the lme not ba,'i.ng mlssed any of her (our fret'"throw attempts She missed the (ront end O( the oDe-and-one situation and the Lad)' MSLadors got the rebound
Mulverhill was fouled and hit one of her two free throws with 14 .seconds left. The
1)ally sUndial
WOMEN-l~ Conlinued (rom page 12
-+---, minute scoring drought that made it seem
like neither team ....'anled towin. The Lady Matadors turned out to be the
team that won the game thanks to (oul· shooling by Denna Mulvertull and Hally GrlfIilh
What .ppe.f.8d.lo.be.........sy.tIlree-g homestand lor Ibe CSUN baseball team turned into something lar diflerent.
The Matadors won just One 01 thre<! ga~~," 8D~,_ ~t .was an 8:-5',{jctory over SoIioma gta~onB8turday;eSUN"loslw cal Stale Stanislaus, tH, on Friday and it w.. walloped 18"3 by Gal LlJlberan on' Sunday.
, Fora team with national championship aspirations, what happened on Sunday is not expected and comes as--qU1~--prise.
Cal Lutheran. which has dual 'mem* bership in Division II and NAlA, scored four nms in the fIl'lit inning to take 8 4-£1 lead belore the Matadors got their lirst turn at the bat.
cal Lutheran (2·0) then got some big' scoring in the fiflil inning, sending 16 batters to the plate and scoring 12 runs 0((
CSUN pltchefS Pierre Amado and J.D, Haendiges.·That left the score At 16-1.
After Ulat the closest U':Je Maladors could get was in the sixth inning, when Scott Sharts hit a solo homerun, bis fourlhol Ihe seaspn. . ~n'Satllrdsy's game, the pitching of Craig Clayton seemed to steal the show. Clayton went.minnings to-earnllis first win of the._..seasan. His showing is en__ging-afterlhe way UNLV<reated him in his first start of the year where he
-couIdo'revellget oUt ofthe first iniiing. "The thought crossed my mind that I
wouldn't get out of-the first inning again," Clayton said. "I told myself not to panic and things would turn around."
'I'hingB did turff around and Clayton got some raves aoout his performance.
"1 thought Craig had better command of -4---"'"'-i,,·tcbes-/ J
. GUN head coach Bill Kernen .said. "He threw to his spots and was more under control,"
Clayton also had conlrol of his bal, homering, singling twice and scoring lWO
t runs. Andy Hodgins also hit a home run, 1.__w.b.icll...came-i.n-thef-our-nm'sec'ond inning
P With CSUN (3-4) leading 6-4 going int.o EriC Johnson. rounds first base after tllwng a Single against Cal Lutt1eran In ,i the eighth inning, Scott ShHrts belted a solo
homer and Clayton added another nJll 10 Ole Matadors· 1133 loss Sunday aflernOOIl - -
if giv-eUle MaLadorstheir final output. .... But Slanislsus came on with'a"eom-btned 'I'he M,aUlUOI"S lake their 3-t record into a 11 Friday's game looked to- be a low- SlX runs in the fifth and sixth innings off Wednesda)' contest against the Mast('r's
scoring affair, with the Matadors lead1llg Matador sLarter Val Lopez, who went SlX College. wtllch \lo~iJJ be another home game 2·1 after a third-Inning rally in which Greg and one-third innmg.s while allowmg 14 hIt5 (or the Matadors and is set to start at ~, _ Shocke sand Denny Vlgo bolJJ lil:~ . -toSlan_ -.--- .. _.-- ... ----p'TIl..-.-..... .. ....-----.--..--.-~
""'.... Ur,feb.1t, yWTRl......w ()I "pr-mf'd and 2" \,ll\b wtth Wffkly mrrilngl "" U So.nw 0.111_ Roam
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, 12 Tuesday, February 13, 1990
Weinerth .hurt; Lady MaU;~U1af.t4d~o~rs~sp~lwit,---------------y-----+--:e-"_.... ..all4"""7:rt:-ahl-:We_a ..l1'S~7w. ~.--:+
~WOelmJlgO. !be CSUN. men's baIIletball team lOUDd IIBeIf unbeaten and aJone.1n lint pia"" In !be CaUfornla CoII"IIi&le AlhIeIlc ~lIOII,
1bree weeka and aIx ga...... later, the MiitiiJOiiillil'13 oven.n;RiirCCAAJ find tbemaeives ill a lour-way tie lor third· place wilb Call11a1e Los Angeles, Cal Slale ~ HUIa.oo Cal Poly San LuIs , Oblspo,ln!be CCAA slaDdiDgs. .
.Over lbe weekend, CSUN earned a split··· by defeallDg Cal Slale DomiDguezHlJls 1814, :>-5), 511-52, 00 Friday at Dominguez HtIIs, and IfI"llIIIJl> <::lIapman.CnlIege (11·
. 12,3-7),_,ooSaturdaY,atCSUN. "We came up abort just !lie ours/!Qtll."
MaUldilr__-a' COiiClit'irti! -ca..idy said, referring to !be team's shoot1ng slump. "The effort was. tbere, but !be abots were sloPPY, I'm nolpleased wilbtbBt (sboollng slump)." -SlitUi1l8y night, Chapman outrebounded
CSUN 111,13 In lbe rUBt hall and the Maladors shot 10 of 24 m..IbeIieI<i (4U
pman made 11 of'2H1eft!gQ8J attempts (45,8 percent) as !be lea"'" went into the hall lied, 27-27.
CSUN'operiild uP a ~39 lead aria Kendell McDaniels layup wilb 12:45 remalnlng. However, Panther sboollng
-~ guard, Chris Marlin (five lor live lrom Ibree-poinl range) responded by malting his third straight Ibree-point shot to cut the Malador lead to 45--42 wilb 12:19 toplay.
'l'lRfMlilAdorswent on an ll·7 run, which was highlighted by six Kendell McDaniels polnlll, to lake a 5fl-51lead wilb 5:Zlto go. McDaniels led CSUN with t9 polnts and lorward Sandy Brown added 4 polnill.
The Panth&s _ltonTR'spurnjflbe1f~
own lying the score 6O-«l courtesy 01 MarlIn's fiflb and flJl8.1 three-polnt Ileld goal wilb 2:03 to play.
Following a CSUN timeout, Chapman proceeded to score !be Ilnsl six polnlll 01 the game to earn its third victory in Conlerence play.
For the game, the Maladors made Z5 01 iekI-goaI-atlempls-l~-percanl.).,-whlle
By JORGE MARTIN
Sports Editor
There won't he anyone that will rnislllke Joan Welnerth lor IIbgic Johnson. hut wben the (SUN point guard went down with a sprained aniJe on Friday against Cal State Dominguez Hilla, the (SUN women-'-sbuketbatt"""'tmlm Uo'QS gte.t:illy allected
The injury catne ill the (inot ba.I1 of the Lady MalllOOl'li' ~ loss to Dominguez HtIIs Then. Saturday night againo\ Chapmsn College, the Lady Mataool'li stnJggled with setting up ""'lr <zIlense. hut !lUll were able to hold 00 {or a 5,&-53 win at (sUN.
The Lady Matadors are DOW 1().14 overall and 7-2 in the Californ.i.a. Collegiate Athletic Association. The tatter is good lor second place In conference behind un
. beaten Cal Poly Pomona "Thill Ia deflnllllly a big wln lor 11>."
lorward Julie Arlotto ..id saturday rughl "Qn<:e you ~ your «tartlng point guard Iblngs are going to gel hai-der. I think this game Ia a confIdence hulJder lor our guards because they took Ithe DomU>g\le1 HUla loss) very hard. hlte if it was theLT (awl. That game wu Ow whWe t.eam's laulL"
startlng In place of We.lnerth wao Dawn Brdttne, who did • goad Job of bring1ng "'" ball up the court and rlnished with 0i0f
"Jaarue was.n'l Lo and we n~ her." Rrolw uid "I think t:tus was e. good Wlfl
for the lea.m because it &ho'fi"5. U5 thal \/I'e CIUl ..'in without our point guard ,.
Thlll game a~ oho'Ned thaI the Lad) Mat.a.do:r'B art becoming a 'Wer)' good t.eam I..U)der pres;sure las,t week IiIgs1n.!i1 Ca.l State Lao Angeles. Brotine hll a jump .hOI In the closing 5a~ to \li'ln th~ ga n\t' ~
fil AgaUlSt Chap:!'f1&.n. the Lady Muladon;.
needed some late-gb1Tlf' hero!CS to aVOid 3 ../
the Paotbens converted on 21 of 45 attempts lill.7 percentl.
Chapman was led hy cenler Roge< Middlet.no'. game-high 20 poinlll snd Martin added 17 poinlll
On Friday night, the Mataool'li .ue _.~.itslour-l!Sm"klIlings't!'l;"lf
MUrtay f?l{M'YlAN L TlUVANtWtOl
Kendell McDanIels makes a layup In Salurday's 66·60 ross to Chapm-an
second C'OlliSeC'"UIJ't-"e los.s
1be lAdy Matadors milled by as moii.n~
a••IX poUlts in the seeond hall The)' put on 8. rally and ulti.m..aLelY-.'t'nt ahead ~-bO on a paIr at free 1.hJ"uw!J by Arlot~o "'fHh lM5 than Hv,," mmule left mtbegame
poHll bomb wntl t 'O~ lett In the gamr What lollo~'ed'lJ\ole <illoI.s \If'" A t/u-o«
Plea.. let' WOMEN. pa,t 11
by defeating Cal Slllle Dominguez Hill> But, lor (sUN, the viclor)' did DOl come easily.
The Msilldon narrowly escaped with
the victory due 10 the clutcl> rebol,.=:'nd::ing~
Plta.e ~ MEN. pagt II
lIJaol&b, IIil:tlnI ,31115'" a team. Brent HlIIIanI - L<1QIlla&c::b's klIl leaderwlth 71, .... 'llIo bid 1lI dlciI. BrelI ~ !IJld 11 Idlls at an il>cndlhIe .. ~, 8lld all""""_ ~ totoft Kerlns bid 21 Idlls and II dip.
~~~=~~ <:sUNhome:llU>!'thlo.:f8III'. ...
'1'l>i,-fmiI Pme started of! close with !he lead ~!lands......-..l tim.. 1iM~~OiitS.~l.Qa·6-6 lie. ~ tbere CSUN _ on a m· potot nm be!l:tnd Cl:III:mu and cuWde hltter Il!arlt Root - '""" had 14 tllIs giring tho lilallldors s 12~ lead (SUN_Oft to";;" i:>-1_
'!'be sec<md game ...... all 4gen
CSUN'. ~ lIrotlo doo'D, DOl I olIowtng II to lIB! the shoa. It ....-. , and Lcrng 8elIcl> look s<lvanlqO <zI _~, winning easilY Ir.3_
In PtD8 - tho IIbtlldors eor>. ~-!l:loU.p!.a¥ol~ •.-........, Ia1l!rIlI bI:lJ:Ind 114 boforo I"r'l<le eallOO s lime QtL C:<mlng qm ri It (SUN ....,1 on ••, _ ~ Kym&n td!b& <lharlIe
and C!U'N lIB!'ti!llL" to • 6-4 Ie><I ~ l:blft on boll> _ ~ ,oad ~~. """CSUN .... "b1" to _ with ....., ~ frnm
TWin<> and ...... OIl a team t»ock with
~_ \lQLU:\'llALL.l'"lle II
__j::.:w__"IHI-1_AllIJJrYlrill.:'iliii~--J(yIu8I1i1cl lMldlls with a .• per~""'!IJld &!:J; SQIo tllt>!;b. Jrmioo' mldd1& bIldIr Bapbael TuIlno bid 11 tmato p' wtll> biB 13 dip. '!be