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A Divided Leg Council Reshapes A.S. Lobby Administrative Board Approved in 14-6 Vote

By Tim Hoffman Staff Writer_____ “Structure does not have to be alienat­ Debate over a controversial overhaul of the Associated Stu­ ing.... It's the people dents Student Lobby was finally within the structure resolved Wednesday night, with a that are alienating.” divided Legislative Council ap­ proving A.S. President Mike Stowers’ Student Lobby Reform Melanie Ogren Act. During the six-hour meeting, on-campus rep. Council voted 14-6 to establish a 19-member Student Lobby Board of administration. The change in tered membership of Lobby will structure and the appointment of not be eligible to vote on Lobby new people to fill those positions issues, but will be represented by could occur as early as next quar­ two electors, approved by the ter, Stowers said. 17-member board. Although Stowers has prom­ Student Lobby, formerly oted his bill as a more efficient headed equally by four coordina­ way to run Lobby, two of the four tors, is the A.S. advocacy organi­ coordinators and some Lobby zation for student interests on reg­ members disagree. Taking a Stand ional, national and international Yesterday marked the Students for Choice Coalition's first official march and rally of issues. The Student Lobby Board “This bill will prevent the mi­ the year, and included members of the National Organization for Women, UCSB will be responsible for managing nority viewpoint from being Campus Democrats and the Associated Students Commission on the Status of Lqbby’s physical and monetary heard,” said Off-campus Rep­ Women. Approximately 150 protestors marched from Cheadle Hall to Storke Plaza resources. This group will be resentative and Lobby member during the noon rally, according to student/activist Andi Blackshaw. About five anti­ headed by a three-member execu­ Lynette Haynes, who authored a tive committee appointed by the abortion demonstrators arrived on the scene as the rally concluded, Blackshaw said. A.S. president. The general regis- See COUNCIL, p.5 SB Worst UC in Hiring Women & Minorities Noise Might Chancellor of Academic Affairs Be Reduced Campus Officials Julius Zelmanowitz. Of these of­ Asian female | ¡ ¡ , fers, 53 faculty members ac­ Say School Must Do cepted and were hired. Fourteen by Proposed were white women, three were More to Improve minority women, and four were Asian male minority men, representing a Recruitment Efforts total of 39.6 percent of the total County Law hired, according to the 1988-89 By Suran Thrift By Geoff Fischer Black female Affirmative Action figures. Reporter______Reporter ______These statistics indicate that the number and percentages of mi­ Despite an administrative nority and women faculty hired New proposals of a noise ordi­ push for a more diverse campus, Black male have declined this year. nance being researched for Isla preliminary figures show UCSB Figures from “UC Focus” “in­ Vista could limit all types of am­ ranking last among all UC dicate that other campuses ap­ plified music, according to Marc Chaconas, staff assistant to Third schools in recruitment of both Latino female pear to be more aggressive than minority and women faculty. UCSB (in recruitment of women District County Supervisor Bill The University of and minority faculty),” UCSB Wallace. offered 567 faculty positions in I Affirmative Action Director Chaconas is “looking at a cou­ the 1989-90 academic year, and Latino male I Raymond Huerta said. “(There ple of variations (of ordinances),” hired a total of 539 professors. s is) no question that UCSB including a UC Berkeley ordi­ Of these, 262, or 48.6 percent, $ should be doing more to make nance, in effect since 1985, which were women and minorities ac­ | offers (to women and includes a time-limit on noise­ cording to “An Overview of Af­ White female | minorities).” making activities and decibel level firmative Action,” a system-wide S The recruitment process of fa- restrictions, he said. summary distributed statewide ? culty varies from campus to cam- Community feedback on the by the Office of UC President White male o pus in the UC system, according idea is being gathered by Chaco­ David Gardner, and figures cited | to Eugene Cota-Robles, Gard­ nas “by going door-to-door in in the September/October issue ner’s Assistant Vice President of I.V., and taking phone surveys,” of the “UC Focus” newsletter. Academic Affairs. “Competition he said, adding that I.V. residents Of these, 29 positions were of­ AMIR GHARAAT/Daity Nexus is veiy intense across the country have also written letters to the fered by UCSB; five to women (for qualified women and minor­ county voicing opinions on both and five to minorities for a total those in “UC Focus,” show a total hired — still well below the ity candidates),” he said. sides of the issue. The result of his o f 34.4 "erosnt: These figures slight overall increase in actual systemwide average. Cota-Robles, along with Joyce research could lead to a proposal place UCSB 14.2 percent below hfring, bui Still indicate that mi­ In comparison to 1988-89, Justus, Gardner’s Assistant from Wallace’s office to the Santa this year’s systemwide average nority faculty recruitment IS UCSB had 62 faculty openings, Vice-President of Educational Barbara County Board of for women and minority recruit­ down in the 1989-90 academic twice as many S» this yssr- Four­ Relations, visited each UC cam­ Supervisors. ment, and last among the UC year. This report shows 31 new teen positions were offered to pus this year. “In general we Such an ordinance, if adopted, schools. faculty positions total, filled by vvhit? women, three to minority found a lot of attention (to Affir­ may not be in effect for some time, Bieures released by UCSB Af­ six white women, one Black wo­ women and iôûT Î9 minority mative Action),” Cota-Robles according to Chaconas. “It would man, and three Asian men, rep­ men, a total of 33.9 percent, ac­ firmative acu:: this mo?thj See HÍkISG; P-5 See NOISE, p.3 which are more recent tnun resenting 35.5 percent of the cording to Assistant Vice- 2 Friday, October 20,1989 HEADLINERS

Major Quake Rocks Rural Bush Visits Disaster Areas Analysts Say World Series China; 29 Killed, 34 Hurt To Observe and Encourage May Have Cut Death Toll BEIJING (AP) — A major earthquake struck rural WASHINGTON (AP)—President Bush said Thursday SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Three strong aftershocks north China early Thursday, killing at least 29 people and he would go to Northern California on Friday “to take a rattled a jittery Northern California on Thursday, and re­ flattening about 8,000 homes, official reports said. look and to provide encouragement to people” struggling scuers who found fewer cars than feared under a collapsed A three-paragraph report by the Xinhua News Agency to recover from the earthquake. freeway said the World Series may have reduced the rush- said 34 people were injured. It said aftershocks continued. Bush, keeping a high profile on disaster-relief efforts, hour traffic. The quake was centered about 135 miles west of Beijing announced the trip amid Democratic complaints and Re­ “Maybe we got lucky because of the game,” Oakland on the border of Shanxi and Hebei provinces, and was felt publican praise over the government’s response to Tues­ police Sgt. Bob Crawford said. “Normally at 5 o’clock in in the capital. The epicenter was near Datong, famous for day’s quake, which authorities estimate killed upwards of the afternoon this area would be bumper-to-bumper. its Yungang Caves that hold thousands of Buddhist paint­ 250 people and caused more than $1 billion damage. Maybe the World Series saved our lives.” ings and statues dating back to the 5th century. The president said he was cohfident that federal offi­ Power and commuters returned to much of downtown It was not known if the quake damaged any of the caves. cials were doing a good job but promised “we will stay on San Francisco as a tentative city tried to recover and re­ Efforts to reach Datong by telephone were not successful. top of it.” group following Tuesday’s earthquake, which claimed an The Chinese quake comes less than 24 hours after a After an early-morning flight from Washington, Bush estimated 270 lives and $2 billion in damage. massive earthquake hit San Francisco, but State Seism«* plans to spend three hours in California on Friday, most of At the 1 1/4-mile stretch of the collapsed double-deck logical Bureau officials said there was no evidence of a the time in a helicopter tour. Interstate 880, the Nimitz Freeway in Oakland, workers link between the two temblors. “We’ll do as much as we can without disrupting local cut holes in concrete and used cranes to pull out pancake- Bureau director, Fang Zhungsun, told Xinhua that ad­ activities,” White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater flat cars. Rescuers found cars as far apart as 60 feet, rather ditional strong aftershocks were unlikely. said. “That generally dictates very few, if any, motorcades than bumper-to-bumper as had been feared, Assistant Fire because of the transportation problems in the San Fran­ Chief A1 Signart said. cisco area.” As of early Thursday, more than 1,400 aftershocks had Opposition Groups in East been recorded. Germany Threaten to Riot Senate Rejects Amendment Big Quake Prompts Talks BERLIN (AP) — Protesters may fill East German On Burning American Flag streets again unless the new leader, Egon Krenz, belies his On Emergency Relief Tax hardline record and begins the kind of reforms under way WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Thursday de­ elsewhere in the Soviet Bloc, pro-democracy activists said feated a proposed constitutional amendment to ban burn­ SACRAMENTO (AP) — The massive San Francisco Thursday. ing and desecration of the American flag, dealing a sharp area earthquake is generating calls for a special session oi Krenz made clear almost immediately after replacing rebuff to President Bush on an issue he had put in the the Legislature, a 25-cent gasoline surcharge and a state- Erich Honecker on Wednesday that the Communist party spotlight. leased mobile phone system that would be used in similar would resist the democratic trends evident in Poland and Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, emergencies. Hungary. said as the Senate defeated the amendment, “We do not Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, D-San Francisco, “Krenz stands for the continuation of neo-Stalinist po­ serve our national tradition by forcing Americans to make asked Gov. George Deukmejian on Wednesday to call a litics,” said Reinhard Schult, a founder of New Forum, the a false and unnecessary choice between the flag and the special legislative session “to best determine the amount largest pro-democracy group in East Germany. Constitution.” and priority of the assistance” needed in the bay area. A Lutheran church leader said privately “the demon­ However, Republican leader Bob Dole said, “I think the strations will start again soon” unless the government Deukmejian’s press secretary, Kevin Brett, said Thurs­ flag should be flown at half-staff after this vote.” day that the governor wanted to confer with other legisla­ changes its course. The church has been in the forefront of The proposal won a slight majority, 51-48, but that was reform efforts in East Germany. tive leaders before deciding whether to call a special 15 votes short of the two-thirds of senators present and session. Reform activists said Thursday the discontent was so voting that was needed for approval. great that employees had stopped work briefly in several Brett said a bill approved last year to allow the state to Democrats led the opposition, but thé vote was hardly spend reserve funds for emergencies without legislative factories. They said employees at a light bulb factory quit along strict party lines. Thirty-three Republicans and 18 work recently and resumed only after meeting with approval may make a special session unnecessary. Democrats voted for the measure, while 11 Republicans management. and 37 Democrats opposed it. Assemblyman Dick Floyd, D-Carson, said Thursday that there should be a special session to enact a one-year, Congress gave final passage last week to a bill to ban flag 25-cent-per-gallon gasoline tax surcharge to help repair New Republic in Hungary burning by simple statute. Bush said he would allow it to the damage caused by Tuesday’s quake and to strengthen become law without his signature but added that he still bridges, overpasses and elevated highways throughout thought a constitutional amendment was needed, that a California. Enacts Democratic Format mere law wouldn’t withstand an expected new legal BUDAPEST (AP) — In the glare of TV lights, Parlia^ challenge. ment adopted a series of constitutional amendments dec­ Future Bright for Series to laring the nation’s dramatic return to a multi-party democracy. Federal Aid For Abortions Be Decided at Candlestick Deputies in a nationally televised session voted 333 to 5, with eight abstentions, to accept nearly 100 modifica­ Sought by U.S. Legislature SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — While jackhammers and tions to the 1949 constitution drawn up after the Com­ drills fixed Candlestick Park, the Bay area began putting munist takeover. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate sent President back the pieces of its earthquake-stricken World-Series The vote formally ends one-parly domination in the Bush a bill Thursday permitting federally financed on Thursday. East Bloc nation, which was officially renamed the Re­ abortions for poor women who are victims of rape or in­ In San Francisco, the Giants played a simulated game. public of Hungary. Like other East Bloc nations, it had de­ cest, ignoring the president’s pledge to veto the measure. They went through the motions without the usual shouts fined itself as a people’s republic in which all power be­ The bill, which has assumed symbolic importance in the that punctuate team practices. longed to the workers and the Communist Party was the larger political war over the abortion issue, would ease an “This is my job, so I’ll go out and play. But it’s not the leading force. eight-year-old restriction on circumstances in which Me­ best of circumstances," first baseman Will Clark said. Under the modified constitution, Hungary will become dicaid will pay for a poor woman’s abortion. “Probably nobody will feel comfortable for a while.” an independent, democratic and constitutional republic The Senate’s 67-31 vote provided final congressional At the Oakland Coliseum, the Athletics worked out — asserting “the values of both bourgeois democracy and passage of a spending bill including the key provision on minus outfielder Rickey Henderson, who didn’t show up. democratic socialism,” according to Justice Minister Kal­ abortion, which the House approved in a surprise vote last Before the team took to the field, it voted not to celebrate man Kulcsar. week. The Senate previously had approved broadening with champagne if they win the series, which they lead 2-0. Hungary’s first multi-party parliamentary elections federal funding for abortions, and its last vote was needed “We don’t think it’s appropriate,” designated hitter since 1947 are due to take place by the middle of next year. to send the bill to the White House. Dave Parker said. “This team has a hollow feeling.”

W eather The Daily Nexus is published by the Press Council and partially funded through Daily Nexus the. Associated Students of the University of California, Santa Barbara on Editor in Chief ; Amy Collins weekdays during the school year, weekly in summer session. The strangely armageddon-like balmy weather will Managing Editor | | H n i u | Jason Sptovak Editorial Matter — Opinions expressed are the individual contributor's. subside but a tad, and everyone is at a loss to explain layout/Design Editor Scott Lawrence Editorial opinions expressed in the Daily Nexus do not necessarily reflect those of News Editor Michelle Ray UCSB, its faculty or student body. All items submitted for publication become the why. In related news, W. Axl “Bill Bailey” Rosey appa­ Assistant News Editor Kim Kash property of the Daily Nexus. rently wilted like a scared little girl on stage Wednesday, Campus Editor Jenny Ogar Advertising Matter — Advertising matter printed herein is solely for in­ lashing out against his drug addict friends and threaten­ Assistant Campus Editors Joel Brand, Jeff Solomon formational purposes. Such printing is not to be construed as a written or implied County Editor Maxwell C. Donnelly sponsorship, endorsement or investigation of such commercial enterprises or ing to quit everything. At last report he’s joined forces Assistant County Editors Dan Jeffers, Patrick Whalen ventures by the Daily Nexus. with Chuck D. and Mick Taylor to form an avant-jazz in­ Opinion Editor Chris Ziegler The Daily Nexus subscribes to the Associated Press and is a member of the UC Assist«#Opinion Editor Christopher Scheer Wire Service. .* strumental troupe called “The Bloomer Girls.” m Copy Editor Amanda PurceN Phone*. FRIDAY Sports Editor Tom Nelson News Office 961-2691 High 78, low 52. Sunrise 7:10. Sunset 6:19. High tide Assistant Sports Editor Craig Wong Editor-in-Chief 961-2695 Science Editor Ben Sullivan Advertising Office 961-3828 4:54 a.m./2:25 p.m., low 7:59 a.m./10-32 n.m. „ Features Editor Adam Moss The Daily Nexus follows the University of California's anti-discrimination codes. Photo Editor Tony Poftock Inquiries about these policies may be directed to: Raymond Huerta, Affirmative SABABG . r Assistant Photo Editor Genevieve Field Action Coordinator, phone (805) 961-2089. High 76, low 55. Do something, Javier! Artsweek Editor Doug AreHanes Second Class Postage paid 3? Ssnts Barbara CA Post Office Publication No. Friday Magazine Editor Jeffrey C. Whalen USPS 775-300. Special Sections Editor ,a*t Fltzsknons Mail subscriptions can be purchased through the Daily Nexus., Thomas m Illustrations Editor odd Francis Storke Communications Building, P.O. Box 13402. Barbara, CA 93107. AP Wire Editor arofyn Stanley Printed by the Goleta Sun. World Outlook Editor B H H P * eter Hemsch Quoting only friends and roommates ßaily Nexus Friday, October 20,1989 3

Cyclist Goes Through Windshield A 20-year-old man was rushed to Pennington was taken to the hospital ‘WOODSTOCK'S Goleta Valley Hospital Wednesday after for multiple injuries, including one to his he was hurled into the windshield of a left forearm in which several inches of moving car during an Isla Vista bicycle skin were tom from his arm, Paramedic collision, authorities said. Tim Emerson said. David Pennington, who officials iden­ The motorist, 21-year-old UCSB stu­ tified as a transient, was later released dent Lisa Vennemeyer, was not injured. with several abrasions and cuts and taken Pennington was determined to be at HAPPY HOUR to a temporary shelter in Santa Barbara fault in the accident, since he failed to under the care of a social worker. obey the stop sign, Gasch said. The incident occurred when Penning­ Every Night 7-10 pm ton, who was riding northbound on a However, a student who heard the ac­ bicycle, failed to obey a stop sign at the cident believed both Pennington and corner of El Sueno and Camino Pescad­ Vennemeyer could have been more ero and collided with a Volkswagen Scir- cautious. occo, California Highway Patrol Officer “I really think people should be more Jim Gasch said. Pennington’s left shoul­ careful and keep their eyes open in Isla der and arm smashed through the winds­ Vista,” UCSB student Susan Gassett said. hield'in the collision, Gasch added. — Kathleen Sauer

NOISE: Sound Situation Surveyed Continued from p.l people complaining and sidered the maximum, Cha- calling at 9:00 p.m. Friday conas noted that the Berke­ probably have to be phased night.” ley ordinance sets a limit of in with the turnover of the 70 decibels. student population,” he Some are also question­ The IVRPD already en­ explained. ing the legality of such an or­ forces decibel limitations dinance. “It seems kind of But the ordinance prop­ for bands that perform in discriminatory to me for district parks. The IVRPD osal has already sparked them to have any kind of noise limit is “85 to 95 de­ spirited criticism from Isla noise ordinance that would Vista residents. Glenn La- just apply to I.V.; it would cibels, taken at the property zof, Isla Vista Recreation have to be county-wide,” line,” which works well and Parks District general said Park District Director with the bands which play manager, criticized the idea Mike Boyd, who opposes in Anisq’ Oyo’ and the Red Bam, Lazof said. because “The decision ab­ any noise ordinance. out a noise ordinance is not If such an ordinance made by Isla Vista residents, “(An ordinance) would takes effect, enforcement it’s made by the county. The be adverse to people who would fall to the Isla Vista county board of supervisors are in bands,” Boyd said ar­ Foot Patrol. However, it is does not understand rock guing that musicians would uncertain what punish­ and roll after 10 p.m.” have their freedom of ex­ ments ordinance violators pression restricted, and the would face. One proposal is An I.V. resident for 15 potential and demand for that offenders pay for “the years, Lazof said people on live amplified music might time and cost of the Foot both sides of the issue must decline. Patrol,” Chaconas said. “If be more reasonable. “We they are responding to dis­ can’t have people blasting Though no decision has turbance complaints, they music at midnight on Wed­ been made as to what de­ can’t be doing what they nesday, nor can we have cibel levels would be con­ should.” 9 6 8 - 6 9 6 9 data systems Brings to UC - Santa Barbara Thursday, October 26,1989 9 A.M. - 3 P.M. in front of the University Center A... PRODUCT DEMONSTRATION * FREE Giveaways * Special Prices * See the NEW 5.9 Lb. Minisport * Student Financing Program 4 Friday, October 20,1989 Daily N çîçus

Photos by Genevieve Field CAMPUS COMMENT Interviews by Adam Moss Should the gov't provide abortion funding for rape victims?

“Well, it’s up to the “Yes. Because in si­ “I f som ebody’s “Yeah, generally I “Yeah, I think it • " / think so. In that victim I think whether tuations like that, it’s underprivileged ... I agree with (providing should be provided be­ case I pretty much they want funding or not the victim’s fault.” think the (government) funding for those cause a lot of rape vic­ agree that the govern­ not. should step in.” under special circum­ tims can’t afford one.” ment should provide stances. £ric Hasbrook some funds c h S u n Doug Kuehn Krista Carreathers Eric Bryant junior, political science and Mina Mortezaie senior, mechanical sophomore, film studies sophomore, psychology senior, business/economics international relations junior, biological sciences engineering

Dweezil By Chris Farrar STUDENTS A.S. FACULTY STAFF LEGAL L i b r a r y SERVICES B o o k s a le resource center WED. free consultation OCTOBER 25 with attorneys 8:30-12:30 to help UCSB students with Library, 8th • Landlord-Tenant Cases • Personal Injuries Floor • Consumer complaints • Family Law • Misdemeanor and felony offenses U C en 3 1 8 5 9 6 1 - 4 2 4 6 Anyone who hates children and ASSOCIATED dogs STUDENTS can't be all bad. University of California at Santa Barbara W. C. fields

I N T E R N S H I P S

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[ * SEI InttnulH m l Nam e__ . London Internship Programme ___ The Arts Address. ____Finance/Economic Research/ Airplane andHelicoptor Rides J l $18/person City____ . State. Zip. Management ___ Human/Health Services * ' Food and Beverage Concessions College/University. ___ Politics ___ Advertising/PR/Marketing ' Children's AviationExpJoratfon and Tour Program :___ Journaiism/Broadcast/Film . Paris Internship Program . S um m er _ Fall ____ _ Spring 19 . _ Washington Internship Program Location — Hlangar T at Santa Barbara M u nicipal Airport FREE PARKING!! Daily Nexus Friday, October 20, 1989 5 COUNCIL: Student Lobby is Expanded by A.S, Continued from p.l competing bill in response LEG COUNCIL FILE to dissatisfaction some Lobby members had with Associated Students Legislative ory of the A.S. Executive Officers Ac­ the Stowers bill. Council Meeting Summary count, and the remaining $400 to A.S. Haynes’ bill would not Oct. 18, 1989 Committee on Committees, Duplicating have altered Lobby as ex­ Bill #18 A.S. Student Lobby Reform Categoiy. tensively as the Stowers Act — Passed e are committed proposal, still allowing all Council approved on a 14-6 vote A.S. Bill #21 A.S. Key Policy — Tabled people...committed to each Lobby members to vote. President Mike Stowers’ restructuring of The bill deals with changes to key allo­ Because of the great con­ A.S. Student Lobby. A 19-member board cation policies for users of the A.S. of­ other, to the world around us, troversy surrounding Stow­ will replace the four current Lobby coor­ fices. Further information on costs re­ and to God. And each Sunday ers’ resolution even after its dinators as leaders of the group. Thé bill lated to the proposal were needed, and we gather together as the passage, Haynes’ bill was calls for the establishment of a “campus the bill will return on next week’s agenda. Episcopal Church to renew that not withdrawn, and will be advocacy program” to work on a variety commitment and find the discussed at next week’s Leg of student issues.. Bill #22 Educational Opportunity strength to live in a fast- Council meeting. Program Funding Reform — Tabled Lobby Coordinator Raf­ Bill #19 Student Lobby Revisions — James Siojo tabled the bill which prop­ changing and confusing world. ferty Atha, who supports Tabled oses the transference of administration of We discover meaning in life’s the Haynes bill, has labeled Lynette Haynes authored this Lobby A.S. funding of EOP to the Financial Aid everyday stress and tedium the Stowers proposal an at­ reformation bill, which was tabled after office. because there is a Great Love tempt by Stowers to assert a Stowers’ proposal was ratified. However, working among us, bringing “consolidation of power” it will - be discussed at next week’s Emergency Bill — Relief to Victims of over Lobby. After Stowers’ meeting. the Northern California Earthquake — forgiveness and healing. We bill was approved, Lobby Passed team to see our duties and Coordinator Kris Peterson Bill #20 Apportionment of Remain­ Rachel Doherty authored a last-minute responsibilities in a new said she was unsure ing Suspense Account — Passed bill to allocate $100 of unallocated funds perspective where problems James Siojo authored this closing-out whether she will remain to be "used as deemed necessary” by the become challenges and we with Lobby after this of the A.S. Suspense Account. $522 will A.S. Earthquake Relief Fund, the bill quarter. be allocated to the Special Projects Categ­ states. really begin living. However, others believe Come join us this Sunday the new proposal will be Coordinator Krista Jill An­ could be, she explained. He added that his intent in and see for yourself how His beneficial to Lobby. “Struc­ derson said. Anderson and “Four people are not going changing the make-up of commitment makes ours easier. ture does not have to be alie­ the fourth Lobby coordina­ to agree with everything. the group was not to create nating,” On-Campus Rep. tor, Andi Blackshaw, were Both sides should be repre­ upheaval. Melanie Ogren said. “It’s in favor of the change. sented,” she said. “This is an expansion of the people within the struc­ “People have different “What’s important now is Lobby,” he said referring to ST. MICHAEL'S UNIVERSITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH ture that are alienating.” ideas and perceptions about that the students put the the size of the official Lobby SUNDAY HOLY EUCHARIST 8:00 AND 10:30 AM “What I am talking about how Lobby should be,” controversy behind,” Stow­ board. “Lobby has never CAMINO PESCADERO AND EL GRECO IN ISLA VISTA is organization and effec­ Blackshaw said. “It’s (cur­ ers said after the meeting. been this big before.” 968-2712 *— _____ tiveness, and what the hell is rently) not the student wrong with that?” a frus­ forum it should be.” By hav­ trated Stowers asked. ing only four coordinators, “I feel there’s going to be with potentially conflicting a great improvement on viewpoints, the organiza­ Lobby,” Lobby Legislative tion is not as efficient as it 968-2862 HIRING: Recruitment presents W W W W Continued from p.l women and minority faculty 'tt'te'tt'tt'ft usually comes from grass said. There is a vast differ­ roots organizers even ence in the way each cam­ though the campus admi­ pus recruits candidates, Jus­ nistration does give support PURRRFECT tus said, adding that “UCSB to things like affirmative ac­ is hiring women and minor­ tion, diversity and women’s ities, but have not chosen to issues, Johnson added. take a focused approach (to affirmative action).” “Historically when we The objectives of increas­ see bottoms up issues they ing minority and women fa­ don’t normally get the kind T i i e culty at UCSB are “bottom of resourcfe support they ÇQve up objectives,” meaning should,” Johnson said. “I C ^ g g a e that it is the current minor­ think department chairs ... ity population on campus and deans ought to be held One Love £ X .u sic that continues to push for accountable for their affir­ further faculty diversity, ac­ mative action objectives just e jo n ig f it cording to EOP Assistant like they’re held account­ ViBration a t 9 p m Director Hyiilon Johnson. able for coming in on budget The initiative to hire more each year,” he added.

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“The essential matter of history is not what happened but what people thought or said about it” Earth Day Focuses OPINION Frederic W. Maitland ------Joanna C. Renema and 100,0 ion Squai Earth Day 1990, to be held on April 22 of next The U.! year, will mark the beginning of a long-term so membe commitment to building a safe, just, sustainable tricts. All planet. Its objectives are educational, eco- coverage 1 nomic, political and cultural. Public Br Earth Day will launch a “decade of environ- daytime p A & é yax -h i ment,” designed to promote biological diver- Scores of sity, human health and regenerative agriculture, devoted i; > -F^-iér^b cf J It will seek to involve a broad cross-section of And molt society in creating a groundswell of support for Day as a i environmentally sound products, investments mental cc and policies. in the ! Earth Day 1990 will focus environmental followed 1 awareness at the community, state, national was trans and international levels. Thousands of Earth months s Day activists will take place around the world to Nixon prc encourage the political, economic and social vironmen changes we need to save our endangered again er planet. .... grounded As all globally-minded initiatives must begin dean Air by taking root in the realities of here and now to tai moven flower and bear fruit, so it is with Earth Day. Congress] The UCSB Earth Day 1990 Coalition is forming 0f mutage here at UC Santa Barbara and it is forming nowl helped pa We need your help. safety act Are you willing to become involved? Please in qU{i read on! changing In 1970, 10,000 schools, 2,000 colleges and growing c universities and virtually every community in aluminum the United States participated in Earth Day. Ac- an(j ¿rivi] tivities ranged from nature walks to direct ac- ^a, tion against major polluters. The mayor of New issues tha The Reader's Voice

but an order that is organ­ D R EW M A R TIN /D aily Nexus Anarchy ized very differently from the elitist and hierarchical Editor, Daily Nexus: orders familiar to persons Although UCSB is an in­ like Krista Jill. two-thirds majority, or split their votes — cancell­ stitution supposedly de­ If this is a place of learn­ ______Editorial______ing each other out—when a two-thirds majority is signed to- promote higher ing, then it seems logical Despite the absence of a formal hierarchy of lacking. education, there seems to that people have an accu­ power, the Associated Students Student Lobby According to Stowers’ proposal, “One major be an epidemic of ignor­ rate understanding of the ance. All of us are guilty,in language they use. For has held its doors open to anyone interested in be­ element of a Lobby structure should be to create a varing degrees, of speaking those interested in learning ing involved. In the past, this has been both bless­ sense of belonging and an attitude of inclusive­ or acting without really about the richness and ing and hindrance. Any student has been able to ness. The situation now is functionally exclusive thinking. A prime example complexities of anarchism, walk into Lobby and declare themself a voting because the structure has failed to manage the na­ of this is a recent statement I suggest they begin by member. However, this freeform structure has also tural ideological differences of a diverse student by Krista Jill Anderson in either going to the UCSB li­ which she described Stu­ brary (and looking on the left Lobby without firm leadership to make the population.” Granted, this may be an accurate as­ dent Lobby as having "ab­ HX shelves on the 4th body an effective force. sessment of Lobby’s past In recent years, the large solutely no structure to floor), reading periodicals And being an effective force is, after all, the mis­ majority of Lobby members have been firmly lib­ the(ir) meetings. It's com­ such as "Anarchy," "Black sion of Student Lobby — the branch of A.S. eral in their ideology, apparently discouraging plete anarchy." (Daily Flag" or "Ideas and Ac­ charged with promoting student interest in the anyone to the right of the political spectrum from Nexus, Friday, Oct.13). tion," or taking Political Regardless of the myths Science 111 (Anarchist university and government So it is understand­ joining the organization. stated by Anderson regard­ Thought) Spring quarter. It able why A.S. President Mike Stowers thought it But Stowers’ restructurement will do little to ing the situation of Student is not the intent of this letter necessary to provide Lobby with a power pyramid. improve the diversity of Lobby. Despite best inten­ Lobby, I will focus the to articulate the principles However, his proposal, approved by Legislative tions, when it comes to making appointments, scope of this letter on her of anarchism, but simply to Council Wednesday night, is a shortsighted an­ those doing the selecting inherently choose from very misguided conception point out that ignorance of anarchism. Despite the should be antithetical to swer to a far-reaching problem. within their circle of acquaintances—usually peo­ stereotypes of anarchism as human intellectual deve­ Intentionally or not, Stowers has taken the keys ple with similar social background and ideology. being synonymous with lopment and to suggest to Lobby and put them on the presidential ring. So by having the president appoint the Executive disorder, chaos, and an ab­ some resources that may Under the new proposal, control of Lobby is in Committee, which appoints everyone else, the sence of structure, the real­ help those who wish to the hands of 19 members of the Student Lobby ity and history of anarch­ learn. ideology and characteristic of the group will ism is quite the opposite. DAVE KAROLY Board. This reorganization is not inherently bad; largely be homogeneous. Anarchism is a social the problem is that the A.S. president, who in the Although this proposal has been approved and philosophy and practice future could be a radical fascist or communist, has will likely take effect Winter Quarter, there does that rejects authoritarian No Respect been given too much power in deciding who fills exist one ray of hope: Leg Council must approve government and maintains the voting-power positions. Although Stowers’ in­ the three executive positions. The members of that it should be replaced Editor, Daily Nexus: tentions may be the noblest, those of future A.S. with social and economic On October 17 a quote Council should remember they are the elected rep­ organization based upon appeared on the Daily presidents cannot be predicted. resentatives of the UCSB student population. individual freedom and Nexus Editorial Board staf- The president forwards his recommendations of They should carefully use their chance to review voluntary cooperation. The fbox. It contained the words candidates to fill the three positions on the Lobby the appointments to ensure that Lobby will reflect currents of anarchist of Voltaire: “I disapprove of Executive Committee to Leg Council, which in the diversity of student opinions. Council’s tradi­ thought and practice are what you say, but I will de­ turn selects the 14 regular voting members, who many, and include: indivi­ fend to the death your right tional process of approving appointments en dualist anarchism, pacifist to say i t ” How appropriate approve two members to represent the general masse with little question must stop. Council must anarchism (religious and that on the same day I read a Lobby membership. This duo will vote in tandem now use its power to keep the doors of A.S. Lobby secular), mutualist anarch­ letter by Eric Shuman (Daily to reflect membership opinions, determined by open to all. ism, communal anarchism, Nexus, Reader’s Voice, Oct. anarchafeminism, and 17). This was the most ig­ anarchosyndicalism (the norant display of ill- fusion of anarchism and re­ Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU considered crap I have seen volutionary unionism). in my four years on this cam­ Despite the diverse inter­ BUTTSY.AU, I WANT pus. The attitude expressed GOSH... IS YOU MIGHT SAY pretations of different by the author of this letter 1510 BE LEGALIZED, THERE ANY THAT. EVERY schools of anarchism, all REGULATED m NP ANIMOSITY TIME HE SEES baffles me and I fail to TAXED, JUST LIKE YOU! BETWEEN YOU ME, HE GIVES variants combine a relent­ understand how any re­ IT'S TIME, MAN! PV YOU ANP MR. CORN? ME A R EA L less criticism of existing motely intelligent person KNOW POT IS THE COUN­ EARFUL! coercive political, eco­ could read the letter to TRY'S SECOND nomic, and social struc­ themselves and want to sub­ LARGESTCASH tures, an unshakable belief mit it for publication. CFOP.PJ6HT in the creative potential of Eric refers to the “holy AFTER CORN! \ free human beings, a vision crusaders” and “religious of a new libertarian society, freaks” who denounce and a projected way of at­ abortion as a result of a lack taining this society by of belief in their “own means outside of conven­ flawed faith.” The obvious tional political practice. In lack of respect for a person’s short, anarchism is order, religious beliefs doesn't Friday, October 20,1989 7 ¡es on Environmental Awareness 'ork banned automobiles from Fifth Avenue, However, we now face new environmental nd 100,000 people attended an eco-fair in Un­ problems on an international scale: global in Square, in New York City. warming. Ozone depletion. Rainforest destruc­ The U.S. Congress adjourned for Earth Day tion. Ocean pollution. Acid Rain. Soaring po­ o members could attend teach-ins in their dis- pulation growth. V ricts. All three networks devoted substantial Earth Day 1990 is rooted in a belief that peo­ overage to events around the country, and the ple —individually and collectively — do indeed 'ublic Broadcasting System devoted its entire count, and working together, can accomplish aytime programming to Earth Day coverage, extraordinary things. It will be a focal point for cores of national and regional publications massive, worldwide demonstrations demand­ evoted issues exclusively to the environment, ing a sustainable global environment. It will md more than 20,000,000 people used Earth build alliances that transcend the boundaries )ay as a vehicle to demonstrate their environ- dividing countries, continents and cultures. icntal concerns. Among the specific accomplishments we In the supercharged months and years that hope to achieve are: allowed Earth Day, that outpouring of concern * A worldwide ban on chlorofluorocarbons ms translated into lasting achievements. Two —which destroy the ozone layer and contribute lonths after Earth Day, President Richard to global warming — to be folly implemented lixon proposed legislation establishing the En- within five years. ironmental Protection Agency. The bom- * Slowing the rate of global warming through DREW MARTIN/Daily Nexus gain environmental movement quickly dramatic, sustained reductions in carbon diox­ * A comprehensive hazardous waste minimi­ rounded the S.S.T. and passed a tough new ide emissions. This will include the higher stan­ zation program, emphasizing source reduction. faculty are encouraged to attend. ’lean Air Act. That same year, the environmen- dards for automobile fuel efficiency and rapid * Heightened protection for endangered spe­ The coalition will focus on planning events »1 movement defeated seven of a “dirty dozen” adoption of a transportation system not pow­ cies and habitats. and activities leading up to, and intensifying on Congressmen, forced the military to halt the use ered by fossil fuels. * A powerful international agency with au­ Earth Day and the week of April 22. Earth Day f mutagenic defoliants in Southeast Asia, and * The preservation of old-growth forests, thority to safeguard the atmosphere, the oceans 1990 will be a cooperative effort of all peace and lelped pass a federal occupational health and both in temperate and tropical areas. and other global commons from international environmental groups, both community and afety act aimed at “in-plant pollution.” * A ban on packaging that is neither recycl­ threats. campus-based, and we welcome involvement of In quieter ways, tens of millions began able nor biodegradable and the implementation * A new sense of responsibility for the protec­ fraternities and sororities, cultural associations, banging their lifestyles — eating less meat, of strong, effective recycling programs in every tion of the planet by individuals, communities academic clubs, athletic teams/clubs, religious rowing or buying organic produce, recycling community. and nations. groups and any other interested organizations luminum and glass, insulating their houses, * A swift transition to renewable energy You can make a difference! Our first meeting or groups. nd driving smaller cars. resources. to organize the UCSB Earth Day 1990 Coali­ We have found solutions to some of the * Dramatic increases in residential and in­ tion will take place Monday, Oct. 23,5 p.m. in Joanna C. Renema is a junior majoring in sues that gave impetus to the first Earth Day. dustrial eneigy efficiency. the Multicultural Center. All students, staff and aquatic biology and anthropology.

oigan- alarm me near as much as centage of the children and abortions if the procedure 18 years for a human to be­ Nebraska? of Operation Rescue as us­ Y from the lack of respect for inno­ adults presently inhabiting were made illegal. come fully developed: phys­ I also never realized that ing “terrorist” tactics. rchical cent life. Speaking only for the planet are dying as a re­ This argument is based ically, mentally, etc.). Sec­ exercising free choice, On that same day the •ersons myself I do believe in a god sult of substandard living on an erroneous assump­ ondly, abortion damages a whatever the consequence, headlines of the Nexus told and I do believe that he is conditions. Insisting that tion: that an accurate as­ woman physically and men­ in individual and private of a boycott and a possible : learn- the creator of life. the only children to whom sessment of the number of tally. Have you ever met a matters was actually “in­ public protest of the local logical This belief, however, is we will give food, shelter, legal and illegal abortions woman who, due to having flicting one’s morals on Domino’s pizza. As you are i accu- not necessary to have a education and love be the has been made. Mr. Kelsch a legal abortion, became another.” I always thought well aware, Andi, this boy­ of the basic respect for life, parti­ children who carry 50 per­ seems oblivious to the fact sterile? There are many! Try that inflicting meant to cott is spearheaded by your a. For cularly human life. And any­ cent of our genetic material that perpetrators of illegal to convince them that abor­ harm another in some way. chapter of the National Or­ arning one who has seen film of an is the epitome of “selfish­ abortions rarely provide the tion shouldn’t be outlawed. Thanks again for setting me ganization for Women. Not s and abortion being performed ness.” Taking this perspec­ Public Health Service with Talk to women who have straight. I can’t say a fetus is only have you chosen to chism, will have no doubt as to the tive, the forfeiture of the op­ information about the num­ had abortions. I have. Ten not another, but logically it punish someone monetarily ;in by presence of life in a “fetus.” portunity to procreate is ber of procedures they per­ years after having an abor­ does not mean that it is for their personal point of CSB li­ Eric, I would hope that you viewed as an “unselfish” act. form. As incidences of il­ tion: 73 percent still have another. But I could be view, you picked the wrong on the have that respect for human I am not proposing a ban on legal abortions have not flashbacks of the abortion wrong. Maybe you could person. Don’t you know le 4th life. Your letter shows just progeneration, but merely been (and can never be) mo­ process, 80 percent still “bring me past” my logical that Domino’s is a franchise adicals the opposite. I agree with offering Mr. Kelsch and the nitored, no accurate com­ think about their aborted fallacies and into this won­ owned and operated by "Black “your” idea that “dead ba­ readership a philosophical parison can be made be­ child, and listen to this: 96 derful utopia of yours where someone other than your id Ac- bies” go to heaven because point to ponder. tween the number of abor­ percent regarded their act everyone is educated into intended target, Thomas olitical it is the only alternative that An apparently “unself­ tions performed in Ventura7 of abortion as an act of . the glories of being nice and Monaghan? By this action, irchist offers any justice to this ish” case of selfishness is County before and after murder. These aren’t right- caring for eveiyone else. Andi, you are stating that Liter. It mess we have created. that of the “pro-lifer” who is abortion was made legal. wing fundamentalists, these Show me this place, or don’t people with different points s letter But to use this line of rea­ willing to adopt a child, and Now, for the sake of phi­ are women who have exer- bother spewing your gar­ of view (other than your nciples soning to justify extinguish­ so attempts to convince the losophical argument, let’s cised their right to bage about what it is to be a own) should be run out of iplyto ing a human life would lead healthy, young woman con­ assume that the total num­ “choose.” True, laws do re­ woman and have to face the business. This logic is the orance me to believe that Richard sidering an abortion to de­ ber of abortions performed strict our. freedom but they decision to have an abor­ same as me holding your ical to Ramirez wasn’t so bad after liver “tiie good.” State and in Ventura County actually are necessary to protect us. tion, for whatever reason. bank account in an aittempt deve- all. And Hitler did a won­ local child protective ser­ did increase after the proce­ Lastly: be wary of the mo­ The right to have an abor­ to force you to behave in a uggest derful favor to millions of vice agencies are overflow­ dure was made legal. Would tives of Planned Parent­ tion has increased the status manner that benefits my it may Jews. The only problem ing with older, “unwanted” Mr. Kelsch, as a philosophy hood. What is the real rea­ (god, what a chauvinistic own personal gain. ish to with your simplified view of children (a situation that or a religious studies major, son they want to keep abor- question) of women by rec­ This is terrorism, Andi, “God’s little daycare center will be greatly exacerbated if care to argue that the lives of tions legal? Money. ognizing that'they are cap­ take some time to think ab­ .ROLY in the sky” is that we don’t “pro-life” activists succeed X number of unborn fetuses Planned Parenthood makes able of deciding for them­ out it, and get your act have the right to decide who in their efforts to ban legal are more important than the millions of dollars from selves. The most dangerous together. ends up there. The fact that abortion). These “less desir­ lives of Y number of women abortions every year. I en­ place for a baby in this THOMAS C. SPURLING ct we have the ability to create able” children are waiting in who died as a result of illegal courage you to talk with wo­ world would have to be any­ human life does not give us foster homes and state insti­ abortion? Or does he men who have had abor­ where you are pontificating, the right to destroy it And tutions for adoptive parents naively assume that if abor­ tions and hear their side. I’m because then, it would have quote Eric, before you are tempted while “pro-life” proponents tion is made illegal it will sure you’ll then agree that no choice either, about Daily to submit anything for are picketing Planned cease to occur in the back we need to outlaw what to believe. One last rd staf- others to read, be sure that it Parenthood, singing “Jesus alleys of our society? abortions. question. When have you ! words does not portray you as a Loves the Little Children,” PEGGY LA CERRA STEVEN D. GIFFORD ever been pregnant? rove of valueless ass unless that is and begging women to let I would like to close by vill de- what you wish to them adopt their fetuses. If saying, in this reality, that lr right accomplish. Mr. Kelsch and other “pro­ Joelle Casteix (Daily Nexus, apriate SEAN PATRICK lifers” wish to promote un­ Freedoms Thanks Keiih “The Decision to Have an 1 read a selfish behavior, their de­ Editor, Daily Nexus Abortion is Private,” Oct. Things are getting pretty t (Daily monstrations of devotion to I would just like to thank 18), has my complete love, hot and sweaty in the Nexus :e, Oct. Selfishness life would be greatly appre­ Editor, Daily Nexus: Keith Newby (Daily Nexus, respect and friendship and Editorials office, what with lost ig- ciated by these forgotten Miss Blackshaw (Daily "Disputing the “My Body, I’m glad she had a choice. all the letters and columns >f ill- Editor, Daily Nexus: children, as well as the Nexus, “All Women Should My Right” Argument,” Oct. SEAN WALLACE we’ve been getting. So, if ^e seen Robert Kelsch (Daily homeless, th.e drug- Have the Right ta Choose 18) for bringing to my atten­ you want to write, better iscam- Nexus “Poverty, Disregard addicted, the handicapped, Yes or No,” Oct. 16), why tion and I’m sure many make it good, ‘cuz not only iressed of Law, Not Valid Excuses and the mentally-ill indivi­ don’t we have the freedom others like me, what actual Terrorism is it first come, first serve, > letter for Abortion,” Oct. 16) dual s living in our to choose to snort coke or reality is. I never realized but we’re only taking the fail to would have us believe that community. not? Because we know the that women deciding on an Editor, Daily Nexus: best. You know, the “a few ny re­ “the bottom line of abortion Mr. Kelsch might also re­ effects of coke are damaging intimate, personal and life­ Andi Blackshaw really good men” idea. person is selfishness.” It appears view his logic notes before to us physically and men­ long affecting dilemma was impresses me with her Letters should be less ter to that Mr. Kelsch, who he grabs his philosophy de­ tally. Yet there are no com­ exploitation. I guess dese­ knowledge of terrorism. than two pages, columns to sub- pursues degrees in both phi­ gree. He informs us that “in plaints to this restriction of gregation, using this logic, is Andi, hypocrites like you three to five pages, double­ n. losophy and religious stu­ Ventura County last year, our rights. People still do also exploitation of minori­ are the reason I have moved spaced, with name, phone “holy dies, has foiled to give the slightly over 49 percent of coke illegally, yet no one ties. What is really needed is from a left to right-wing aff­ number, year in school and ligious notion of “selfishness” all pregnancies were termi­ says the solution is to make to teach the wonderful iliation. Your twisted logic major. And, hey, no more ounce much concerted thought. nated through abortion” snorting coke legal. understanding of what it is fully displays itself in the handwritten letters — it 'alack One would be hard and that “before abortion The same holds true for to be a minority and the col­ Nexus (Daily Nexus, “All makes the typists mao. “own pressed to think of a more was legal, the amount of abortion. Why should we dness of trying to live in the Women Should Have the Submissions are subject bvious “selfish” act than giving abortions wasn’t even close outlaw abortion? First be­ majority society. Perhaps a Right to Choose Yes or No,” to editing for space and clar­ arson’s birth to a child, planned or to the figure.” He concludes cause abortion kills a deve­ separate state would be bet­ Oct. 16), when you were ity, but the message will oesn't otherwise, while a large per­ that there would be fewer loping child (it takes about ter for all minorities, in, say, quick to label the members never be changed. 8 Friday, October 20,1989 SPORTS Daily Nexus There’s No Place Like Home Booters Look to Tame Bears, Gauchos Kick Off ‘Final Four’ With Hayward State Claim Rights to Best in West the chance.” By Scott Lawrence teams first played in 1983. second, and our game with Mainly because four of By Dino Scoppettone “There’s a tradition be­ Staff Writer______Stiff Writer______them really (decides) who is the team’s six games to tween Berkeley and Santa number one on the West date have been played Barbara through the years, Coast. I think our rivalry The white road jerseys while donning Gaucho It’s crunch time for the and it’s a tough and good ri­ with them is really intense,” are still around — a little white. But Saturday fans UCSB wom en’s soccer valry that we have between she said. under the weather from will get the chance as team. ourselves,” said Women’s With three games left to wear, of course — but UCSB, a winner of three Last year at this time, the Coach Tad Bobak. “The go, UCSB has put together a they’ve been condemned straight, hosts the Hay­ Gauchos had compiled an players get up for this big solid 13-2 record, but a trip to a soon-to-be forgotten ward State Pioneers in eight game win streak when game. It’s like the two top to the postseason isn’t yet part of the lockerroom, be­ Harder at 1:30 p.m. they traveled to Berkeley to teams in the West meeting assured. But a win tonight ginning what will be an “Everyone is real upbeat take on the Bears. Santa (each other).” could cement the Gauchos’ off-season made longer by and practices are still in­ Barbara, which had never “There’s definitely a ri­ spot in the playoffs, al­ four weeks. tense and we’re still hun­ beaten Cal, pulled out a tie, valry on our end,” said se­ though the team must be Which means those fa­ gry,” said UCSB corner- but two days later lost to So­ nior Cindy Hawkins. "I voted in by NCAA officials. miliar weekend ventures back Darryl Thomas. noma State. That game, and don’t know what Berkeley “It’s definitely going to up the 101 are overforthis “We’re still as intense and a loss to St. Mary’s two feels, but definitely (there is) put us in a great position as year, and the 4-2 UCSB hungry as we were earlier Brian Fleming weeks later, kept the on our end. We’re ready to far as making the playoffs,” in the year when we were WR leads the Gaucho Gauchos out of the playoffs beat them.” Bobak said. “We should 1-2. .. Our biggest wins KCSB will broadcast offense with 32 despite an 11-4-1 record. Junior midfielder Laurie have it pretty well secured, have been on the road, but receptions, 457 yards So guess who’s coming to Klein feels the same. but kriowing that it’s a vot­ Saturday’s game be­ our games at home have town today? That’s right, and a 14.3 average. “I think there’s a big feel­ ing situation, one doesn’t ginning at 1:30 p.m. been pretty close, so we it’s Berkeley, a team that has ing of rivalry, because usu­ want to be 100 percent on 91.9 FM want to show our fans that compiled a record of 7-0-2 ally they finish in first and sure.” we can play well at home, against UCSB since the we’re right behind them in See RIVALS, p.10 too.” football squad will finish And they may get a out the remainder of its chance to do just that 1989 slate inside Harder against what on paper Stadium; a sort of ’Final looks to be a hapless Hay­ Four’ for the blue-and- ward club. The Pioneers, gold grid scene. members of the Northern “Yeah, the Final Four, California Conference, are that’s not a bad way to re­ 0-5 and feeling the effects fer to it," UCSB Head of numerous injuries, Coach Rick Candaele said which coincide with a prior to practice Thursday. modest rebuilding season “Anytime in this game you riddled with juniors. can write anything here to “But they’re tough,” basketball it’s good. This Gaucho running back year, we wanted to have it Chuy Ornelas assured. Fred Freking so that when we threw a Especially if tough LB leads the Gaucho long pass everyone in the means losing by an average defense with six stands would yell ‘airball,’ sacks and has 33 but we haven’t really had See FINAL 4, p.9 takcles.

GENEVIEVE FIELD/Daily Nexus LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION — Today's UCSB-Pepperdine game will be televised on Prime Ticket at 6:00. Poloists Make Cameo, Face Three Top-10 Squads During Weekend #3 Pepperdine Waves who are atop the By Craig Wong at 4-0 and have a Stiff Writer Stogriffi 15-3 overall record and handed the Gauchos an 8-7 loss two weeks ago at Santa Barbara’s Having played good enough water Campus Pool. If UC Santa Barbara wants News Authority polo to make the nation’s elite give notice any chance at toppling the Waves, some to the UCSB squad, the team now finds it­ consideration will have to be given to 1250 AM self at the crossroads this weekend. horsecollaring the three main scoring Sporting an 8-8 overall mark and a 2-3 threats of Pepperdine, Geoffrey Clark (54 Big West record, #8 Santa Barbara has goals), Sasa Poljak (51 goals) and Rafael some big choices to make as it prepares to Gandarillas (33 goals) who combined to embark on a crucial three-game road trip score six of the team’s eight goals a fort­ which could determine its fate in its mis­ night ago. sion to qualify for the NCAA tournament. Batting first against UCSB will be the See X-ROADS, p.10

Serving Prawns Nightly

Daily Nexus The Graduate GTE Mobilnet Pacific Company Santa Barbara Stone Schauer Printing Tony Rose Camera & Video Hianliyou Tailgate S Sponsors! Cluck's 3868 state St. 687-4417 Daily Nexus Friday, October 20,1989 9

Booters Try to Shake CSUF, UNLV Jinx Copeland’s Sports

By Tom Nelson Staff Writer OCTOBER

Knowing that any conference loss will ruin hopes of post­ DOORBUSTERS! season action, the UCSB men’s soccer team finds itself with SKI BLOWOUT a huge weekend ahead of it in what Big West coaches call SELECT CROUP “murderer’s row”; road games at Cal State Fullerton and UNLV. FAMOUS However, the reason the trip is considered so deadly is not because the two teams are the most talented around. MAKER Just two weekends ago, the Gauchos (second in league with a 4-1 record, 6-5-1 overall) were victorious in overtime ver­ sus Vegas and disposed of Fullerton 2-0. The Titans are cur­ rently third in the league with a 2-2-1 record while Vegas surprisingly finds itself in the conference’s lower echelon at 2-5. But before this year, no team had ever swept during the tHp. Last year, the Gauchos lost both games— 3-2 at CSUF and 5-0 at UNLV. Fresno, which leads the conference with Than Original Manufacturers a 5-0 record, recently swept the Titans and the Rebels, en­ Suggested Retail SKIWEAR A ACCESSORIES ding the jinx. SPECIAL CROUP COLUMBIA “You go to Fullerton where there’s lots of smog and n o t' FALMOUTH JACKET so good air quality and there’s not that much to do,” ex­ plained Gaucho Head Coach Andy Kuenzli. “Vegas is a STREET NEAT QALORAMA four to five hour drive from Los Angeles through the desert SUNGLASSES and then you have to focus your team on things other than gambling. So it’s not a trip people usually enjoy.” Kuenzli will not only be concerned with smog and slots this weekend, but in trying to get some goals out of the wing TONY POLLOCK/Daily Nexus position—a spot that has been nearly non-existent in terms HEAD BANGIN' - UCSB's Will Gould and r0 of goals scored in ’89. ■ ■ LESS CSUF's Don Crevoiserat will meet again tonight Than Original Mfg sug Retail 49SS Through 12 games, the midfield has scored approxi­ -UA-.umM: mately 60 percent of the team’s goals while the forwards 1 in Fullerton. SPECIAL CROUP ADIDAS FAMOUS MAKER POLYFILL JACKET have ¿hipped in 30 percent. According to Kuenzli, who has MEN'S & always been fond of statistical analysis, that number needs they really want to beat us. If we beat them it’ll be us and WOMEN'S to be closer to 50 percent production from the forwards. Fresno. Their crowd is usually pretty wild and I think WARMUPS “We basically put the challenge up to the wings and told they’re a different team at home.” Large variety Of styles a colors in the next five games we want one goal per game from one “Mathematically, there are still four or five teams in the OUR PRICE of them,” Kuenzli said. “If we get that production we have a running,” Las Vegas Head Coach Barry Barto said. “It is realistic chance at going 5-0 in the second half.” very competitive and every game is now important. (UCSB) And to catch Fresno, and possibly nab the automatic beat us in a close game at home and I'm looking forward to 50% NCAA bid which accompanies a Big West crown, Santa playing them again. I don’t think Andy (Kuenzli), (CSUF Than original Manufacturers Barbara must win the remaining games on its schedule. Coach) A1 Mistri or myself want to let Fresno just walk right 3 Suggested Retail “I think the first game against Fullerton is really impor­ in and take it.” . tant,” midfielder Tor-Erik Aasen said. “They beat UNLV But before the Gauchos can get their shot at the Bulldogs, and they really didn’t have a good game up here and I think they’ll have to end the jinx of murderer’s row.

three weeks, so if there’s go­ Hayward’s leading passer “I think our football team FINAL 4 ing to be a letdown this and rusher comes in the has learned that we just would be it.” form of 6-1, 205-pound ju­ can’t step on the field with SPECIAL CROUP SPECIAL CROUP Continued from p.8 Leaders for the Gauchos nior Tony Randall, who has some of these more physical DISCONTINUED STYLES include quarterback Steve TENNIS DELUXE of 18 points a game, includ­ 277 yards in the air (one TD Northern California teams RACQUETS ing losses of28-9,38-10 and Armstrong (60-112 for 731 and two ints), as well as 271 -and win a ball game,” Can­ AND GOLF 31-7 to Santa Clara, So­ yards, six touchdowns, four on the ground on 54 carries. daele said. “It will be the vFRAMES BAGS interceptions), who has led noma St. and UC Davis re­ But tomorrow’s probable same this week against Hay­ From the Gauchos in thqir last Wilson, spectively. But that doesn’t starter is 6-3,190-pound ju­ ward State. We’ve won Korrex seem to factor in the three wins. Brian Fleming is nior Mike Maine (64 yards; three in a row and we’re OUR PRICE ft Ajay equation. the top receiver with 32 two interceptions and no playing really well, we have "Most of our guys aren’t grabs for 457 yards and four TDs). Their leading receiver all the momentum going for 5 0 % LESS expecting them to be weak, TDs, while Ornelas leads is 6-1, 215-pound junior us, but it won’t make a bit of Than Original Manufacturers Suggested Retail 392® the team on the ground with BASEBALL & SOFTBALL CLOVES we all know they’re pretty James Jones (nine catches, difference if we don’t step SPECIAL CROUP good,” Ornelas added. 413 yards on 98 carries. De­ 120 yards), while 6-5, on the field this Saturday at "I think the fact (our play­ fensive tackle Charlie 270-pound senior Terry home and play very hard BASEBALL & ers) are talking well about Brown still leads the de­ Tracey is the leading defen­ and play with great SOFTBALL them is a good sign—I hope fense with 38 tackles, three der with 56 tackles. intensity.” GLOVES Styles From Rawlings, Mizuno, Steeles & Morel it’s a good sign,” Candaele sacks, one fumble recovery OUR PRICE said. “Actually, they have a and four pass deflections, good football team. I mean with comerback Troy Vigil 5 0 % LESS apparently it hasn’t been second in tackles at 36 and Than Original Manufacturers Suggested Retail preseason All-America line­ L.A. CEAR DOORBUSTERS good enough to win five SOUP MEN'S. WOMEN'S A KID'! games or they’d be 5-0, but backer Fred Freking leading it’s been good enough to in sacks with six. l . r . G e a f i play well every week. “When we looked at our ATHLETIC SHOES “They beat us last year schedule before the season, OUR PRICS and we have a lot of players we saw Sonoma and St. coming back, so they re­ Mary’s right in the middle,” member that, I think that’s a Armstrong said. “We knew 20% good thing. The fact they’re those would be two tough 6578 Trigo a big, physical NorCal team games, and now that we’ve — I’m always apprehensive beaten both of them, it’s gi­ Student Discount TROOP DOORBUSTERS about that because we’re ven us a lot of confidence, • Fast, professional service SPECIAL GROUP not quite as physical, so it but we need to be careful • Bicycles by Trek, Univega, Giant, Ritchey will depend on our effort not to let down at all. If we • Full lifetime warranty on all new bikes level. This is a big point in play to our capability, there our season because it’s the will be no letdown, but if we last NorCal team we play let up for just a little bit, then Air Bicycles and we’ve played well for I can see us losing games.” Open 9-8 M -F, 9-6 S at. & Sun. 968-5571

Than Original Manufacturers Suggested Retail .1 DIADORA DOORBUSTERS ÎÆMERALD Presents... FREE MEMBERSHIP 11 I SPECIAL CROUP - v $toe9 ^ : > - CALVIN $1 OFF ANY RENTAL 6545 Pardall Fid., • • • • « -X Isla Vista, CA & HOBBES OF $5 OR MORE COURT SHOES 968-6059 By Bill Watterson w/today's comic OUR PRICE HELLO? VALLEX HARDWARE? JUST THE WIRE? Ok., NO, NO, A ROTOTULER WONT 50 TE5, I'M CALLING TO SEE FORGET VT. DO 1CW RENT DO AT ALL. L NEED SOME­ % IF fCW SELL BLASTING CAPS, BULLDOZERS OR BACKHOES? THING MORE U K E A Than Original Manufacturers DETONATORS, TIMERS AND WRECKING BALL. DOfOU Suggested Retail WIRE. KNOW WHERE I COULD GET » rriw um to p p n PRICES GOOD THRU 10/25/89 ANSTWNG UKE THAT? NO? . OK, GOODBTE. Copeland’s Sports 1230 State st. Santa Barbara 963-4474 HOURS: Mon-Frl 10-9, Sat 10-7, Sun 10-6 10 Friday, October 20,1989 Daily Nexus HAPPY 21ST ELAINE SERP A!! L ost F ound Thank God you’re finally legal-now Computer Team who is averaging 6.87 we can really party! We have quite goals allowed per game. $25 REWARD for return of man’s the year ahead of us: balcony BBQs, X-ROADS "They may be a little more wedding ring. Lost Fri. Oct. 13. Countdown (yes, we are really go S e c u rity Great sentimental value. Please call ing.), dinner guests, Margarita Continued from p.8 versatile than Pepperdine in 967-4140 before 10am or after 8pm. parties, drinking in the park, road Assistant And if UCSB doesn’t watch terms of their attack,” $25 Reward-woman’s Seiko watch. trips, & GRADUATION! State G u a rd out, Rob Sutter could sneak Snyder said. “Still, the guys Lost 10/9 near bus stop or on K24 bos. Street will never be the same! IEI-I LOVE YOU. Jen SpeciaTFull Time up right behind them as he who are scoring for them are Andrea 965-6577 Computer did earlier against the around the two meter area FOUND: A pair of reading glasses Heard about all the $$ being made by Monitor personnel, prop­ at the UCen on 10/13. Contact Asher the HOTTEST MARKETING TEAM Gauchos when he scored so we’ve got to play goo d de­ around?! Their product: A erty and facilities for safety the other two points, in­ at 968-9833______fense. I think we can LOST KITTEN Revolutionary and security compliance. Technician cluding the game-winner (out)swim them just as ... I Should be willing to learn or Grey w/black stripes, four white New 3-D C a m e ra ! Part Time/On Call with 31 seconds left. feet and big, orange eyes, male. Lost be able to operate alarm think we can (out)swim Photos from reg 35mm film are on Sat. nite, Oct. 14th on Abrego. I panels and telecopiers, and We are seeking a Computer “We got a little compla­ Pepperdine.” AMAZING! Be part of the team, just cent against Santa Bar­ The third match that will really miss him! If found, please, in time for the x-mas season sales! will keep accurate records Technician to assist In the please, please call #960-9419 of activity. Position is 32 maintenance, diagnosis and bara,” Wave Assistant round up the road swing is Call Joy NOW! 562-6603______hours per week, 12 midnight repair of PC terminals, print­ Coach Dave Meyers said, #9 UC San Diego which will Special N otices 1 met you at the artwork by the to 8 a.m., Saturday, Sunday, ers and other associated referring to a 5-1 lead Pep- take place on Sunday. The lagoon, 10/17.1 enjoyed our talk but peripherals. PosiUon also Lutheran Campus Ministry Presents I'm not that good w/names. Please Monday and Tuesday, and perdine almost blew. “We Gauchos own a victory over take a chance and come to the SB involves general tasks in­ The Student Congregation. provides benefits that in­ hopefully will get a lead the Tritons, defeating them Worshiping Sunday Eve, Museum w/me. I live at San Rafael cluding configurations and clude medical, dental and again and play better against 10-6 earlier in the season. St. Michael’s Church, IV______dorm, U live in IV 562-0922______retirement plans. hook-ups. SB because they did a good It is clear that the ROLLER HOCKEY in Old Gym Sun. JOE-L THE PAST 2 MOS HAVE Stop by and complete an For Immediate considera­ job in coming back against Gauchos have played the 6:00-8:00pm . Sponsored by the BEEN WONDERFUL UR SEXY tion, please send your res­ Rolierblade dub. All welcome. BEAUTIFUL AND OWHATA BOD, application (5383 HoUister us.” nation’s top squads compe­ THE FUN NVR STPS. Avenue, Goleta, CA) or send ume to: General Research What could be an added titively, but the desire has The Estonians HAPPY 21 your resume to General Corporation, P.O. Box 6770, incentive is the fact that not been translated to the I’M ALWAYS THERE 4U. Research Corporation, P.O. Santa Barbara, CA 93160- are coming! LOVE SCREAMIN______Prime Ticket will televise scoreboard where UCSB Box 6770, Santa Barbara, CA 6770, Dept UCSB, ATTN: D. RONI- 93160-6770, Dept. UCSB, Garland, or call (805) 964- the contest tape delay at 6 has come up short by a goal We can do it! Let’s JAM thru mid ATTN: D. Garland. Equal op­ 7724, ext. 275. Equal oppor­ p.m. this evening. The ac­ in three of its last five games. terms! GOOD LUCK! portunity is our policy and tunity is our policy and our tual match has also been re­ A Big West split doesn’t do 9 6 8 -2 8 6 2 -IRENE ______our practice, M/F/H/V. practice, M/F/H/V. scheduled for 3 p.m. in Ma­ Santa Barbara a whole lot of Seana & Julie libu today for interested good because two squads HAPPY BIRTHDAY YOU GUYS! GENERAL GENERAL Gaucho fans. (in all likelihood) will go to ¿iso:* GET PSYCHED TO PARTY “It’s a good opportunity the NCAAs from the league. f f o o d ______TONIGHT!______RESEARCH RESEARCH for us,” Head Coach Pete A backdoor entrance to the Thanks for returning Tabino! ¿Alternative After ’’the Big One” one can only CORPORATION CORPORATION Snyder said. “I think we’re postseason is possible if hope that catastrophies cease and fortunate because Prime Santa Barbara can come up that the Evil Stevil persevere as Ticket rarely ever comes up with victories versus Pac-10 the event that made Satan crumble! from, the Jungle-dudes & Satanas! this direction. Being on t.v., schools at the Long Beach presents we just have to go out and Invitational next week. If ‘The TIM COLLIER play it like a regular game.” UCSB has four losses Happy B-day from your little roomie Following Pepperdine pinned on it in conference One Love Janey. You’re a great guy!! UCSB WOMEN’S SOCCER TEAM will be an even tougher test, after this coming weekend, (*3NCAA): the nation’s top ranked the lights could be out, the words to live by against the bear- team, UC Irvine, which party over. Vibration They can’t win if they don’t score! meets the Gauchos on Sa­ Live Hi-ßgae Offense: Do that “MAGIC” shit! “We’re just trying to focus Fran the active alumni...Schritter turday. The ’Eaters carry a on our one game on Friday,” ‘Tonight 9pm VS. BERKELEY (WHO?) FRIDAY 15-2 overall mark with an Snyder said. “We’ve got to 7:00P.M. ______' ” ' unblemished 3-0 confer­ do what we need to do to WE’RE HERE! The Spirits, Ghosts, ence record to go with it and win that game.... We can’t P ersonals and Goblins have invaded ST. MARK’S. It’s the scariest Haunted have talent all around the afford to look past a single Church in IV. For the brave ones; pool. game. I’m not so worried ab­ April Finnila THANKYOU FOR A WONDERFUL the doors creak open at 7pm with a Senior Tom Warde has out what’s going to happen YEAR!!! LOVE YOU SO MUCH. dance going until 12mid. TONIGHT piled up 49 goals while Ju­ four, five, or six weeks down LOOKING FORWARD TO MANY E ntertainment lian Harvey has racked up the road. We’re just think­ MORE. MICHAEL______40 tallies. The supporting ing about now. We’ve got ASIAN-INTEREST SORORITY CAPTAIN DAN'S SAILING cast consists of Pablo Yrizar guys who are playing real Starting. CRUISES Full Day $50. Evening $25. First meeting-Chi Delta Theta ISLAND WEEKEND $100. (34 goals) and a name on the well and some injuries to UCen rm.3 Friday Oct 20 at 5:30pm PRIVATE CHARTERS (6 persons max) 8200/dav. 962-4671.______all-soap-opera team, Skylar overcome. We’re looking at All WELCOME info? 968-6139 Alison Putnam (31). In goal is teams ranked above us so ATTENTION SKI CLUB S trip Oh G ram s M/F Exotic Dancers Chris Duplanty, a member we’ve got not a lot to lose This weeks FAC party is going to be m-oi6i of the 1988 U.S. Olympic and a lot to gain.” at 6619 Del Playa #1,6:00pm Don’t miss it! H e lp W anted BWM, 22, VERY MASC. SEEKS VERY MASC MUSCULAR, MALE CASUAL POSITION Being at home is always a WHO IS A UCSB STUDNT18-25. Part-time position. $8.29 per hour. great benefit and to our ad­ REPLY TO PO 14245 UCSB SB Re gistration of Extension students RIVALS 93107. FRAT GUYS WELCOME! at class openings in Santa Barbara vantage. Also, we really like Continued from p.8 Catholic T-Shirt day this Monday! and UCSB. Evenings and weekends. playing at night,” said mid­ Show your support and wear your T- Assorted office duties, week-days UCSB is playing at fielder Kiersten Taub. Shirts.______.______with flexible hours/on call basis. Applicants should send Resume to Harder Stadium after finish­ “There’s just some kind Feeling down? You are the most University Extension, 6550 Hollister ing a three game road trip, of aura in playing at home at impt. person in your life! Don’t miss Ave., Goleta, CA 93117, Attn: including two matches m night. Having a lot of fans the ’’First Love”, Learning to Love Program Services. UCSB is an North Carolina. The out there, like they would be Your self Wkshp! Mon. 10/23-at 6:30 Equal Opportunity/Affirmative pm, Free! Rm 1340 Counseling & Employer. Proof of U.S. Citizenship Gauchos are glad to be the twelfth person on the Career Services, Given by the Stress or eligibility for U!S. employment home, due in part to the field, it makes a lot of differ­ Peers______will be required prior to em­ team’s 7-0-0 record in ence,” added Klein. FOOTBALL: ployment (Immigration Reform and Harder. The Gauchos will tty to Another WIN! U guys R Control Act of 1986) ______“I think (playing at home) find that aura tonight at AWESOME! LEVEL Hayward at Delivery Driver Wanted. Close to Harder Stadium this weekend! campus. Good Environment. Call will make a big difference, 7:00. -IRENE 968-3663 for information. GRAND OPENING SALE! Lowest Prices Guaranteed In Our Area! CdebraU FUTONS! FUTONS! Economical From the choice is yours Cotton Futons $ 1 1 9 « C O TTO N futons with high Fro m $ 4 4 95 density FO AM COR E for extra 2 p V TODAY r - ^ support and comfort, Futons are economical, practical, frames: some assembly required You're invited to a ^ easy to store, great for overnight guests and are recommended by chiropracters. MOOKTA1L PARTY All frames convert to sit, sleep or lounge. ^r- Get a free drink and The Tahoe SOLID BOOKCASES Sleeper learn how to make your own Avail, in Pine, Frame & 7/2 at Storke Plaza f O ak, A lder Futon 1:30-2:30 from *33“ Avail, in standard sizes run *239“ Drawing for Prizes donated by: Acapulco Restaurant, Buchanan Motor Works, The Can­ ALSO ON SALE: Futon Covers from *29“ • Bean Bags from ♦18“ tina, Dave's Market, Giovanni's, Isla Vista Oriental Comforters • Lamps • Shoji Screens • Tables • Rugs • Silk Plants & More! Market, La Jicora Restaurant, The Leather Guild of Isla Vista, Lickity Split, Morning Glory Music, M.S. Brenner Hair Studios, Rental Net­ FUTON FACTORY OUTLET work, Rock House, Sam's To Go, The Smart checks Cookie, Student Body, Top Shop Automotive 5748 Hollister Ave MC/VISA 209 West Anapamu Downtown

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he space shuttle the Santa Barbara Channel. Atlantis launched In the third accident, an T without incident RTG from the aborted Wednesday,„despite efforts Apollo 13 mission landed in BRIEFS by environmental groups to the Tonga Trench in the Pa­ block its controversial cific Ocean and remains Cold Fusion Still flight. there still. At issue in the launch was JPL’s Doyle said that Stumps Scientists the radioactive power G alileo RTG’s are the only option source for the Galileo for the Galileo spacecraft. spacecraft, an unmanned The weight of batteries for The “cold fusion” laboratory reaction satelite aboard the shuttle Galileo’s six-year is a mystery that unmistakably produces that will study the atmo­ mission would be prohibi­ heat and merits more research, though it sphere, magnetic field and tive and solar panels are not is unlikely ever to be a useful energy moons of the planet Jupiter feasible because the power source, scientists said this week. during its six-year mission. collected decreases signific­ John Appleby of Texas A&M arid Galileo is the most ad­ antly as the spacecraft gets Paul C.W. Chu of the University of vanced unmanned space­ A w ay farther away from the sun, Houston, co-chairmen of the closed craft ever built and will he said. conference on cold fusion, said Wed­ travel more than 2 billion nesday some new, unpublished experi­ miles during the course of During its mission, Gali­ ments discussed in private by about 50 its lifetime. leo will systematically make scientists showed that the cold fusion Several environmental passes past Venus, Earth, an apparatus developed at the University of groups argued that the asteroid, Earth again and Utah can show an unexplained produc­ craft’s plutonium power another asteroid before tion of heat. source poses a threat to life heading for its primary goal But it still is unclear if the reaction is on Earth and, in the event of of Jupiter and its moons. chemical, nuclear or some previously an accident, could cause Before reaching Jupiter, unrecognized phenomenon. The conference sponsors, the Na­ thousands of deaths. however, Galileo will sepa­ NASA spokesman Joe rate into two parts: an orbi- tional Science Foundation and the McRoberts said that NASA ter and an atmospheric Electric Power Research Institute, origi­ has performed extensive re­ probe. The probe will de­ nally did not plan to announce any con­ views of the controversial scend through Jupiter’s at­ clusions. But in response to requests power pack and that there mosphere and relay infor­ from repprters, Chu, Appleby and three was no sense in further mation back to the orbiter other scientists held a news conference. discussion. about the temperature, In a prepared statement, Chu said “It’s safe and that’s about pressure, and composition that “new, positive results in excess heat the size of it,” he said. of the planet’s atmosphere. production and nuclear product genera- At the heart of the debate The orbiter will in turn relay tion have been presented and are Galileo’s two radioiso­ By Michael Seijfert , Reporter the data back to Earth, in reviewed.” tope thermoelectric genera­ nomic Trends filed suit against powered satellites necessary for the addition to gathering data tors (RTG’s). NASA in Washington Federal Dis­ Strategic Defence Initiative. on Jupiter’s intense magne­ Ozone Studied As RTG’s employ a radioac­ trict Court. U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch tic field and moons. tive material, in this case Christie Institute representative denied the environmentalists’ suit, After beginning its des­ plutonium-238, which re­ Robert Richie said that his group’s however, and refused to issue a tem­ cent, the atmospheric probe Galileo Speeds On leases heat as it decays. The lawsuit was based on omissions from porary restraining order to delay the will only last about 75 mi­ A healthy Galileo spacecraft sped un­ heat is converted into NASA’s Environmental Impact launch. nutes before it is destroyed erringly toward distant Jupiter on electricity to power the craft Statement for the flight. The U.S. has launched 22 space­ by Jupiter’s high pressure Thursday, while the five orbiting astro­ through a device called a "We think so many questions have craft prior to Galileo that have been and temperature. The orbi­ nauts who released it measured the thermocouple. come up that need to be answered powered with RTGs. The Voyager ter, however, has an ex­ threatened ozone layer that is Earth’s The two RTG’s on Gali­ more fully,” he said. spacecraft, which recently returned pected lifetime 22 more natural sunscreen. leo produce approximately Florida Coalition spokesman stunning pictures of the planet Nep­ months and may last longer, Racing along at more than 9,000 mph, 500 watts of electricity, or Marcello Blanco said that people tune, employed an RTG similar to the NASA said. the probe by midaftemoon was more about the same needed to had already been hurt as a result of type aboard the Galileo spacecraft. Scientists are interested than 200,000 miles out on its power five household light the U.S. Department of Energy’s pro- Of the 22 U.S. launches of RTG’s, in Jupiter and its moons be­ 2.4-billion-mile, eight-year journey to bulbs. cause they resemble a mini­ study the largest planet in the solar sys­ Environmental groups ature solar system. By tem in search for clues to how the uni­ are especially concerned be­ During its mission, Galileo will systematically make understanding the compos- verse began. cause plutonium is ex­ tion of the Jovian system, Galileo was dispatched from Atlantis’ tremely toxic and if vapor­ passes past Venus, Earth, an asteroid, Earth again scientists hope to gain in­ cargo bay Wednesday night, 61/2 hours ized and properly dispersed and another asteroid before heading for its primary sight into the formation and after the shuttle was launched from over the planet could kill goal of Jupiter and its moons. evolution of our solar Cape Canaveral. NASA officials re­ thousands of people. system. ported Thursday the craft was in “per­ NASA’s contends that Galileo’s flight trajectory fect shape” and “right on course.” the safeguards they have ta­ from the Earth toward Jupi­ Atlantis was also reported in “excel­ ken will prevent the pluto­ cessing of radioactive materials such there have been three accidents. ter can only be described as lent condition” by Mission Control after nium from being vaporized as those used in Galileo. The first, in 1964, occurred when a wacky. Called the Venus- the crew members successfully restored and dispersed even in the “I don’t feel I can trust NASA,’r Navy navigational satellite burned Earth-Earth-Gravity-Assist a cooling system that shut down Wed­ event of a shuttle disaster. Blanco said, adding that because up re-entering the Earth’s atmo­ (VEEGA) and maneuver by nesday when it overheated. Jim Doyle, Public Infor­ thousands of lives are potentially at sphere, dispersing its radioactive NASA scientists, the series A new shuttle experiment used a sen­ mation Representative for stake, the space agency should not contents above the Indian Ocean. of close planetary fly-bys is sitive instrument in the cargo bay to NASA’s Jet Propulsion La­ launch the craft even with a minimal In the other two accidents, the designed to give the space­ measure sections of the Earth’s ozone boratory, said that approxi­ potential for danger. RTG’s remained intact and did not craft enough speed to make layer, an area of the upper atmosphere mately $50 million had been Blanco further said that Wednes­ release their radioactive contents. it to Jupiter. which protects Earth from most of the spent on developing the day’s launch was an attempt by the One of these accidents occurred in The spacecraft, which sun’s ultraviolet radiation. current RTG system and government to make people comfort­ a 1968 launch of a NASA weather was deployed from the There is global concern over deple­ that it had been determined able with having radioactive material satellite from Vandenberg Air Force space shuttle Atlantis Wed­ tion of the ozone layer, and many peo­ to be safe. in space and that it was a stepping Base. The satellite failed to reach or­ nesday, is currently headed ple fear its destruction will cause a rise Among the safeguards in­ stone to the launch of future nuclear bit resulting in two RTG’s landing in toward Venus and will loop in such human health problems as skin cluded in the RTG design around it, gaining speed in cancer. are making ceramic pellets GALILEO'S PATH TO JUPITER the process, and head back of the plutonium, encasing toward Earth. them in the strong metal iri­ Galileo will then swing Firm Restores Info dium and two layers of gra­ past Earth gaining speed phite fiber, and surrounding again, make one revolution all of this with metal and a around the Sun and then for S.F. Businesses fiberglass-like material. slingshot past Earth once Only hours after a catastrophic earth­ The multiple layers are more before heading to quake struck San Francisco, phones be­ meant to contain the pluto­ Jupiter. gan ringing at a Pennsylvania-based nium in the event of an acci­ company that offers data restoration for dent. NASA has tested the The original design of the companies whose computer systems encased pellets in experi­ Galileo spacecraft called for fail. ments designed to simulate a liquid fuel Centaur rocket Sungard Data Systems Inc., and com­ a violent explosion such as booster to send it on a more panies like it, stand to reap huge profits the one that destroyed the direct path toward Jupiter, from the quake’s destruction, which space shuttle Challenger. but a design review after the caused widespread power outages and NASA said that the prob­ Challenger space shuttle ex­ jeopardized the computer databases of ability of an accident result­ plosion concluded that a insurance and financial institutions. . ing In riie release of pluto­ liquid fuel rocket in the Five such companies in San Fran­ nium ranged trom 1 ill 2,5^0 shuttle bay would present cisco paid Sunguard as much as $25,000 to 1 in 2 million. But a Fed­ an unnecessary additional each and sent back-up data tapes by eral Interagency Nuclear risk becuase of the volatility plane to the firm’s Philadelphia office to of the fuel tra h in L ] - Safety Review Panel deter­ L/Iv o w t v vuiudUlC LUm puivi j/ivgiu»» mined that a launch pad ex­ Galileo now uses a more designed to operate automatic teller ma­ plosion could result in 80 stable, uu! ]ess powerful, chines and other vital operations, Sun- cancer deaths from the re­ solid fuel rocket to boo&t'! miard’s manager Susan Hetzel said. lease of plutonium. away from Earth. The 6~“We are not Hetzel. said. To block Galileo’s rocket is not strong enough “Most of our clients contracted wiui L* launch, the Christie Insti­ to send the spacecraft to long before this earthquake. It’s just that tute, the Florida Coalition Jupiter, however, forcing scientists to develop the we are in the sort of business where it for Peace and Justice and helps to be prepared. the Foundation of Eco- VEEGA strategy.