" .. ', .. ,',.' ....' ... .' .~ .. ";'-'~ J;» SPf,·(:. Co.1.1. 1) LD72g.6 C5 075 (A "~, \ ') , Orion rchives) i. 18:5 See pages 17-24 for the ~1ar 4/ 1987 Received on: 03-04-87 Orion's special pull-out MERIAM LIBRARY--CSU, CHICO section on the upcoming Associated Students election.

( 1 \ ( 1.\ BMU expansion probable reason ";' 1 r

)' A constitution II, , I :1 ~ay be changed n "

photo by Tim Rowe by Thomas Rank and DaVid Hawkins " Basketball Fan - Art Acker congratulates , •••J women's wildcat basketball coach Fran CosIo! on ,"-"" -;., their victory Saturday. :, At, y:~s~C!yf1.~,:>,:~~eetingthe Associated Students Board of Directors approved 'f -.... changes in the AS constitution to bovotedon by Chico State students in next week's The Wildcats defeated UC Davis, 65·58 in double general election. ,r ovortlme. The AS, in their attempt to approve a BMU addition, want to bypass student I The Wildcats received their first post-season bid petitions in order to hold a referendum election. I to play in the NCAA Division II Championships. ( A referendum is a student initiative, or The constitutional changes were authored measure previously passed by the BOD, by John Noele, AS director of community Chico State will be riding a 10-game winning affairs, and a candidate for AS president._ :j which is submitted to the student body for : \ streak, including 16 of their last 17, into Satur­ approval or rejection. Nock initially thought a new section would day's contest. If a majority of students approve the have to be added to the constitution to house changes, the BOD will be able to hold a his amendment. He spoke with Dr. Royce referend'Jm election by a simple majority or Delmatier, chair of the political science two-thirds vote of the executive board, department, requesting that Delmatier without requiring student petitions. establish a new section title: "Voluntary, Currently, a referendum requires signatures Referendum. " from 10 percent of the student body for such "Whatever happens, we'll go by the book," an election to take place. said Herman Ellis director of student ac­ The AS has stated its intent to hold a tivities and lias on to AS government officers. referendum election on the BMU expansion Since the AS is a corporate body as well as a later, this semester, but no petitions have been student organization, they must follow circulated to justify such an action. corporate and constitutional guidelines, and If the constitutional changes are opproved state and federallaws. by the student body the BOD will be able to Ellis said he spolte with AS attorney Jeff authorize a BMU election. Carter and was told a neVi section to the Additionally, the BOD approved a Student constitution was unnecessary, and all that Union Board resolution that allocates $20,000 was required was a rewording of the for "an educational campaign" aimed at paragraph defining how a referendum informing students about the results of a measure is eotablished. survey recently commissioned by the AS, The proposed amendment comes one year costing $4000. Other general information after a complete revision of the constitution about the BMU expansion, and the fee in­ took place_ (In 1986, a constitution revision creases students will be required topayifthe committee chaired by then-AS President Sue BMU addition is approved, will also be See Referendum Page 10 releosed.

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Counselors maxhnize resources the system-wide level therc's nevcr been a separate staffing formula for advising, yet St~fing shortage academic advising continues dispite this," said Graham. "It grew out of counseling because some counselors were more hinders students specialized in academic arens, while others were more specialized in personal coun­ by Sora Chambers seling and career center. "This seling." Staff Writer situation continues until the end Graham said he doesn't see the of the semester." split of the two services as a Don Graham, director of the problem. Chico State counselors at the center, agrees that difficult.ies' "Advising is certainly counseling and career center, arc taking place. valuable to students and it needs faced with a shortage of staff "It's a continuing struggle to to be provided, but it would be and limited funding, are stret­ keep retraining ourselves to nice if, at the system·wide level, ching their resources to .meet meet the needs of the student people would recognize a growing student needs. body," said Graham. separate staffing formula for Although Chico State's "We can't meet everyone's advising." . student population has grown needs, but we feel with the Graham and Raker agree that significantly, there hasn't been resources we have we do a lot of another factor in the high an increase in the counseling good, and a student can get some demand for counseling services staff in the past few years, said valuable help and support for on campus arc cutbacks in Betty Lou Raker, vice president any issuc they're dealing with," mental health services within the of student affairs. asserted Graham. community. There are close to 15,000 Wilile more staff would help, "What has happened over the students enrolled at Chico State, Graham says it may not be the past 15 to 20 years is that Students Without Teachers Paul Marones,. but only 20 counselors to serve best solution to the problem mental health services have assistant director of the counseling and career center, them. since student affairs must divide suffered cutbacks locally. state­ "Usually about the fourth their allotted budget and wide and even nationally. So college counselors are faced with "Broken homes, economic week we experience what we call staffing between the counseling there isn't the kind of the problem' of trying to meet the issues, finacial aid problems, and 'the crunch,' when there arc lots center and other student ser­ psychological support that used needs of thousands of students." global issu'es add another layer' more students than appointment vices. He suggested new staf­ to exist in communities," said Graham said there arc in­ of stress to students in school," times," said Paul Morones, fing formulas might be helpful. Graham. "What we end up creasing societal pressures assistant director of the coun- "In our case, for instance, at with is a situation in which causing stress to students. see counselors, page 10. Lottery money. delays Cci __ S:8 u,,~ertain de'cisions \ , , by Becky Johnson distinguished visiting professor Staff Writer program." Ten percent or less of the lottery money will go into the The Education Policies endowment fund to gain interest, Committee, a sub-committee of depending on what is remaining the faculty senate at Chico once funds have been dispersed State, held a meeting last , to the other three categories. Thursday to take final action as Based on past situations, it's to how and where discretionary unlikely any funds will be left lottery revenues will be allocated over, said Spear. on campus. Now that the EPC has mnde Thirty-six million dollars has its final, recommendation on been budgeted out of lottery where it believes lottery funds revenues for the 19 CSU cam­ would prove most beneficial to puses this year. Chico State, it is up to the Benate "Chico State is expected to and ultimately President Wilson receive a little over $1 million," to give final approval. said Gordon Fercho, vice "Since the decision is very president of business and ad- . tentative before the semite takes ministration. I!.-_...;;.;;;a action, we will hold on to the There's a problem system­ document until the Chnncellor's wide, however, with lottery Lottery Maney - Coming In but where Is It going? Paul Spear, chair of Education office decides whether they are funds falling short of the ex­ Policies Committee. -, going to give us money in pected $12 million goal for the for future plans until it's !mown we receive for the next fiscal year remnining funds will go into categories or in a block," said first hnlf of the 1986-87 fiscal how much money the lottery will exceed the amount we categories for special programs, Spear_ year, explained Fercho. actunlly brings in for this fiscal received last yel11'," said Dennis such as the proposed upgrading Currently, lottery money is The stllte "university system year, Hefner, a member of the com­ of the sound system in Harlen distributed by category, with hilS only netted $6 million in the The university's allotment has mittee. . Adams Theater. A slmlliar each section allotted a certain loot six months. varied from its earliest dispersal The largest put of the money, amount will be spent for the ptlrcentage of the funds. "Our committee was - given in August 1986 to the most 60 percent, will be allocated to visiting professors, scholars lind The Boud of Trustees will unallocated monles and it ;VIIS current allocations, explained the enhllJlcement of existing I11'tists program, to support the take action in May to limit the our decision which percentages Fercho. instruction III programs, and costs, of bringing accomplished categories, on a system·wide would be put mto each of four Last year Chico State was would be used to upgrade such individuals to campus. baois. categories," said Paul Spel11', allocated 1188,000 In programs as the exercise Said Fercho, "I think one of The state lottery, which hllo­ chair olthe EPC. discretionlll'Y funds. physiology lab in the physical the most exciting and certainly boon in effect for two yearll, has , The committoo is denling with "We (EPC) arc hoping the education department. the most visible thing to come no pattern in Its dispersement of unspecified amounto of money. amount of discretionary funds Ten to 80 percent of the out of lottery funding is the funds to the 19 CSU campuses. ,March4,1987------____...... ______the OrioTl ______------'3

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Leaflets called 'tasteless' and 'disgusting' I t University officials angered by distribution '\

by Thomas Rank University also has the right to Staff Writer limit such expressions if it in­ terferes with the educational process, such as the disruption of Advertisements of classes. questionable taste were stapled Claiming they weren't to Chico State billboards Friday responsible for the design of the morning, "disgusting" campus ad, the Top Flight Bnllroom wns administrators and members of a confronted with objections to campus support group for the flyer. women. "We are just as much a victim The flyer, promoting the local of this as anybody," said Scott band Control, depicts a woman Thomsen, bookkeeper and bound and tied to a chair with director of promotional affairs the word KUNTROLL written I for Top Flight. across the page. Thomsen explained the Top Members of Education and Flight didn't know about the nd Support Programs for Women until after it was posted by wrote a formal complaint ex­ members of Contro!. pressing their outrage that such "It's unfortunate for us and an explicit flyer would be ac­ them that the band came up with cepted by the university. an ad that was offensive and in The letter was attached to one poor taste," said Thomsen. of the flyers and delivered to The flyer is actually a com­ Chico State President Robin posite of other advertisements. Wilson who called the flyer ESPW The photo of the woman is a "disgusting" and was "appalled furniture ad from ITlterview by such blatant exploitation of The legality of taking the say this is really too sleazy," pro aches infringements of such magazine', and the Top Flight women." . flyers down was brought to the said Wilson of the verbal ap' rights with "great trepidation." logo and drink prices arc from a ,"This (flyer) is a prime attention of Wilson who said, "If proval. - "To the degree that I have local publication. example of what we are the flyer had been authorized, "Even if they were stamped we some nbility to maim rules about Greg Gee, guitarist/vocalist educating against," said Cheryl they shouldn't have done it. If it would have to post the flyers," what happens, on campus, I for Control, submitted a letter to Harrison, director of ESPW. wasn't stamped they're perfectly said Parenti. "It's not my policy; believe I can ban advertising the Orion npologizing to those Kim Perry, founder and free to tear it down." it's the university's." that I feel is salacious or not in who took offense to their ad and president of the Chico chapter of The flyers didn't have an University policy brings up the best interests of the student pointed out that future ads for the National Organization of approval stamp because the the ques~i~n of censorship. .' body," said Wilson. the band won't include any Women, and currently serving device use'd for stamping Concrete policies haveri"t been "Depictions of sadomasochism similiar graphics that were an internship with ESPW, felt publicity items broke last catablilihed by" 'i1hlco, State arc well beyond what is tasteful viewed as being objectionable. ,~, violated and assaulted by the Tuesday said Sally Parenti, concerning offensive' advJrtising on a college campus." - The apology extended to the flyer. Information Center coordinater. on campus. And although the "The constitution doesn't stop Top Flight for any em­ I "I was in favor of letting the However the flyers were First Xmendment extends to the at the gates of the university," barrassment or interruption in j flyers stay up to let them speak posted by Control band members university protecting student said Rick _ Rees. associnte business the flyer may have for themselves," said Perry, but after verbal approval was given rights of free speech, it doesn't director of student activities. caused. I she admitted a few of the flyers by a student employee iJf the necessarily protect offensive I According to Roos, the President Wilson said he will were ripped from some of the information center. advertising. campus has the right to regulate ask the AS to write a strongly· } kiosks that had more than one "I would think that-somebody Wilson, a thorough supporter time, place, and manner of free worded letter to whoever flyer attached. else looking at this (flyer) would of the First' Amendment, nil" speech, but not content. The published the ad. i

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,::r1 ;'4 ~"'!'-'~~~~~~,~,~,~, ~,,":'.~,~, ,~,~~-~~~,.~"~,,~,,,-,-, -, ---tlzeOrioll------,-, -, ,_,a, -, ., ,-, .. , -. ,-, .. , -, ,-,-, -, ~'",Mar~h 4, ~,9871 -LOCAL 'White Paper' initiated AS-university agreement reaches first year by Brion Tipton allocated on a percentoge basis for funds must direCtly benefit Jesse said none of the campus The Instructionol 1m· Staff Writer to three committees. The students socially, educationally, enrichment funds hove been provement Fund is used to mojority of the money, 40 professionolly or ~ulturolly. alIocoted. His committee is finance faculty workshops. The percent, is 'allocoted to the The committee hOB spent prioritizing the proposols it's nine·member Instructional Two years ogo the Associoted Student Enrichment Fund, and 82,000 on two proposals ap­ received, and expects to allow Improvement Committee - six Students and Chico Stote sg percent eoch to Compus proved in November. plonned expenditures later this foculty and three students University established an Enrichment and Instructional Nearly all of this omount, spring. oppointed by the AS president, ogreement in which university Improvement funds. $1,800, was spent on computer Current funding proposals of including the choir - has spent progroms received revenues In the fl1'st year of the software for the electricol the nine·member committee $6,000 of its original $24,000 to from some AS operations. agreement, $32,000 has gone engineering deportment and'the include the planting of cherry poy for doy·long workshops The agreement followed the 'toward the student enrichment remaining $200 went to pay for trees at each comer of the intended to improve foculty release of a letter by university programs, and $24,000 each to some English tutors. boundary of the original IS-acre teaching abilities. " President Robin Wilson dubbed the other two funds, These expenses were approved cherry orchord donoted to the Three of the workshops - two the "White Paper." There are only two principles because the proposals "were state by the Bidwells to con· >, held eorly lost semester and one 'I The AS is now required to guiding the expenditures from mode by students for students," struct Chico State, a fountoin for :1 held during intersBssion - f- contribute a percentage of its these funds. explained McElfresh. Future the rose garden, wall benches to ,I focused on how students loom. :! profits from the bookstore ond First, such funds should allocations of the remaining be installed in lecture buildings, The workshops were ottended by i food service operotions to a generally be used to finance $32,000 will be decided in the picnic tables to be ploced on the t" designated Campus Service projects not eligible for funding campus, ond the enlargement nearly 76 foculty members from ; next few weeks. various departments on compus, '\ Fund. or that are insufficiently funded The Compus Enrichment Fund and refurbishing of the Taylor explained Dr. Steve BeMiller, Since there were no specific by other compus resources. And is used to support small·scale Art Gallery professor of ,mothematics and guidelines regarding how the secondly, because these funds physical improvements and is The committee is composed of coordinator of foculty money should be spent, the sub- are likely to fluctuate, they available for campus· wide two faculty members appointed professional development. committees of the fund are shouldn't support ongoing or projects beneficial to a "sub· by the foculty senate, two stoff The committee also 'brought making their own recom' repetitive programs. stantial portion" of the academic members oppointed by the stoff Able Fink, a· professor from mendations. The moin criteria for ex· cammunity. council, three students op· "We're atillsearching for ways peilllitures by the seven·member "Proposals for funding must pointed by AS boord members, Sunny College, at Buffalo, New of determining how the money Student Enrichment Committee be physical improvements of the one member oppointed by the York, to Chico Stote. He focused should be spent," said Brian - five students appointed by AS compus with high visibility, and university president, one olumni on the uso of role-ploying ond McElfresh, AS controller a!ld board members and two non· must be widely used by the oppointed by the olumni council, dromo in the clossroom to help chair of the Student Enrichment students appointed by the campus community," said Jim plus the choir oppointed by the teoch students. BeMiller expects Committee. university president, plus the Jesse, chair of the Compus university president ond the AS to see more workshops offered The Campus Service Fund is chair - is the program applying Enrichment Committee. president. this spring. City chief of police recounts Pioneer'Days disruptibns by Brian Tipton such disturbances. Bullerjohn, 86·90 percent of the Staff Writer However, Chico's growth has people arrested during the week put a strain on the police are from outside the city. deportment. In the last ten years "We're not here' to worry .Tohn Bullerjahn, Chico's chief the population has increased obout the majority," soid of police, says relations between from 22,000 to 33,000 residents, Bullerjohn. "It's the five percent the city ond Chico Stote but the increase in police'officers who won't comply with the low students have changed over the has been minimal. thllt we have to look out for." years, but Pioneer Doys remains "Our resources are beginning Despite such incidents, the a problem. to feel stretch marks," says police chief doesn't believe Chico Bullerjahn questions to what Bullerjahn. Stote will suspend Pioneer Doys. extent the university is This year Bullerjohn will "It's not for us to decide how responsible for the actions of its celebrote his tenth year as the much disruption is allowable students. city's chief of police. During his during Pioneer Weell," he said. "Since the University attracts term he has experienced some "The community decil!es thot." students to the community, major problems during Pioneer Bullerjohn notes thllt com· what responsibility does Chico Days. ploints from loco I residents have State have in policing its Lost yeor 0 porty ot Fifth declined in recent years. students off·campus?" he asks. Street Monor, nicknomedi'fhe The police deportment will "I hope we can continue Zoo,' become so uncontrolloble continue using undercover moving in the same direction as police officers hod to be coiled in. operations to 'l Jntrol illeglll the last couple years, and keep "What hoppened ot 'The Zoo' olcohol usage by underoge Tun year veter£ln - Chico PolleD Chiof John the disruption (from parties) to a can be ottributed to 011 the stUdents. manageable level." energy students hod, in their Bullerjohn soys the most Bullorjahn plannod to stav in Chico for flvo voars, but ho Bullerjahn says that in the systems at thot point in the importont thing about Pioneer likod it so mUCh, he staved. . majority of situations when semester," soys Bullerjahn. Days·related parties is for his students are confronted by "Some oir hod to be let out of the deportment to moke sure thot be orrested for drunk·driving. He Fridoy, and Soturdoy nights. police, there are few real tire." He believes there is one no serious injuries occur. But on referred to a young woman who problems that occur. The polico deportment com. mojor event eoch year where additionol concern is drunk wos chorged with 0 DUI lost "'I'liere' "imiiiit many com· pensotes for this by reducing the students "let off some steam." driving. . semester for riding 0 bike while number of officers from the munities where it's necessary to The incident at Fifth Street "I moy look the other woy intoxicoted during 0 "bar cycle" average four or five per shift, to send only two cops to respond to Monor was also reloted to the when someone is drunk, but not event. one or two during normally quiet a complnint about a party," said high level of people from out of if they intend to drive," he soys. Bullerjahn says students hours, thereby increosing the Bullerjohn, noting that no of· town who travel to Chico for He explains thot it isn't obsorb on inordinate omount of number to seven or eight on busy ,ficers have ever been injured at Pioneer Days. According to necessary to be driving a cor to an officer's time on Thursday, nights. :' I I :' \ • t , , , , , , •• f , t • ~ , , • f I , ... " } '. " , r I I I,' I ' I ! ••• I • I, \,' ~, .... J " " l' I March 4, 1987 . th~ On'~~ " . , \ . ) J, • I ~ I • ~ • I I l , I • I , I , J l I • I, • , I ' • I ~ , • \ , ".,., ...... ,~ h -LOCAL r Warner St. AS sponsors cab.. I I changes eervice for students \ probable 'and local bars by Mary Anne Nowak It will 'also provide a way home By Michele Evans Staff Writer for those students who don't Staff Writer wish to ride with a drunk driver Fab Cab is an attempt by the and have been left at a bar. , Associated Students and local Cannon got the idea for the After 15 years nnd numerous watering holes to keep drunk program last November after studies, the city of Chico is now drivers ofr'the road. visiting a friend in Davis. She posed to begin solving the traffic This pilot program would recognized a need for a simular and pedestrian problems of the allow students who have had too progl'Om in Chico and presented portion of Warner Street that much to drink or have been her idea to Larkin and Austin. goes through campus. stranded at a bar to call upon the Since then the three have been In a recent meeting, the city cab service to drive them home. working to get Lhe program off council ordered city plnnners to § The program was designed by the ground. .ll Gen Cannon, chair, committee According to Larkin and draft a series of proposals for the 5 future of Warner Street. 'll on arts and lectures, Anne- Cannon the response from the "At this point, the project to ~ Marie Larkin, AS executive vice bars they have approached - fully complete and landscape, e president, and Phoebe Austin, The Madison Bear Garden and with minimal signals, is ] director of Bacchus, a campus The Gl'Oduate - has been very somewhere in the neighborhood " organization against alcohol favorable. Thebars have agreed of $1.6 million," said Bill s abuse. to sponsor Fob Cab two nights Nichols, city councilman. I, { The AS Activity Fee Board each month. The proposed plnn will include: ~~~~2l]~tt±~~iliJ has allocated $3031.25 for the "It's a positive step as an widening the Warner Street program. Additionally, each ride alternative to drinking and bridge over Big Chico Creek to will cost the student $1 with a driving," she said. accommodate bil[e lanes and Sharing the Street - Cars, bicycles and student identification card or Fob Cab won't only benefit the sidewalks; widening some pedostrians cause increaSing traffic problems, requiring., social security number. students, but will also be an portions of the street to include widening of Warnor Street. " According to Larkin, the Chico asset to local bars. left turn lanes; installing four Clipper service was originally If a person leaves a bar drunk, crosswalks with traffic signals working with the AS on the and gets in an accident while aod a median barrier to during school hours." students, then the .clty may program. However, on Monday driving a car, the bar can be held discourage jaywalking. According to Francis, the consider the closing of the street. the Clipper went out of business responsible for any injuries that According to Greg Francis, school would like to see Warner At a meeting last December and as a result the program has occur. With this program, director of facility planning, the Street closed off to vehicles. the city discussed a possible been postponed. bouncers can use their judgment f crosswalks will be located at "If Warner was to be closed extension between West Sixth According to Cannon, a city and call for the cab and possibly .' Legion Avenue and Big Chico off, there would have to be 24· Avenue and East Avenue but the sizeof Chico must, by law, reduce any liability thnt may Creek, at the point just north of ' hour access' to the street for thase plans are. still in maintain a taxi service. When a incur. the creek and the intersection of emergency vehicles," added diBcuBBion. '_1,>,' : new service is established or the Larkin is hoping to begin a Warner and West First Streets. .Nichols. "Warner is the only The county nnd city general's Clipper resumes business, a cab . pilot program within the next "It is entirely possible on the street with access to Whitney plan cnlls for the link, but a few and driver will be contracted and few months. However, if they are block between Second and I vy to and other buildings. years ago Chico voters voiced Fab Gab will begin. unable to get it in the next few put a multi· decked parking overwhelming objection to the Fab Cab is fashioned after /l months, it will be scheduled for structure as well as one on the "It seems to me that Warner lengthened Warner Street. similar program at UC Davis. next semester. The pilot will run north side of campus," said Street is primnrily used by , With the Warner Street plans Under the progrnm, a cab will be for two to three months. At the Nichols. "If the university were students." still in discussion actual work on rented from a local cab service end of that' time, the program to do something like this it If the destination studies do the street won't begin for at least and will be on·call to drive any . will be re-evnluated and the AS would allow the city to consider a show ,that the main traffic a year and the project could take student home who has had too will decide whether or not to much to drink. continue Fab Cab. i l partial closing of Warner Street during daytime hours are several years, said Nichols. ! \ Get That New Look For Spring A~ Jls S'oucCiKeJf SCREENS-MIRRORS' Hair Design SHOWER DOORS All Well Cocktails • Student Spring Specials AUTO AND house wine alld draft permll reg. $40. now TRUCK GLASS beer iust .25 haircutll reg. $11. cellophnnes reg. $18. Tall Cocktails and Wine . weaves reg. $40. now $30. Drinks not included. 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This year the Chico Sta te in his events and qualified for Salache, team member_ . captain), Darron Peterson, and Forensics and Debate team has nationals which will be held over The team has three coaches: "For a team to compete Shannon Finley to do quite placed in every tournament they spring brealt. "I am excited to Joe Corcoran, head adviser, and nationally, it takes about well," said Corcoran. have attended. have the opportunity to go to two graduate advisers, Randy $30,000 to $40,000, and we are "I feel that our team does so The 35-member team has been nationals. Hardly anyone who is Larson'and Marlt Nelson. receiving only $25,000. For us to well because we have become coming home with first and 19 gets to go." said Budman. The team is funded through compete nationally throughout such a close group of friends . second place wins throughout Chico State has many im­ the Instructionally' Related the year we would need another who support each other," Bald the year. pressive wins. They have won Activities board and is currently $10,000 to $15,000," said Salache. "Our last tournament was held the Governor's Cup' in the 'not recei~g any funding from Corcoran. The Chico State team will be at Modesto Junior College and university division, and' placed the Associated Students. The team has a national debate hosting the fall championships we took second place in the fou~ fourth in the national California "We have done some judging in Virginia coming up, and a next December. Local resident claims he's ille "timate son of Kennedy by Taylor Flynn notorized document signed by Staff Writer Joe Kennedy confirming Montgomery to be his son. The signed statement, Ken Montgomery, with his Montgomery claims, is kept in a distinguished Irish features, safe deposit box at an un­ thick wavy hair and phonetic disclosed Boston bonk along Boston accent, refers to John F. with other papers including the Kennedy as "Jock" - he also "Airship Document," which refers to him as his half brother_ supposedly contains never In his recently published book, before released information on Hidden in Plain Sight, Ken the Kennedy assasination. Montgomery, a Corning Montgomery claims he can't get resident, claims to be ·an the papers due to government illegitimate child of Joseph intervention. Kennedy (JFK's father), as well "Even if I surround myself in as an ex-intelligence agent who the media and go down there (to knows enough classified in­ the bank), the FBI will con­ formation that somebody is fiscate everything before I enn trying to kill him. . even touch it," says Mon­ "When I first heard the story, tgomery. "I'm not saying that I thought he was full of it," says Peter Comras, a private in­ they don't have a right to. They vestigator who served 28 years do. Most of that stuff is with the FBI and has 33 years property of the United States experience in intelligence and Government." criminal investigations. Presently, Montgomery is However, after analyzing' intent on promoting his' book. If it's a success he says he'll get a Montgomery's responses to over -K-e-n-n-e-d-y Dr Can Man 1000 questions on a lie detector, - Kon Montgomery tells his story as son, John, listens lawyer to prove his legitimacy. Comras says Montgomery is Intently. He recently returned from ,'1 Boston and Houston where he "probably" telling the truth. Irish family on the Cape. somebody has been trying to Gene Chappie, who represented attempted to get media coverage Comras used the Dektor The Kennedys coaxed Mon- keep him quiet - permanently. the Chico area, investigated the but was unsuccessful. He Psycholicol Stress Evaluator tgomery into the secret service ComraB isn't the only believer Montgomery cose. He checked blamed the failure on "Kennedy (PSE-101), a machine that where he served as a special of Montgomery's bizarre story. numerous public records and was influence." measures the tone of the voice in agent for over two decades. "Ken Montgomery is telling unable to prove Montgomery a "We flooded thllt market detecting lies. Comras claims the' His secret identity the truth, the whole truth and liar. A 10cIIl publication quoted (Boston) with information and device is extremely accurate. was Q.J. Winn, and he' was in- nothing but the truth so help Hardesty as saying, "That was demos (books), and you won't "I didn't just ask him volved in covert activities him God," says Woody Palmer, probably the strongest case I find that book in any store or the questions, I'interrogated him," ranging from the Boy of Pigs a Corning high school tellcher ever did ... There was nothing on . story in any newspaper ... They says Comras who' spent ~hree- fiasco to investigating the and ex-neighbor of Mon­ Ken Montgomery, it's like he hod me leaving with my tail and-a-half weeks probing Manson family. Montgomery tgomery's. never exls,ted before that between my legs," says Mon- Montgomery. "All of his was also involved in a successful "Other people think I'm crazy period." tgomery. reslXlnses were ,consistent ... He completion, of a mock (for this)," says Paimer, but he's Montgomery is not surprised. had to be involved in some of assassination attempt on then so cOnvinced of Montgomery's He says the government, "It's like Custer going into the that to know what he knows,' presidential candidate Richard genuineness he refinanced his probably pulled the records to I~dian nation ,~ith a six-gun and Comras concludes. Nixon. house to put up $12,000 towards discredit him. In at least three SIX bullets, says Palmer According to Montgomery, he While John Kennedy was publiShing the book. In ad­ seperate clIses Montgomery has desribing what it's been like to was befrlendod by John Kennedy president, Montgomery was dition, Palmer and his wife, requested information from get the story publicized. in 1948 at the age of 15. Later, assigned to become a spy within Robertll, have established with government agencies only to be Montgomery sllys that after fighting in the Korean War "the agency." Not only was hea the Montgomerys what they call told his records were destroyed . as a member of the 187th Air- double agent for Kennedy, but . the "Justice for Ken Bi-Family by fire. . . . proving he is a Kennedy. is born Infantry Regiment, was also a link between the Corporation," which is basically Nevertheless, Montgomery's secondary,. and the main ob­ Montgomery returned ntateside White House and "underworld an agreement that· if Mon· book contliins reprints of 30 Jective· is to prove his past to again be confronted by his figures." tgomery is killed the book will . documents which he claims employment with the govern­ "friend." This time however he' After rebelling in the agency in stU! be promoted. support his arguments. ment Who, according to Mon­ was informed of his hlood' 1978 Montgomery was asked to Steve Hllrdesty, a former legal However, he says there is a key tgomery, owe him over 20 years relationship to the prominent leave, and ever since thon piece of evidence missing-a of bock pay and retirement I, aide to retired Congressman i benefits.

.- .,~ ••-.-- ...... - •• --•• ~- ..... _- _ .... _ •• " ...... _ ...... , •• j , •• ,., •• 1.LI .• ,.,. ':"."1' ,y~. ,.. \, •• ". \. ,March4,1987--______theOrioll ______'-' ~ \< ·.r -NATIONAL , 15%SriIDENT,nISCQ,UNT I' .. UNTIL 'MARCH ,:31 .. '". ! ' Student'governance'returns .,,' I \ . RICHARDGILBAR,.M.A.,·O.D. ' .. (CPS) -. The student Ohio students are engaged in a adds. "governance" movement seems 14-year battle in the state But wmmng representation RICHARDL.·KADERLY,.O.D. to be reviving. legislature to win voting rights often takes time and means . At Harvard, all Ohio public for student trustees. winning over stubborn colleges, Alabama State and Student leaders at South legislators. Wo Ipocloliro in lining .allrypet 01 ,on'o~llenlll' other campuses, students in Dakota's state schools have In Ohio, Democratic recent months have renewed formed a federation to lobby the Representative Mike Stinziano • loh/hard • "',nded ",or • 001 permoable • bllocal efforts - some lapsed for more legislature for student regent has spent 14 years pushing for • aillamalic • linlld . than a decade - to gain seats on voting rights. student representation on the the governing boards of their And in January, after a two Ohio Board of Trustees. In 1985, schools. month student government his bill passed the House but "We Care For More The reason seems to be money. boycott of all administration­ died in a Senate committee. Than Just Your As college costs escalate, sponsored events, Alabama "Right now, legislators are Eyes'~ students feel they should have a State President, Leon Howard, concerned about what's going on say in how their educations are finally agreed to back the with the Ohio economy," says 1046 G MANGROVE offered to them. students' efforts to get a student Rebecca Mitchells, executive (MANGROVE MEDICAL CENTER) "Individual campus groups seat on the board of trustees. director of the Kent State and state student associations "We're quite pleased with his Student Senate. "Higher are working to get student decision," says Alabama State education was totally forgotten trustees on governing boards, studen t treasurer Hassan in the past few years, and it's especially if they're elected by Walker. "Now we're waiting for only now that it's getting some students and not appointed by the opportunity to sit down with attention. " governors," explains Shelly the president and iron out some "Student representation has Wilsey of the United States of the wrinWes in the plan. But been a priority here for a long Student Association (USSA), a appointment of a student trustee time, but it's beginning to get FREDUCCINI'S national lobbying group for will have to come from the discouraging," she notes. student government governor. South Dalmta students also associations. While the idea of student hope new faces in the new During the 1960's, many' representation seems prudent legislature will boost their students won seats on their and necessary to most students chances of winning voting Student college boards of regents or and campus leaders, governing privileges for a student regent. trustees. While few had voting board members and state "Last time they voted, it was Mid-Week rights, most could present legislators have mixed emotions .. 50-50, a tie vote, but no majority student opinions on issues often USSA's Wilsey claims most so it failed," says Paul Knecht, Dinner Specials· influencing the decisions of boards "don't want to give up president of South Dakota State All week you can eat for just $10.95! board members. any decision making power." University's student association The issue seemed to fade in the And some administrators say at Brookings. And remember Professor Falso's re­ late 1970's, howevel', and stayed a student on a governing board, "There also was high turnover search sez fresh pasta isa brain food in the background until this with or without voting rights, on the regents this election, and (anna intense aphrodisiac). Free wine school year. presents a' conflict of interestj the new group could be more witha you student 1.0. Thatsa right! At Harvard, one student says Linda Henderson of the open to student imput. But even Free wine! observer attributed the revival Association of Governing with no voting privileges, a to the campus anti·apartheid Boards of Universities and student on the board often can movement, which led some Colleges. "They have to learn to turn the tide in close regent 1020 Main St., Chico 895-1981 students to question how in· view things in the best interest votes." vestment and other campus-wide of the school as a whole and not And the students who sit 011 decisions were made. just in the interest of the governing boards take tha t "Students are analyzing their students. responsibility - and their other roles much more and want to be "And to be effective, a student duties - seriously, often more so i I part of the decision making on representative needs experience. than non-student members. ! \ their campuses." Wilsey says. Most get on the boards going "There are very few occasions See Us .1 "They think the colleges are into their senior year, and that's when we can refute a student there to serve them, so they not enough time to learn how the board member, whether voting should have a major role." board works." or non-voting," admits the Currently, 32 states and the Some boards and legislatures, AGB'sHenderson. District of Columbia let students however, encourage student "They take this very seriously sl sit on at least one education participation, especially in and do their homework on the For Auto Parts governing board, up from about student affairs issues. issues," she adds. "Every 26 states in 1981. A few have "Even non-voting students student trustee I've ever talked • Complete Stock voting privileges. can have a voice in decision to has been very responsible. , lor ALL Cars But the issue remains un­ making and often can influence They do their homework hetter • Tools settled a t some schools. the vote on an issue," Henderson than the regular members." • Welding Equip. • Machine Shop " • Paint ------_____ Opln 7 Day. Mon.·Frl.8·5:30 Sat. 8·5 Sun. 8·2 CHICO AUTO PARTS 175 E. 20lh 51. • Chico 342-4261 Paris 342-2331 Palnls ~;I, J , J t,J , ~ ,"' I J I'J , .I ... f • , • 1 • I • f • ! , .., " , • r •.~.j I , ~ ..1 ..... ,. •• If .... " • (0 ... " ", ". ", .. , ..... '.. '... 'M~rriI14:'1987~ 8 tiw Orion' .,', . -CAMPUS QUOTES- Do you think it is in the country's best interest to supply arms to countries such ~ University Newsline as Iran to gain the release of U.s, hostages? QUOTE OF THE WEEK 'Education is t.he ability to listen to almost anything without losing By Ryan Perkins your temper or your self-confidence.'

Robert Frost

Last year we ran across an Donlt attempt to plan your Jennifer Nichols article entitled 'Student college program entirely on the Senior Responsibilities in Academic basis of what your friends tell Public Relations/Music Advising' written by Dr. Lowell you, regardless of how well in· Walter of San Jose State formed they seem to be. ' "'The needs of the many out University. We believe it is Do seek the assistance of your weigh the needs of the few.' worth your consideration. adviser because your experiences Spock said this in Star Trek II, and needs are unique and a and I think to jeopardize the program for someone else will safety of democracy for a few seldom fit you. individuals is wrong. Of course if Donlt avoid academic ad· it was my brother being held visement assistance from hostage, I might have a different faculty. Do take advantage of this opinion." Donlt assume that your opportunity to talk with an adviser will automatically tell Andre Shaw expert even though you might not choose him as your personal you everything you need to Senior know. Psychology/Telecommunications friend. Do be assertive and ask 1 questions if you think you have '1 "Nope. It kind of defeats the received insufficient or purpose of fighting terrorism. Donlt assume that your misleading information. There is Supplying weapons only in­ adviser knows who you arc when nothing wrong with asldng creases the amount of terrorism you walk into her office or that questions. they can do. Economic sanctions she knows what you want or and negotiations seem the way togo." need. Do introduce yourself and explain why you are there. Donlt assume that your Prisia Spatis adviser will remember the Sophmore Donlt assume that because content of your discussions from Fashion Merchandising ;'your adviser knows your one appointment to the next. academic niaj or he knows all Do keep notes of what you "Yes, because the hostages about your career and life gOllls. discussed with your advis~r at and the families would be Do tell your adviser as much each meeting. At the beginning happier. Also the construction as possible about your of each new contact with your of the new arms would create educational and vocational adviser, summarize briefly what more jobs for the unemployed. plans. Your adviser needs this you tallIed about and agreed But the world is going to end Idnd of informa tion to do the upon during the last meeting. anyway." best job of helping you select appropriate supporting courses and electives. Donlt limp along with an Joe Brown Donlt mislead your adviser by adviser with whom you can't Junior, withholding information or communicate. Recreation Administration distorting information in other Do request the assignmcnt of ways. another adviser and, keep in "No, the U.S. should worry Do be as open and honest as regular contact with her. more about unemployment possible. Tell her about learning among minorities. The world , , problems, special handicaps, " should be a place for peace. As a failure experiences, or financial whole it benefits no one. The problems which detract from DonIe: wait until CAR week to world should be one fraternity.'" your academic work. Many contact your adviser. times there are campus resources Do make appointments at available to provide you with the times when your adviser has JoeRuiz needed assistance. more time for you. Senior Organizational Communication DonIe: assume that your Do contact any of the several "Hell no. All we do by ex­ adviser has aU your records. sources af assistance available to changing arms is to encourage Do keep your own file of you on campus in addition to other terrorist groups and en­ personal records and bring them your faculty adviser in order to danger the lives of other free with you when you have an enrich your, educational ex­ Americans. Perhaps we could appointment with your adviser. perience. choose more civil means such as

) prisoner exchange. We have a ! ' government more concerned with money then ,the welfare of Prepared By: Office of Advising and Orientation Sutler Hall 102 895.5712 its people."

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~ril-;... ;",;",0, ______' ioi' '..;,',;,,' '..;,',;.' ';,,;,',;.' ..... ',;,;' '-' ';.;,',;.' ,;,;' • .,;,.,;",' ...... ' -the Onon-' ______------LOCAL Coun8elor------~(\-· -~~------~-...;..------­ continued from page 2, workload through creative groups a vailable to students. Student's personal needs are becomes a problem (with thl means. - The -cen'ter offers a total of 20 also met by student affairs increased workload)." i he said. -'-Describing "the crunch" that groups dealing with such issues services, according to Raker, But, Raker sees the need fOl"' Graham also suggests that' takes place, Morones explained as depression, relationships, and which lightens counselors' counselors and other student: Chico. State students, unlike' "the counseling staff tries to' sexuality. workloads. affairs services as a positive' students on commuter cam­ address the problem by seeing Two special areas where "There's a real effort in all sign. ' : puses, face more significant students in a group rather than student concern is on the rise are areas of student affairs to deal readjustment problems. individually. eating disorders and adult with the whole person," said "I'm very predjudiced," she "We have a residential campus "We did a recent poll to rank children of alcoholics, explained Raker. said. "I think we have a very fine where students have left family, the top dozen most common Morones. For example, if a student student body - good people who and friends. As a result, people, ,needs on the parts of students,", Graham commented that "as comes into the student em-, are attentive to themselves and have difficulty in the adjustment said Morones. "We've geared an increasing number of people' ployment office looking for work seek to make ~h~i~ lives better." process," he explained.' our groups around these needs become aware that 'My problem and it's clear their unem- Graham said he would en- "Students must deal with and this semester we have the is not an isolated one,' their ployment has underlying per- academic requirements, other most groups we've ever had." awareness grows and we get an sonal causes, "You don't just courage any student who's personal needs such as finances, According to the poll, the most influx of requests for services. luck that person out the door and feeling like they're haVing a and on top of that, try to get to' common problem students come . "In many instances what will say, 'You need a counselor,' said serious problem to contact the know people and build a support' to the center with concern in-' ,benefit the student most is the Raker. "You help them deal with, counseling center: base. timate relationships. Closely group process," he added. "You the problem." , "Frequently students feel in a "As a result, we end up with, following were family relations get insight not only from the Commenting on the coun-' corner," said Graham. "Andl students who are in need oC: and depression. 'counselors, but also from the selor's workload Raker said, sometimes with an objectivel support services for a w~i1e." , This year, the counseling :other students - and friend­ "Our counseling center is ex-, view, they can come up, with, Despite the difficulties, the center has increased by 60 liihlps and relationships are ceptionally fine; it's one of those different strategies for makin~ rfi~"jiselin~n{{ i~ mana~ng the percent the numb~~~~~ort ;formed." exam./lles where your good work things better." I 'Refarandum~1 ------~--- ,continued from front page In place of a reVISion com- studied the rationale behind the ~ during next week's election. by a petition of the students, and mittee this year, all AS boards, revisions and 'made fl'nal an election will take place if the . d ' Advisory measures and petition is signed by 10 percent Elrod reVl-ewed the ent:.e con- committees an councils recommendations to the AS I U • ed th .. d ,opinion polls are non-binding stitution and recommended reVIew e ~onstltutlon an executive board. ofthe student body. ch,_anges.) , 'suggested pos81ble amendments ,I At last week's BOD meeting ,resolutions giving advice or The proposed change would · Pr 'd t An I , requesting the opinion of t o.AS VICe- eSI en ne· changes in the constl'tutl'on' allow the BOD to place such "There were some things they L kin students on an issue. issues on a ballot without the ,simply failed to address," said ar . regarding advisory measures The constitution now states collection of student signatures. , Nock, referring to the referen- Larkin prese~ted the proposed and opinion polls were approved that an advisory measure or The AS general election will be l~um're9uire~~nts. 'changes ~o a policy council that, 'and will also appear on the ballot, opinion poll must be established held next week, March 11-12.

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March4, 1987.'______,theOrioT} ____-~"'!"!"~--- ...- __------... 11.

'i __NEWS BRIEFS'_ . I

Life credential deadline \ Teachers and other educators who qualified for a life credential by August 31, 1985 but who failed to apply at that time may do so between now and March 31, according to the state Commission on Teacher Crcdentialing and Dr. Edward Miller, dean of the College of Education at California State University, Chico. Legislation enacted in 1986 provides that the commission shalI'issue a life credential to an applicant who meets the following requirements: .Stamps jn .faradise (l)As of August 31,1985, the applicant had fulfilled all requirements for a life credential that were in effect at that time, including the requirement "Postage Stamps of Great Britain 1840·1974" will be the program for of two years of teaching or other certificated service performed under a the March 10 meeting of the Paradise Stamp Club. The program is 11 slide I clea~ credential in California public or private schools. show produced by the British Post Office and distributed by Linn's Stamp (2)The applicant applies to the commission for a life credential between News. The club meets the second Tuesday of each month at the American ') January land March 31, 1987, setting forth the qualifications that would Savings Community Room, 6930 the Skyway in Paradise. A business .1 have entitled him or her to receive a life credential if he or she had applied 'meeting begins at 7 p.m. followed by the program and informal stamp :1 by August 31,1985. trading. ' I~I (3)The applicant encloses the credential fee ($50). The Paradise Stamp Club is the only active philatelic organization in i~1 A life credential is issued for the life of the applicant, and does not need Butte County. Collectors, including juniors, from throughout nor­ .J,),!} to be renewed. No life credentials have been granted since September, theastern California are welcome at all meeting. For more information call :I 1985, As a result of legislation enacted in 1983 which requires teachers and Tom Ferrara at 345-2630 or Larry Keown at 343-5130. ,ij ,I. other educators to receive renewable five-year credentials which may , I require completion of continuing education or other courses for renewal. ~I The three-month limited application period is intended solely for persons who, for whatever reason, failed to learn between 1983 and 1985 that life credentials would not be issued after August, 1985. Honor's Counell me~ting Persons who meet the requirements may contact the Commission on Teacher Credentialing at 1812 9th Street, Sacramento, CA 95814, for an application, or may contact their local school district or county office of Presidents of and advisors for departmental student honor societies are education for more information. urged to meet with other honors organization representatives to plan for the organization of a council of campus departmental honor societies. The meeting will be Tuesday, March 10 at 4:00 p.m. in BMU 222. A small group of honors orgainzation advisors and officers met lllst fall and discussed what an Honors Council migM accomplish. Interest was C.A.V.E. Wor~~h9pS ,high, especially in the possibility of collo,horation in the sponsorship of an University honors Week next year and in informal meetings of honor This week is the final week to register for C.A.V.E's personal growth organization members with distinguished visiting faculty and other.l. The classes. The personal growth program offers 30 different non-traditional :group also discussed ways of productively involvillg members and con­ and popular classes that are not offered through the university. A few are sultation with and promotion of the university Honors Program, omong Western Dance, Shomanism, 'Juggling, Shiatzu Massage; Watercolor othol- topicS: Contact Merrl Suver, 345-9546, Dr. Carol Burr, 895-1524, or Workshop, Choices for Young Women, CPR and many, many, more. Robert Standing, 895f·5712, for additional information. C.A.V.E. is a non·profit orgllnizlltion so it offors these classos at low or no cost. Don't miss this opportunity to lell1'll while having funl Hurry in to C.A.V.E. at 2nd & Cherry Streets or call 895-5817, for a free schedule and more information;

j I ! \ collegiate crossword I

ACROSS 47 Bring up II "- good - 48 Numismatist's deserves another" . 1 The occult subject 12 Storied 7 A shaking 49 Certaill dwelllngs 13 Nun's hood·shaped 13 SQcial circle ,(ab~r.) cap 14 'Attendants to an 50 Suffix for drunk 15 Organic compounds important person 51 Famous grmnarian 20 Lodging places ' 16 ltalhn seasoning 52 Pays up, in cards 23 Produce eggs 17 W,'eaths for the 53 Plant part 24 College girls head 55 Actress - Day 26 Beer mug 10 Muhal1llladanism 57 Chooses 27 Binge 19 "Days of Our _" 58 Pie - 29 Place of sacrifice "'"'"+-1'- 21 Chlld 59 Hereditary ruler 31 Metrical feet 22 - accompli 60 Punctuation marks, 33 Mlerican invent,or 23 Muscular power for short 35 Swamp 24 Remedy 36 Warned 25 "For shamel" DOWN 37 Without hesitation 26 Extends across 38 Nea t ' 27 More painful 1 Pirate 40 Subtitle 28 Mistakes in a 2 Artist's studio 41 Goes to published work 3 Procreated 42 Tenant 30 Payments 4 Ancient Syria 45 Race se!Jlllent I y Answers to last 32 Lustful 5 Author - yutang (2 wds.j 34 Harvard - 6 Ancient Greek 48 Sects II' 35 Strict disciplin- land 49 "What's in -1' arhn 7 Farcical imi- 51 Narcotic shrub 39 Type of liquor tation ' 52 Sandarac tree week's punic 43 City in New York a Renovate 54 Quill . 44 Actor Gert - 9 Greek letters 56 Southern state 46 consumed 10 In the center (abbr.) ."' ...... < ' ,~.'.

______'.' '_' .'.'.'.' '_March 4, 1987, 12 ,-the Orion -OPINIONS Welcome to inner city hopelessness. his own foul. No longer is the game free. Enter But the game of basketball offers hope. It is m(e a the coach. A driven, successful, congenial man who, shining star against a black sky, a sanctuary, a for the past 17 years of his life, has coached not just Player clearing in the jungle. It is, at last, the only place in basketbnll, but rules and regulations, standards the world where the young man, the player, can and morals, playbooks and the reality oflife outside have absolute and complete control over his own the arena. and destiny. The basketball court is where the player A bond develops and the coach and player soon calls his own shots, his own fouls, and is not con· become lille father and son, each seeing through the coach fined to rules and regulations and reality. He loves other one's eyes, communicating in a unique and the game because the game is so free. The game is intimate way - a way that cannot be duplicated by everything his world is not. any other relationship each may form while at the In the inner city, it is the move towards the universtiy. basket - the move itself mind you - that is most The coach is at first, simply coach, but in· important, regardless of whether or not the shot evitably becomes the all-encompassing teacher, falls, because at the level these young men are counselor, mother, father, brother, and hopefully at by Phil Midling playing, it requires a truly stupendous move - a last, life-long friend. hard lean to the left, fake to the right, dribble drive The coach may be the first, and perhaps the last The ghetto. It is early morning and the sun has back to the left, half step, one-handed reverse slam person the player will ever trust. Tho coach may be not yet filtered through the fog as the rush hour just to survive and compete on this blacktop of the last hope, and he'll be damned if he'll let the traffic speeds by at a blinding pace, past a virtuoE'ty. The move is the p lyer's signature, his player down. schoolyard where a group of young blacl(s are pel'sor._lity, perhaps his futur\!o So, the coach is scrutinized by the press, the fans, taking each other to school - on the basketball So, the game and move continue, phenomennlly, the athletic department, and the administration. court .. for the rest of the day until dusk falls, and the His coaching philosophy is called into question It is a game of five on five this morning, and the player heads home and back to reality. The'next when he benches the player for drinking alcohol game is better than usual, which is saying a lot, day, a new game will begin, and the move will be before a game. His integrity is called into question because the games here are always better than the repeated, the evolution once again stimulated. The when he helps a player, perhaps with a sixth grade usual. player only gets better. reading level, through a class so that the player will Welcome to the game of inner city basketbnll. Years later, the player, the young man, is ready to remain eligible to play basketball. Quite different from outer city basketball. Or rural display his move in the collegiate arena where the The player's eligibility is now over. But the move basketball. Or affluent suburban basketball. The lights are bright, and the air is clean, and the ghetto remains. And the coach remains - whether difference here being that the urban game is not is for away. coaching or not - in the player's life. And if the just one facet of life - a mere diversion on a sunny And it is here, where the player faces a quandry col\ch has turned the player on to learning, even if Saturday afternoon - but rather, life itself. ' he has yet to be prepared for; the rules and it's only learning how to cope in a world where For the young urbanite, basketball is a way of regulations of the university. Suddenly, the player , scoring is important, and moves are obsolete, then life. 'By the age of 12 or 14 or 16, he has already has responsibility. The element of time becomes a perhaps the coach has succeeded. mastered the game, the fine skills having been , major factor in his life, in conjunction with the But the quandry remains. nUl'tured and honed by years of intense motion on schedule, the class, the test, and the grade. The The quandry was born long before the coach, or asphalt courts, years of constant horizontal and game has changed in that the player is now told the university for that matter. It was born on those verticIe movement, eight hours a day, seven days a that scoring is' most important - the move ob· early morninss on the asphalt court, when the week, 52 weeks a year, through rain and snow and solete. The player is unfamiliar with the educational traffic - and the player's young life - sped by at a violent poverty. court. No longer does the player call his own shot, blinding pace. 2 I&ZtJ&Uifaa:£::::: ::::: I Actunlly, I didn't. patise to wonder. 'j He glanced furtively from side to One is the government of South Meurer's' side, then pressed his girth forward Africa. Those leaders are not rural ','~l and confided, "It's them hook·nosed buffoons from Los Molinos. They are Jews." highly educated and cultured and M. utterings My jaw flapped open with shack. about as bigoted as they come. He might just as well have said that Shouldn't they know better? hordes of three-eyed aliens from The second factor is CSUC Venus had sacked Washington. He bathroom graffitti. Try these, if you mistook my astonished look for please. enlightenment, and continued. "Kill all Arabs." "Them Jews owns all the banks. "If you are a faggot, I hope you die They's infiltrated our government. of AIDS." Why, lookit Kissinger I And they's There are others too foul to print. I met my first bigot, or at least who disliked a whole race of people. even passed a law that sez if they How can the "brighest and best" of noticed my first bigot, when I was in As I grew, I was exposed to hear me talkin' like 1m talking to you society actually feel those feelings junior high. I was working on a various flavors and styles of bigotry, now, they can put me on a plane and write that gross idiocy? What in project (I forget what the purpose but usually at a distance. Klansmen without even a trial, fly me to Israel, great scott are they learning? And wasl which required interviewing an on TV. Prison gang wars. That kind andSHOOTmel" from whom? 'And why? older person who lived in an apart· , of stuff. He nodded solemnly, then added, ment. My next major personal in· "When yuh get off work, yuh should I believe that a person can hold an The older person I talked with was troduction to a bigot came about six come out to the Grange Hall; we's unpopUlar, seemingly "racist" a southern lady in her 70s and the years ago. I was working at a mom· havin' ameetin' about it." position without being a bigot. constraints of a retirement income and·pop gift and housewares store. I was sorely tempted to dive for the There Ilre some pretty reasonable dictated that she live in a complex in It was a slow, hot June day and the phone and shout into the receiver, argUments why sanctions against which most of the inhabitants were store was empty when'an enormously "Abrahaml Myronl Get here as fast South Africa would be counter· not old and southern. Many were overweight man in a sweat·drenched as you can and warm up the plane, productive. One can argue plausibly young and hispanic, and a few were sleeveless shirt came puffing in. I've found another one I " that the Arab states, and not Israel, black. He wanted to look at Swiss Army But I was on company time, and are largely responsible for the ten· She kept using a word that I did knives. As he pawed over the besides, he might have had a heart sions in that sphere. One can feel that not understand. selection, he began grumbling about attack on the spot, so I merely homosexuality is morally wrong "What is an undesirable?" I finally the high intorest rates we were replied, "Mmmmmm," and sold him without hating homosexuals. asked. suffering tlirough at the time. a knife. But unreasoned, groundless "You have to understand," she I agreed that they sure were Over the years, I persuaded myself paranoias and hatreds are, a whole said. "It is hard to change when you terrible, sir. that bigotry was largelY the mark of different ballgame. And if education are older. But I do not like block, He stopped fingering a blade for a the ignorant and undereducated, and culture will not change those ~ ... , ... - moment, looked me straight in the largely because the bigots I met were feolings, what will? , .' That was shocking to me. I had eye and asked, "You know what's in that category. But I'm not so sure It is a disturbing question. ,never been introduced to someone, causing it don'tcha?" anymore. Two thingB have given me Anyone have any answers? , ""~. ~ ' , , ...... ,,,. ~. " .. ~.-.... ,. ~ ... ~ .. - ..... - , _.... .~...... - -_ - ~.~~ .. _._. _< .. _M',. '~>~~I:~~~:.~~~~~~

' -~.' " ...... - . ~ .•. ". ~ ~'. ,,~,"" ...... \.: ...• " . " .. ~.;. ...',,,;,.~ .... ,.~.~,\: i/~ i.~ .. ,~.·:.:;.~2:". I. '. , ,March 4,1987------~~I" ------~.. 1.3, -OPINIONS j electorate decide which issues are important enough that signatures have to I Orion's be gathered to hold an election? I Let somebody else decide. Approval of the changes will provide board members with much more individual power than they now possess, Power to shove referendum measures, such as the BMU expansion, down the throats of the student body. The changes will allow the AS to present issues even if students are unaware - or not fully aware - of the repercussions involved. Ultimately though, such options give a great deal of power to so few that we find the changes objectionable. The Constitution of the United States is the framework for fundamental Is the AS to become a government for the students, but without student laws of the federal government. In the 200 years of its existence there have direction and initiative? Are AS board members fearful that students can't been some 26 changes, most of which have been clarifications of our rights as cope with the responsibilities involved in deciding what issues we feel are citizens of this country. important? Are AS board members more concerned with using the BMU The infrequency of these changes indicates the stability and flexibility of this expansion as an issue to further their own careers and resumes, with little document. ' concern for what students want, or how much we're willing to pay for it? The Associated Students - our student government - also follows a The Orion feels the approval of the constitutional changes will establish a constitution that establishes fundamental rules and gUidelines under which stronghold on student government by the few, rather than the many. they must abide by. The AS is a corporate organization intended to represent student Interests The stability of this document is a questionable matter, considering the above all else. The proposed changes In the referendum process will nullify recent actions of the AS Board of Directors. the intent of such measures to be initiated by students, without the fondling Last year the AS constitution was completely overhauled. The constitution and manipulation of our elected representatives. revision committee, chaired by then AS President Sue Elrod, reviewed the In the end, we the students will decide the outcome of this issue by casting our votes next week. entire document and recommended changes that were eventually approved. It is our right, and our responsibility, to direct and decide those issues that Yesterday the A~ e~ecutive board approved further changes in the con­ we deem important. stitution, which will be placed on the March 11-12 general election ballot. If When freedom is jeopardized we must not rely on society's leaders to make the student body votes in favor of the changes, the BOD will be able to hold responsible decisions that we can make ourselves. . referendum elections without a petition of the students. Our freedoms - and our rights - are our own. And why not? - Petitions are so bothersome anyway. Why should the ~nd we would like them to remain that way. What·'s Wr(!ng wit'h a little Burrlesque? e , of S'~iences and find out whether the and intellectual commitment. 'It is Facult,y Forum findings 'of a deeply flawed poll critical that we welcome and nourish published in a girlie magazine have all of them. caused the AAAS to have second There may be parents so offended thoughts about their choice of host by Playboy's poll that they decide - by institution for their regionol meeting. based on that information - not to I'll gladly pay for that calli send their sons or daughters here. Furthermore, I was offended by Our collective sanity demands that Charles 1. Geshelder the self-righteous, smug insinuations we calmly recognize we can do in Professor Burr's sweeping nothing about such people. We will generalizations about our students. drive ourselves crazy otherwise. In last week's Faculty Forum, anyone who believed a university's If a woman quolifies for admission to There is considerable evidence to Carol Burr posed questions then 'reputation was damaged or advanced CSU/Chico, maintains her GPA and indicate that parents are primarily provided answers concerning by being ranked in a magazine makes proper progress toward impressed and influenced by other Playboy's recent attention to Chico .devoted to masturbatory fantasies completing her degree, then whether parents whose children did attend State and its implications for our should perhaps selilk employment or not she chooses olso to use her the university. academic reputation. Not only were outside a university. time to look for a marriage partner is Carol Burr uncriticnlly accepts the her assumptions and premises highly Having served on notional panels frankly none of Carol Burr's public relations hypo about main- debatable, but her remarks about that award research grants in my business. toining images. Such concern about Chico State students were deeply field, I can assure Professor Burr And if a male student satisfies tho images is best left to the pages of offensive andjudgmental. that funding agencies examine on same entrance requirements and Playboy and Vogue. Or else check applicant's professional preparation maintains his academic status at tho out the tortured insides of today's After Playboy ronked Chico State and accomplishments, the soundness university, then what he does with White House where an obsession the No.1 party school in America of the proposed investigation and the other consenting adults (male or with external images became a way (arousing the ire of President Robin feasibility of its budget. Whether or female) fs equally none of her to disguise the sleaze and criminality Wilson among others), I telephoned not students at one's institution business. Her remarks about within. colleagues at the University of Iowa, party often and intensely has no students who are "fashionably As a faculty member, I am far more John Hopkins, UCLA, and'lndiana bearing on the panelists' judgment. .dressed and fashionably bored II reeils concerned about our inner academic University for their reactions. A few None. Someone unfamillar with the of sanctimoniousness. Would she proceses, not what students 90 seconds into each conversation, each .. grant review process is, of course, core to hear the conclusions students outside my classes or what pollsters one demanded to know the real certainly free to fantasize otherwise. draw about her state of excitement or from New York or other faculty reason for my colling. When I per­ Recen tly, .the· American boredness based on her choice of members think they do. sisted, they simply laughed at the Association for the Advancement of clothing? By the way, any poll that ranks naivete of faculty who thought a Science agreed to hold. its 1989 This university struggles to Chico State ahead of the University party school ranking would affect Pacific Division conference here at educate a wide range of students who ofMiami as a party school should be one's judgment of a colleague's ,Chico State. Perhaps Profes~or Burr come here from different social treated with the some respect as a scholarly work or grant proposal. should telephone the Executive , classes and ethnic groups, bringing poll that runks the Wildcats' footboll The all agreed independently that Director at tho California Academy with them varied states of maturit team hi hor than the Hurricones. 14.·------...... -.;..the Orion-----..;.------'··..' '.' .. ' ..' .• ' ..' '..;..' Mar~h 4,19871 -OPINIONS

Letters

DeDr Editor, litle respect for the University from student who enjoys partying or who Dellr Editor, which we recieve our diplomas. is pictured in Playboy cannot also be In re your refusal to run the I'm sure that if this pictorial is a serious scholar? Can she demon­ Your February 25 issue was a fine Playboy solicitation and thus published in October, our futures strate that bright students avoid example of hypocracy and one-sided won't be shattered, but it certainly Chico State because of Pioneer Days? reaffirm your good taste: journalism. First you make a Bravo! isn't the best way of promoting our Have employers experienced trouble decision not to run an ad for Playboy. campus and backing our degrees. with Chico State students because of Then you run two stories trying to Robin S. Wilson our party school image? Do graduate justify your decision. In the process Gina Wilson and professional schools discriminate telling us the Playboy against our students? One of the photographer's name and when he things most professors seem to would be in town. Your ad was just a DeDr Editor, understand, regardless of their little wordier than Playboy's, and it DeDr Editor, politics or ideological stripe, is that I was shocked to learn of your didn't cost them a dime. there is room in this acadomic setting In your front page story you stated refusal to print Playboy's ad­ Why should Playboy magazine pay for all kinds of diversity_ Burr's that by running the ad you would vertisement in last week's issue. to advertise in the Orion? It is ob­ tirade strongly suggests that this Why?..Not because I support have put the Orion's blessing on vious that you ran the ad for free in lesson has eluded her. Playboy's exploitation of women Playboy's pictorial. Nice to know the headlines of the Orion last week. Burr's abysmally low opinion of (which it docs), or because I support you, the Orion staff, give alcohol and The headlines read, "Newspapers Chico State's students' motives and insult to our already overly inflated mid-week drinking your blessing. refuse to run Playboy ad." If the aspirations is not, I trust, one widely party schoo! image, but because I Does your front page story on editors were concerned and had a held among the faculty here. Her su pport Freedom of the Press. condoms mean you condone pre­ clue, they would not have ran a story comments on what guys and girls Under Freedom of the Press it is marital sex? about the whole ordeal. Playboy here are looking for, the relative certain tha t we will be exposed to In "Orion's Opinion" you stated, could not have asked for better value of intelligence and good pecs, ideals contrary to our own (or those "The Orion chose not to run the ad coverage. and her inane suggestion that out­ of our parents!). Freedom of the because we felt it was our obligation side agitators (on Harleys yetI) are Press is a constitutional right that to the students at Chico State to not Joe Klllany raising hell at Pioneer Days hearken the Orion has a responsibility to promote something we felt could be back, I think, to that primitive detrimental to their futures." Hey uphold. If the Orion upholds the militant feminism that seemed to responsibility of Freedom of the thanks big brother. Read any George demand unceasing vaginal vigilance Press, then Playboy's advertisement Orwell books lately? You are a and rage. I had thought such times has as much right to be run as the newspaper, not our parents. Your Dear Editor, had passed. Peace Corps, the Military, or any job is to be objective and give us all other organization which I approve sides, not to protect us from real life. Professor Carol Burr's intemperate or disapprove of, regardless of whose and uncivil comments in the Sam Armstrong "good taste" it might offend, Is it Febru~ry 25 Orion are disturbing to the right of tho Orion to decide, me and, I suspect, to anyone else who '1'0 shake our deadly P's (Pioneer based on their own ideas, the student appreciates Chico State. Burr Days, Playboy, and Party School), body's ethics? Or is it up to the suggests that Chico State is widely Burr proposes that we change our Dear Editor, individual to make his/her own known only for its Pioneer Days, its annual festival to autumn and call it choice? Playboy ratings, and (soon) its air­ "Harvest Days." Like Professor Thank you for refusing to run the brushed coeds. She argues further Harold Hill, who also saw that Playboy ad. 'l'he pictorial idea docs Joe Wolner & Don Bruce that with such publicity, Chico State trouble began with a "T" that not reflect well on those of us who will inevitably not attract serious rhymes with "P", perhaps Burr could I want to be recognized for our in­ students and that the outlook for organize a boy's band to help protect ,'1 telligent minds. employment and continued us from carnal pleasure. Until s'he I have new respect for the Orion. I DearEdltor, education of our graduates will gets it her way, party hearty! want to be proud of my school as an become bleak. educational institution. Congratulations to you and your Does Burr have evidence that a MlchaelJ. Erplno ,i staff for your professional approach Laurie Dauterman to the Orion this semester.

BobVlvllln

Dear Editor,

Dear Editor, I'm very pleased to know that you view Playboy's ad as exploitative. San Diego State may have been I'm a liberal person and I think that rated No. 3 party school but in my Playboy is a very successflll book it achieved No. 1 status in magazine. However, I really feel

campus newspapers by running the they've taken their idea of a "party I Playboy ad in the Aztec. No one that school" too far. I realize that some I I know of gave a damn for the Orion's women might think posing is worth "i blessing before, so I doubt if its the qUick cash and that is their right "head-in-the-sand" attitude will to make that personal decision. On change things. If the young women the contrary, though, I don't think want to pose they're going to, not. that it is fair for a handful of women, withstanding parents, friends, Ilnd with the support of a Playboy the general public. Question: Did the camera, to exploit their fellow 14,000 Orion staff members who voted down students for a buck at their accepting the ad pony-up the lost . discretion. The issue renlly isn't revenue? whether or not posing is por; nographic. Moreover, it is a simple Wlllt Goldthcirpe issue of common sonse and showin~ a

.. ,., r ;:-, '",., ::;,."'!..'""':'.:----:---':"-;o-...... "" ...... _ ..... , .. _, •.. ~ .. --...... " .. , ..... ,-..... ",), . '.t-~~-.... --. -. . 'I"~ '.: ~ '" -.... ~ ~ -~;""""'"",,~ ..... "', :'-"'""'''' "." , ...... ". ' .. " . '. --.t...... ,.-.~- ...... _, '-_. _...... _""_ .... _.... __ .-.... - ... ' .. , •• ' ••\.: ...... :....~ ...... <:~ ••• ~- ..... j" •••~~ .....-!

IMarch4, 1987------___ theOrioTl ------15 ~ -'OPINIONS Letters

Dear Editor, Let's look at the fiscal reality could bll moved to a ground level support this would not have been involved in this controversy. The shop adjacent to the videos and post possible. Sue Sanguinetti's article in the expansion repeatedly pushed in the . office. A ground floor meeting room For the next year, Chico State con 2/18/87 issue, "Recent Survey early 1980s was to cost over should be available for groups with cloim to possess the symbolic (if non· Contradicts '83 BMU Renovation $5,000,000 and the similar plan several disabled members and other existent) W. Ann Reynolds cup for Vote," was poor reporting and the presented recently to expand over to purposes - this could also be the having been the longest·surviving headline was wrong and misleading. Chestnut Street and to Second Street music room. CSU school in the tournament. The A.S. survey on which this story is now estimated to cost around Please cover all possible per· For people who were wondering is Iiased did not contradict the 63 $7,000,000. In 1983 the official spectives in the expansion con· who "we" are, Mensans·On·Campus \ percent to 34 percent student vote for annual debt retirement determined troversy this semester. The survey is an AS organization, open to a one million dollar renovation as as necessary for expansion was indicated students arc not willing to students, faculty, and staff who are. .1 opposed to an over five million dollar $500,000 a year for 30 years in· pay for the expansion the AS leaders members of Americon Mensa. Our .expansion in September 1983. cluding finance costs. have in mind. Let's arrive at the best activities include game nights, video Rather, it indicates that students are Currently the AS is paying $50,000 solution which is fiscally sound, nights, pot lucks, bull sessions, and still not willing to pay for a large a year on the present structure. At aesthetically appealing nnd most anything else we want to do together. expansion of the student union. But the time of the last expansion vs. functional. This is not a time for Americon Mensa accepts scores Sanguinetti or the editors left out renovation election, the AS projected extravagance. from tests that most students have this part. $140,000 a year from video game already taken, as proof of As presented in recent Enterprise· revenue for 30 years to help payoff Charles W.Preusseer qualifications for membership. Record and News and Reuiew ar· the debt. No kidding! Nelson Antholne Minimum qualifying scores for SAT ticles, the survey showed that 20 At least a ten·fold increase in or GRE are 1250, ACT 29, or 66 on percent of students are not willing to annual debt retirement is still to be the MAT, and insure immediote have their A.S. fees raised to pay for expected with a southward and , , membership. We also give I.Q. tests II' .expansion. Thirty·three percent are eastward expansion. How much of Deor Editor, I, on campus, for people who haven't i ,\ willing to haw their union fee raised this could be covered by a $5 fee yet qualified, and would like to try. $1 to $5 per semester for expansion Thanks to Sue Sanguinetti and ,i' increase? Fourteen thousand Mensa is 0 strong base for beginning jl imd "expanded services." Thirty·one students times $5 times 2 semesters your staff for the excellent article a national network of contacts in any ) percent approve of a raise of $6 to equals $140,000. The increase of (photo excepted) on Chico State's field. ,! I $10. Only 16 percent approve of a annual debt retirement for a large first entry into the College Bowl, the 'Anyone who is prequalified (on a , ., raise in fees over $10 In other words, expansion would be more than three major leogues of intercollegiate test already taken), who would like to 53 percent of the 44 percent who times this amount. AS projections of intellectual competition. toke our tests, or who would like responded to the mail·in survey are dramatically increased business We were proud to have represented more information, can contact me at opposed to paying more than 1 to 5 revenue to cover the difference are CSUC in this national competition, 894·6016 or Cheryl Adams at. 894· dollars in extra fees for expansion, sure to be overly optimistic, and who and thrilled by our exceptional 7083. and 84 percent are opposed to paying would have to be buying more and shoWing. We were at least as sur· more than 6 to 10 dollars extra. . paying higher prices to assure such prised by it os everyone else. It's nice to Bee the AS finally admit an increase? We would also like to publicly Once agUin, to a~ who were in· that 'fee increases will be necessary The large expansion concept is not express our appreciation to the volved, we thonk you for your for expansion, as representatives fiscally sound. And if the BMU is to Associated Students, and to confidence and support. have done in recent articles. In 1983 be turned into a mall to increase Christine Thompson, A.S. Director of the AS Election Board and BOD business revenues, it will not be Academic Affairs, without whose Gary L. Eason found opponents of the expansion aesthetically appealing. One two or l~ ,:guilty of "lies" for saying fees would three story wing off the south or west '" have to be increased to pay for ex· I side would be sufficient to provide 'r pansion. The minutes of this special the services desired by over 40 Correct-ion hearing and other atrocious meetings percent of the students in the survey i I around that time are available at the - automatic bank tellers, video In the story "Date rape a'hidden problem" in the Feb. 18 issue, AS offices. The former Student rentals, a music listening room, and a the university Escort Service number was listed incorrectly. The Coalition for Appropriate post office. correct number is 895·5372. 'I' Development is being revived at this To alleviate crowding in the time. bookstore, non·reading materials II \

E,/iIIl,..ln·Chirf ManaJfi/lJf Rditor Adui ... r Advl'r/isinJ[ ManclK'" Ad Sale., MarUlII"r Keith L. Michuud Phil Midling Dr. Richnrd Ek Bnrril! Puull .Jeff I!ouiller Letters Welcome As ..it, Adviser Neu'., Btlitllr Spllrls f:dilllr Beth Miller Sal"·'I,,·"pll· Dovid Huwkins Murk DeSio Eric Beckett MllrioMolitor Bntf'rtai"m"/II/~t1jt(Jr fJlwtuBr/ilur Brilln Crumpler Mlono Olson TIll' OriOrl welcomes ',etlers 10 I he DuniulicCunco Cruig I!ichurdson Matt Olmsteud 'J'~n Howo edllor on any subieci 01 gener,11 inlerest Steve Grnhurn MiciwlloSledu 10 the campus community. Kurt Hiekllrn Chris Wuhl Writl'rs ~orion All lellers should bA Iyped and must Prm/Ilrtion MfltwJW' Duvid BusseLli DnveMcurer D,·siJ.:",',..i be turned IOtO Ihe On'orl oilice 10 . StoyeCluy Suzanne lIooth Tlu)rnus Hunk .Joy AndcrHon Adrienne Citron Plumas 001 by noon Friday. Ihe week Susnn Bushnell Sue Snllh'llin.tti Prodllction A,... islllni ,Jodi Armknochl Susy Goodncr. belore publlcallon. Letlers should be no Sorn Chnmhers BriunTipton Lesllo Crouch Erin norry Scott Kirk longer Ihan 250 words. Scott Cornwell ,JenlseTreuting Meghnn Curney nen""Snnh~linl!tli The Orton reserves Ihe righllo edll Michele EYolls Putrick Vaughan Prodllclion slaff Classifird slarr lellers lor length and 10 reject any lellers Puul Finley Bill Willillrn,on Stoye Schroth Duve Foster !'uuroToricco II deems libelous or in bad lasle. Bl.'Cky Johnson Julio Seitz DnveMccse 11iIssnWcbor PhUIlllI'aphers MoryAnne Nownk ouesllons aboulletlers 10 Ihe editor CopyedUo," Joe Prnx Liso Luun Graphic IIIlIslralors ~h,luid be directed 10 Keith L Michaud. Anno O'Dnnnell Mimi DnvlH Alex Schencl, JenniferCrool, Moria Moreno edllor .11895·5625 or 895·4033 Lori Comphell Lourol{lrHchenbuum Andreu Priolo Edilorial DesiR" Monicu Hlyos Mnrk Vlncont I{ovln Loo Scott Irirk 14·------....----theOrion------..-.· ...... '.'.' ·.·.·-Mar~h4,19871 ...... , .', I -OPINIONS " , " '. . . , ' Letters

Dear Editor, liUe respect for the University student who enjoys partying or who Dear Editor, fr~m which we recieve our diplomas. is pictured in Playboy cannot also be In re· your refusal to run the I'm sure that if this pictorial is a serious scholar? Can she demon· Your February 25 issue was a fine Playboy solicitation and thus published in October, our futures strate that bright students avoid example of hypocracy and one-sided reaffirm your good taste: won't be shattered, but it certainly Chico State because of Pioneer Days? journalism. First you make a Bravo! isn't the best way of promoting our Have employers experienced trouble decision not to run an ad for Playboy. campus and backing our degrees. with Chico State students because of Robin S. Wilson Then you run two stories trying to our party school image? Do graduate justify your decision. In the process Gina Wilson and professional schools discriminate telling us the Playboy against our students? One of the photographer's name and when he things most professors seem to ",-ar Editor, would be in town. Your ad was just a understand, regardless of their little wordier than Playboy's, and it Dear Editor, politics or ideological stripe, is that I was shocked to learn of your didn't cost them a dime. there is room in this academic setting refusal to print Playboy's ad· In your front page story you stated Why should Playboy magazine pay for all kinds of diversity. Burr's vertisement in last week's issue. that by running the ad you would to advertise in the Orion? It is ob· tirade strongly suggests that this Why? ... Not because I support have put the Orion's blessing on vious that you ran the ad for free in lesson has eluded her. Playboy's exploitation of women Playboy's pictorial. Nice to know the headlines of the Orion last week. Burr's abysmally low opinion of (which it does), or because I support you, the Orion staff, give alcohol and The headlines read, "Newspapers Chico State's students' motives and insult to our already overly inflated mid·week drinking your blessing. refuse to run Playboy ad." If the aspirations is not, I trust, one widely party school image, but because r Does your front page story on editors were concerned and had a held among the faculty here. Her support Freedom of the Press. condoms mean you condone pre· clue, they would not have ran a story comments on what guys and girls Under Freedom of the Press it is marital sex? about the whole ordeal. Playboy here are looking for, the relative certain tha t we will be exposed to In "Orion's Opinion" you stated, could not have asked for better value of intelligence and good pecs, "The Orion chose not to run the ad ideals contrary to our own (or those coverage. and her inane suggestion that out· of our parents!). Freedom of the because we felt it was our obligation side agitators (on Harleys yetI) are Press is a constitutional right that to the students at Chico State to not Joe Klllany raising hell at Pioneer Days hearken the Orion has a responsibility to promote something wefelt could be back, I think, to that primitive uphold. If the Orion upholds the detrimental to their futures." Hey militant feminism that seemed to responsibility of Freedom of the thanks big brother. Read any George demand unceasing vaginal vigilance Press, then Playboy's advertisement Orwell books lately? You are a and rage. I had thought such times has as much right to be run as the newspaper, not our parents. Your Dear Editor, had passed. Peace Corps, the Military, or any job is to be objective and give us all other organization which I approve sides, not to protect us from real life. Professor Carol Burr's intemperate ,or disapprove of, regardless of whose and uncivil comments in the Sam Armstrong "good taste" it might offend. Is it Febru~ry 25 Orion are disturbing to the right of tho Orion to decide, me undO suspect, to anyone else who '1'0 shake our deadly F's (Pioneer based on their own ideas, the student appreciates Chico State. Burr Days, Playboy, and Party School), body's ethics? Or is it up to the suggests that Chico State is widely Burr proposes that we change our Dear Editor, individual to make his/her own known only for its Pioneer Days, its annual festival to autumn and call it choice? Playboy ratings, and (soon) its air· "Harvest Days." Like Professor Thank you for refusing to run the brushed coeds. She argues further Harold Hill, who also saw that Playboy ad. The pictorial idea does Joe Wolner & Don Bruce that with such publicity, Chico State trouble began with a "T" that not reflect well on those of us who will inevitably not attract serious rhymes with "P", perhaps Burr could want to be recognized for our in· students and that the outlook for organize a boy's band to help protect telligent minds. . employment and continued us from carnal pleasure. Until s'he I have new respect for the Orion. I Dear Editor, education of our graduates will gets it her way, party hearty! want to be proud of my school as an become bleak. educational institution. Congratulations to you and your Does Burr have evidence that a Michael J. Erplno staff for your professional approach Laurie Dauterman to the Orion this semester.

BobVlvllln

Dear Editor,

Dear Editor, I'm very pleased to Itnow that you view Playboy's ad as exploitative. San Diego State'may have beon I'm a liberal person and I think that rated No.3 party school but in my Playboy is a very successful book it achieved No. 1 status in magazine. However, I really feel campus newspapers by running the they've taken their idea of a "party Playboy ad in the Aztec. No one that school" too far. I realize that some I know of gave a damn for the Orion's women might think posing is worth blessing before, so I doubt if its -- .the quick cash and that is their right "head·in·the·sand" attitude will to make that personal decision. On change things. If the young women the contrary, though, I don't think want to pose they're going to, not. that it is fair for a handful of women, withatanding parents, friends, and with the support of a Playboy the general public. Question: Did the camera, to exploit their fellow 14,000 Orion staff members who voted down students for a buck at their accepting the ad pony·up the lost discretion. The Issue really isn't 'II revenue? . whether or not posing is por: nographic. Moroover, it is Ii simple Walt Goldthorpe issue of common senso and showing Ii '\':"",'~~ '~i'l ~, ' .• ; ••..• ", •.• '. ' .... 'lI ••• ,.~ ...... ~ •.• ~ .. " -- "~':"'.'~ ~••• ~ •• , ...... ~ ....-Ij;, ...... '~ ...... ~~ ...... - _ ...... _._ ..... , •• ...... ;~., .. ,'~'... ~ .

..1 IMarch4,1987------______theOn·on ------15 r~ r -'OPINIONS I I Letters .1

. Dear Editor, Let's look at the fiscal reality could b~ moved to a ground level support this would not have been involved in this controversy. The shop adj acent to the videos and post possible. Sue Sanguinetti's article in the expansion repeatedly pushed in the· office. A ground floor meeting room For the next yelU", Chico State can 2/18/87 issue, "Recent Survey early 19809 was to cost over should be available for groups with claim to possess the symbolic (if non­ Contradicts '83 BMU Renovation $5,000,000 and the similar plan several disabled members and other existent) W. Ann Reynolds cup for Vote," was poor reporting and the presented recently to expand over to purposes - this could also be the having been the longest-surviving headline was wrong and misleading. Chestnut Street and to Second Street music room. CSU school in the tournament. The A.S. survey on which this story is now estimated to cost around Please cover all possible per­ For people who were wondering is liased did not contradict the 63 $7,000,000. In 1983 the official spectives in the expansion con­ who "we" aro, Mensans·On·Campus percent to 34 percent student vote for annual debt retirement determined troversy this semester. The survey is an AS organization, open to a one million dollar renovation as as necessary for expansion was indicated students are not willing to students, faculty, and staff who are. opposed to an over five million dollar $500,000 a year for 30 years in­ pay for the expansion the AS leaders members of American Mensa. Our ·expansion in September 1983.· cluding finance costs. have in mind. Let's arrive at the best activities include game nights, video Rather, it indicates that students are Currently the AS is paying $50,000 solution which is fiscally sound, nights, pot lucks, bull sessions, and still not willing to pay for a large a year on the present structure. At aesthetically appealing and most anything else we want to do together. expansion of the student union. But the time of the last expansion vs. functional. This is not a time for American Mensa accepts scores Sanguinetti or the editors left out renovation election, the AS projected extravagance. from tests that most students have this part. $140,000 a year from video game already taken, as proof of As presented in recent Enterprise· revenue for 30 years to help payoff Charles W.Preusseer qualifications for membership. Record and News and Review ar· the debt. No kidding! Nelson Antholne Minimum qualifying scores for SAT ticles, the survey showed that 20 At least a ten-fold increase in or ORE are 1250, ACT 29, or 66 on percent of students are not willing to annual debt retirement is still to be the MAT, and insure immediate have their A.S. fees raised to pay for expected with a southward and membership. We also give I.Q. tests .expansion. Thirty·three percent are eastward expansion. How much of Dear Editor, on campus, for people who haven't willing to have their union fee raised this could be covered by a $5 fee yet qualified, and would like to try. $1 to $5 per semester for expansion increase? Fourteen thousand Thanl(s to Sue Sanguinetti and Mensa is a strong base for beginning imd "expanded services." Thirty-one students times $5 times 2 semesters your staff for the excellent article a national network of contacts in any percent approve of a raise of $6 to equals $140,000. The increase of (photo excepted) on Chico State's field. $10. Only 16 percent approve of a annual debt retirement for a large first entry into the College Bowl, the 'Anyone who is prequalified (on a raise in fees over $10 In other words, expansion would be more than three major leagues of intercollegiate test already taken), who would like to 53 percent of the 44 percent who times this amount. AS projections of intellectual competition. take our tests, or who would like responded to the mail-in survey are dramatically increased business We were proud to have represented more informaUQn, call contact me at opposed to paying more than 1 to 5 revenue to cover the difference are CSUCin this national competition, 894-6016 or Cheryl Adams at. 894- dollars in extra fees for expansion, sure.to be overly optimistic, and who and thrilled by our exceptional 7083. and 84 percent are opposed to paying would have to be buying more and shoWing. We were at least as sur­ more than 6 to 10 dollars extra. . paying higher prices to assure such prised by it a~ everyone else. It's nice to see the AS finally admit an increase? We would also like to publicly Once again, to a~ who were in­ that 'fee increases will be necessary The large expansion concept is not express our appreciation to the volved, we thank you for your for expansion, as representatives fiscally sound. And if the BMU is to Associated Students, and to confidence and support. have done in recent articles. In 1983 be turned into a mall to· mcrease Christine Thompson, A.S. Director of the AS Election Board and BOD business revenues, it will not be Academic Affairs, without whose GDry L. EDlIon ',\' found opponents of the expansion aesthetically appealing. One two or I / .guilty of "lies" for saying fees would three story wing off the south or west I ' have to be increased to pay for ex­ side would be sufficient to provide pansion. The minutes of this special . I the services desired by over 40 Co,.rection I hearing and other. atrocious meetings percent of the students in the survey 'I around that time are available at the - automatic bank tellers, video In the story "Date rape a'hidden problem" in the Feb. 18 issue, , AS offices. The former Student rentals, a music listening room, and a the university Escort Service number was listed incorrectly. The Coalition for Appropria te poat office. correct number is 895·5372. Development is being revived at this To alleviate crowding in the time. bookstore, non-reading materials

Editor-ln·Chi,·! MaIlQJ[i"}f Rc/itur AdlJ;.~I'r AtlvprtisinJ[ Mana1fI" Ad S"I" A/IJIIIIR"r Keith I•. Michuud Phil Midling Dr.llichord EI, Bnrri. Pnull .Je££ lIouilier Letters Welcome As.!/. A,lIoisrr N('II'.'fBditlJr Spurt., Hdi/ur Beth Miller David Iiuwkin, Murk DeSio "ric Beckett MurieMulitor Blltf'r(aitwlI'lIt BtI;t'" PhlJ/oBrlitlJr Brion Crump"'r "'I"n. Olsen Tit!' Orinll welcomes lellers 10 the Daniello Cunco Cruig Hkhord,on edllot on any subieci 01 genr.r;Jlmleresl MotlOhnstcud T~m Howe Steye GrnhuOl Michelle Steei. 10 Ihe campus communlly. I{urt Hickum Chris Wuhl \\'ril"'5 ~orion All lellers should bp. typed and musl Productiun h/llnU}ff'r Dovid Bosselli Dllve Meurer /J,'siUnI'r.,. I)e lurned mlo Ihe On'oll oilice 111 SteyeCloy SUlanne Booth Thillnos Itonl' .Joy Ander",," AdrienncCitron Plumas 001 by noon Friday. Ihe week Susan Bushnell Suo Silnh'Uinctti Proc/ffclioff A.,.,,',,'an' .Jodi "'mknecht Susy Goodncre belore publlcallon Lellers should be no Soru Chamh"" Briun Tipton . Leslie Crouch Erin Barry Scott Kirk longer Ihan 250 words Scott Cornwell ,lcniseTrculing Meghan Carney lienee Sunh'Uinetti The OrIOn reserves lhe right to edit Michele Evans !'otrick Vaughan Prflf/lfcliom .

16 ------theOrion ------Mnrch4, 1987' WANG CHUNG

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IMarch4,1987------______theOrion ______-----17 , 1- 1 I I \

John Nocl, Christine Thompson President President

As a candidate for President, it is I'm running for President of the important to let you know where I Associated Students because I'm stand. capable and qualified of leading I have served. as Director of 15,000 students and our $10 million Community Affairs and a member of corporation. Currently I am Director the Business Enterprise Board. I of Academic Affairs, member of have also served on community and Student Enrichment Committee, university committees dealing with Fiscal Review Committee, and I was

improving parking and bike lanes, a three year varsity soccer player. I creating a safer university climate I am a senior studying and supporting student projects Organizational Communication. I I ~ through lottery funds. have experience in leadership, f I Students need a strong voice ar· collective bargaining, financial and I ticulating their concerns on issues budget planning, and conflict I \ like fees, textbook and food service resolution. These qualities can guide f ) prices. and academic issues. Next us through a prosperous 87·88 I r year, I would like to be your student academic year. voice working to meet the diverse I can provide CSUC students with needs of all students. EXPERIENCE and CONTINUITY. Please vote for Christine (DeDe) Thompson for A.S. President.

Kelly Craighead DeniseCate Executive Vice President Executive Vice President

I'll run naked through campus for Bringing it all together ...that is your vote! Just kidding! But now what the Executive Vice Presidency that I have your attention ...the A.S. is all about. Integration skills are a can do a lot for you, but only if there yital iool in effectively ad· are qualified leaders that represent ministrating the various boards and the students. I am your qualified committees of the Associated leader. I've been president·of a dorm, Students. My abilities to integrate participated in athletics, co:founded' '. and work effectively with a ,wide G.D.I. (largest social/community~';;­ variety of~people. are the most im· club on campus) and I am an active . poi'tifut quhlities I can contribute to ' member of Red Barn. I'm also V.P. thisilOsitio·n. My experience includes for Rec. Admin. Majors and sit on two years as a Resident Advisor, the University's Commission for membership on the Instructionnlly Organizations and Activites, as well Related Activities Boardmembership as on the Academic Affairs Board .. in Pi Beta Phi, and current Vice­ .Vote Kelly CraigheadA.S. V.P. Chair of the Student Union Board . Vote for effective, experienced leadership, vote Denise Cate, Executive Vice President.

Craig M. Landry Jeff Kiernan Executive Vice President Executive Vice President The job of Executive Vice In my five years, yes five years at President is one that demands ex· Chico State, I have had the op­ cellent communication sldlls and portunity to participate in several unwavering objectivity. These organizations. Huving served on the qualities, in addition to effective Pioneer Days Committee, the leadership style and the ability to Committee on Arts and Lectures, motivate others, ensure fairness and and working as a salesperson at ~he stability. I possess these qualities, AS Bookstore, I have been in close and therefore, can best serve the contact with the students, the students in this capacity. I would . faculty, and the community of Chico. IiIre to help crellte lin atmosphere of This. experience has given me the increased student participation in . essential leadership skills and the A.S. programs and activities for all i ,. . broad based knowledge of the students. . student and community needs and My primary goal when elected is to interest crucial to an AS Executive remain objective while attempting to Vice President. I want to be the satisfy students' needs. Through person to whom you voice a concern. open communications and working Vote Kiernan .... diligently I can better serve the 1 students of CSU, Chico. J r:~ ~ .''''1 i,I ~ I,! •. " t < ";." , .. f • , " , , , " , .-. f , ~ , j t • , , r , f , , .' t • I r I .. ~ ,;- , , , / , . ,~ • I - I I., +., j' I .. , • j :. f I " ~ ~ , • I • • , • ~ • • " • I • • • • • • ;,' • ..,.,...... '.' , ( • " I .1,", .4 18 .i------the Orion------March 4,1987'

Anne Marlde Donald A Ledoux Vice President for Finance Vice President for Finance

The office of Vice President for The Vice-President for Finance of Finance requires experience and the Associated Students is the commitment. I can offer the financial controller of the Cor· students both. poration. The responsibility of the Photo I have been active in the AS for Vice President for Finance is to two years and have sat on various maximize student benefits through Not Available Sub· committees: Activity Fee proper expenditure of Activity Fee Board, Business Enterprise Board funds. and the AFB Philosophy Committee. Financial . knowledge and com· This involvement gave nie the municntive skills are vital to foundation for future input to the fulfilling this position. I have at· AS. Currently I am the Assistant to tained these skills through a finance the VP for Finance. As sueh, I have internship at Dean Witter Reynolds, gained insight and knowledge. as well as working one on one with This experience coupled with my people through a sales and cashiering Finance Major and Computer Science position at Nordstroms, and active Minor will enable me to implement involvement in a campus fraternity. my ideas and effectively manage Ledoux is for you. . funds to the benefit' for the students.

Tom Scott Director of Academic Affilirs Chris Skarakis Director of Academic Affairs Tell someone you attend Chico State, and their fust thought is "party capitall" My goal is to see I am running for the office of that theu next thought is "".and an Director of Academic Affairs. I have exc~lIe'nt ·university.".· Many been working closely with incumbent students don't realize that there are Director of Academic Affairs,' over 100 recognized organizations on Christine Thompson, and know the campus. I want to get people out of needs and demands of the office as their dorms and apartments and into well as the current issues surroun· campus life. Also, Chico faces large­ ding it. I am presently a member of scale improvement. in coming years the ::lWI task force developing the - possible BMU' aqilltion, library SIP~:evaluation ,catitlo,g: expansion, and a parking structure. Being a student at Chico State for I .' plan to play a part in their four years and involved with various realization. If elected to Academic organizations I am sensitive to the Affairs Director, I will struggle to needs of the students. If elected, I increase student involvement, and will combine my knowledge and enrich Chico's academic en. experience and work, toward those vironment. needs.

Nick Meyers Director of Business Affairs Jeff McClure My name is Nick Meyers, and I am Director of Business Affairs pursuing the office of Director of Business Affairs. If elected, my objectives are to see that the A.S. I am well qualified to be your Businesses are run efficiently and Director of Business Affairs. , , economically" After all, our As a Senior, studying Finance and businesses nre set up with our Economics, I hlive the necessary money, are run by students, and are technical background for this in existence to serve us. I will strive position. More importantly, as to see that our businesses do not take Controller for the· A.S. Cultural advantage of student needs, to make Affairs, I hnve been able to bock this a massive profit. technical knowledge with actual As vice-chairman of Activity Fee experience. My membership in a ,.: Board, I have gathered knowledge of fraternity for the past 2 1/2 years, not only how A.S. programs and including an executive council budgets work, but how to get things' position, has polished my leadership done through student government. . skills. As a senior Business Administration' My underlying goal will be to make major with a light load next year, I· myself thoroughly accessible to would prove to be an effective, students, realizing the great im· director. . portance that listening has in any So Remember, "Vote For Nick," I represenataive government. , The t .... Mean Business. bottom line is STUDENT NEEDS. ;L:~ '.r) < ___ ",._.~,_v" . .~ '..., ~ : . . :..... ~, " •• _~ ,'_. ~ ••: ...... ~ ...... ;;.... ,"'

. Glenn Farrel Chris Martinez I Director Df PrDgrams and , DirectDr of CDmmunications , I OrganizatiDns

Programs and organizations playa The Director of Communicatians is very impart ant rale in our college responsible for cammunicatian experience. 'rhis positian is between the student bady and the I responsible fDr all University Baard of Directors. Yau elect the recognized graups, including the ;3~' Board of Directors, so. their decisians Children's Center, CLlC, and CAVE. .. -'.... should reflect yaur opinion. As I have been invalved in variaus Directar of Cammunications, my job organizations over my twa years at ~:::':' wauld be to. not only keep you in­ Chico. State, including serving an the formed about upcoming decisions Board of Directars at CLIC. This and events, but to keep the Board of invalvement has provided me with jE.;'\:, • Di~e;tors fully aware of your the invaluable experience and IopinIOns. ;" leajlership qualities needed to fulfill I I have the knowledge and ex- the respansibilities of this pasitian. I perience working with the campus feel that I can prave to. be an effective ~",,, -,.:. Imedia to do the job. More im- liaison between the numerous ... portantly, I have the wiUingness to organizatians and the AS Baard. .. .',:: Ilisten to and encourage student Elect Glenn Farrel, an advocate far .... .opinions, and to. respond to your I.,. t'"" your progams and arganizatians. '. -" suggestions.

! Kara Chitjian Director of Programs and 1::===:=====-..=·._:::""7::",, ..1. La Shon Smith Director of CommunicatiDns Organizations My name is La Shon Smithj I'm majoring in Journalism with a MOVE AHEAD WITH A political science minor. LEADER-The past twa years were The A.S. wauld earn a hard my training grounds in learning the dedicated wDrker, shauld I be elected structure of the A.S. I have been into' Dffice. I wDuld work hard to appainted to. the Judiciary Board as improve existing programs, as well well as being a member af the as implement new programs in the Student Enrichment Cammittee. ,interest af the student bady. My ganl far nll Programs and In addition to. this, I feel as a Organizatians is to. create a pasitive, apen line af communicatian within communications major I have a lot to. affer this position; for knowing how the entire Student BadY. to. communicate is the success in any Serving as your Iialsan between nil position. I'd like to see stranger and Programs and Organizatians and the :better communicatians between the . A.S. I will make Chico. State a better :student body and the A.S., I can educational, cultural, social and 'make this happen. recreatianal institutian. The A.S. has so. much to. offer. We need the right leader. _.FOLLOW A LEADER-Vote Kara Chitjian { Directar af Programs and I I Organizatians. JDhnMartin I Director of CommunicatiDns

Ben Holder The duties af the Directar of Director of Programs and Cammunications include: chairing Organiza tions the Communicatians Committee, . which is responsible far the A.S. Newsletter, chairing the Electians Hello Chico. State. My name is Ben iBaard, which aids in a smaath Holder. During the past twa years ,transition Df administrations, and I've worked at A.S. spansared Kcse : acting as a liaisan between the radio. as News Directar/Braadcaster, . student owned KCSC, and the D.J., and am currently co-Pragram Associated Students as a whale. Director. All af my effarts have been Within these duties lies respon­ gcared tawards enriching the life and sibility and communication ability. oppartunities af the CSUC student. Being a senior majoring in Anather chance fDr the enrichment Organizational Communicatian, I of student life is at hand. If elected, have the backgraund in interpersanal I'm ready to. jump right into the cammunicatian, conflict position of Directar af Programs and management, and both internnl and Organizatians, thus continue to. serve external arganizatianal structure. In thll csue student. 'ra do this, I need handling these respansibilities I will your support. Vate far yaur future, continue to. open the lines of com­ March 11 and 12. municatian between the students, and the A.S. giant. ,{

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, . 20 __.... ______the OriOIl ...... · ...... ;.;, ...... '.. ' •. '''';'''' ---- ...... ___ ..... ;.;.;.;;..;..;...... ' ' 'Mnrch4;1987 ' "'l ., " " ,,' , , ' , ' , , ' " " ' , ' .' . . ", ,/ ',:,!: ASSOCIATED STUDENTS Number 10 PROGRAMS & ORGANIZATIONS A. Kara Chitjian GENERAL ELECTION B. Glenn Farrel SPRING 1987 C. Ben Holder Nuniber 11 STUDENT UNION AFFAIRS ALL RESPONSES MUST BE MARKED ON YOUR SCANTRON BALLOT SHEET IN THE AREAS SHOWN ON THE SAMPLE lNYOURBOOTH. A. John Cooper USE #2 PENCIL ONLY. MAKE NO OTHER 'MARKs'ON TIllS SHEET B. Mall Petersen OR ON YOUR SCANTRON BJ\LLOT ifNt.ESs lNSTRUCTED TO 00 SO. ALL IN BUB~~ COMPLETELY. PART II PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL REVISIONS PART I STUDENT BODY OFFICERS NUMBERS 12·14 ON YOUR BAllOT SHEET NUMBERS 1·11 ON YOUR BALLOI' SHEET The ~ialed SlUdents Boord of Directors on Februmy 17, and Marth 3,1987, Vote for only one candidale for each office. Write-in candidates may be written approved a series of amendments 10 the AS Constitution. In order for these on the back of your scantron ballot sheet in the top left margin. Print changes to beccme effective, they must be independently approved by two-th.~·~ ___ ... candidate's name and the office he/she is sedcing. Completely fill in the bubble of the students voting in the election. on your liC8I1tro11 sheet for the candidate of your choice.

Number 1 PRESIDENT Number 12 A. Christine (De De) Thompson B.JohnNock

Number 2 EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT

A. Denise Cate B. Kelly Craighead C. Craig M. Landry D. Jeff Kiernan

Number 3 VICE PRESIDENT FOR FINANCE

A. DonUDoux B. Anne Markle c 10 act on appea1s from decisions when it acts as a trial court. Number 4 ACADEMIC AFFAIRS

A.. Chris Skarakis B. Tom ScOll ~-,." .... Judiciary shall operate under the principles of due process and shall I" 'lIaIiil:liif\l/er to make such dispositions of cases as equity demands. This sha1l be Number 5 BUSINESS AFFAIRS plished by making a wriUen statement of fmdings of fac~ conclusions, and the reasons or basis thereof, on all material issues of fact, law or discretion A. Jeff McClure Presented. B. Nick Meyers To Number 6 COMMUNICATIONS D. The AS Judiciary shall have the power to make dispositions of cases as A. Chris Martinez equity demands. This shall be 8CalIIIplished by making a wriuen statement of B. La Shon Smith findings of fact, conclusions, and the reasons or basis thereof, on alllll8lerial C. John Martin issues of facL

Number 7 COMMUNITY AFFAIRS Section 2: Membership

A. Dave Stagnaro From B.Jeff Nightingale C. EdLucioo A. 'Ibe.te shall be one Chief JU5Iice and fOlD' AssociaJe Justices on the AS D. Heather R·A. Bowen Judiciary. Appointmellls 10 the AS Judk:iary shall be made by the outgOing AS E. Rudy Minger President when it is koown IhIIt a v8CIIIICy 0' vacancies ~iU exist III the beginning of the following school year. Appointments sha1l be made by the Number 8 CULTURAL AFFAIRS incumbent AS President fO' vacancies occuning during die year. All appointments shall be fO' the continuous \QIIlS not 10 exceed three yelll1i and A. Rob Faulkner shall require approval of the BOD by a simple majority VOle. - r ';, Number 9 MULTICULTURAL & STUDENT AFFAIRS To

A. Shannon Fmley A. There shall be one Chief Justice and four Associate Justices on the AS Judiciary. Appointments 10 the AS Judiciary shall be made by the outgoing AS President when it is koown that a v8CllllCy or vacancies wiu exist at die beginning of the following school year. These appointments shall be approved by the outgoing AS Board of Directors. Appointments shall be made by the \ ., incumberit AS President fO' vacancies occurring during the year. All awointmCDts shall be for continuous terms not to exceed three years and shall require approval of the BOD by a simple majority vote.

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Number 13 ARTICLE VII. PART ill REVENUE SHARING Elections, Recall, Initlatlve and Referendum NUMBERS 15-61 ON YOUR BALLOT

A Yes, I approve Revenue Sharing is a plan which allows each student to directly pledge $2 of B. No, I do not approve his/her annual $30 Activity Fee to a recognized student organization or student program, or $1 10 each of two organizations or progmms. nle organizations Section 5: Referendum Elections lisIed below have submitte.d their names for inclusion in this plan.

From Fill in a block next to one program or organization if you wish 10 pledge $2 10 that organization, or fill in two blocks next to two programs or organizations if B. A referendum measure must be esIliblisbed by a petition of !he students. you wish to split your pledge between two or$lUlizntioDS, $1 to ellCh. Pri(l' to circulation, !he language must be detecmined to be in compliance with all local, SI8le and federollaws applicable to the AS by !he BOD in consultation with legal counsel. The BOD must oct within 10 days to approve !he language MARKING MORE THAN TWO RESPONSES WILL of !he referendum on !he petition. INVAUDATE THIS PORTION OF THE BALLor

To 15. Alpha Chi Smlity 16. Alpha Gamma Delta B. A referendum measure must be established by a petition of !he students or by 17. American Society of Civil Engineers vote of !he AS BOD as provided in subsection C. below. Prior to circulation of 18. Asian Christian Fellowship !he petition or vote of !he AS BOD, the language must be determined to be in 19. AS. Children's Center compliance with all local, state and fedemllaws applicable to the AS by the 20. Baptist Student Union BOD in consultation with legal counsel. The BOD must oct within 10 days to 21. Beta Theta Pi approve the language of the referendum. 22. Bulte Environmental Council 23. California NW8ing Students' Association From 24. Community Action Volunteers in Education (CAVE) 25. Computer Club C. The signatures must be verified by 26. Cycling Team/Club 27. Delta Chi Fraternity To 28. Delta Sigma Phi 29. Delta Sigma Pi I 30. Education & Support Progmms for Women (ESPW) 31. En'Core Society 32. Finance Qub 33. Freestyle Wrestling Club 34. Genemtiog Developmental Ideas (GDI) 35. Institute of Electrical/Electronic Engineers (IEEE) 36. Instructional Technology Society 37. International Business Club 38. International StudenlS Club ,. 39. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship t. 40. Lambda Chi Alpha ./ 41: Marketing Club "J. 42. MEChA U IS signed by 10 pelCellt of Associaled Students members calling 43. Omega Chi Theill \~ for endum election, then an election will be held not earlier than 10 nor 44. Omantental Horticulture Club I ter than 30 school days following the receipt of the petition. The signatures 45. Personnel/lndustrial Relations AssoCiation \ must be verified by the Election Board Chair. 46. Phi Chi Theta 47. Phi Kappa Tau 48. Pi Beta Phi 49. Rape Crisis Intervention Number 14 ARTICLE VB. SO. Sailing Club Elecdons, RecaU, Inldadve and Rererendum 51. SigmaNu 52. Sinorama Society A Yes, I approve 53. Society of Manuc.:turing Engineers (SME) B. No, I do not approve 54. Student Dietetic Association 55. Student Law Union of Minority Section 6: .Advisory Measure and Opinion Poll 56. Students Advocaling Nuclear Disumuunent (STAND) 57. Tau GIIIIlIDII TbeIa Addition 58. Tau Kappl Epsilon 59. 'IbcIa au Fmrcmity· F. F(l' the A&

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22 ______theOrion ______March4,19 87 ~~1987 Ed Lucido Heather R.-A. Bowen Director of Community Affairs Director of Community Affairs

At Chico I have served on the The Community Affnirs Director Election Board and the Political plays an important role as a liaison Science Student Union. Throughout between the student body and the my experiences I have found it in­ community. The degrce of ef­ spiring to successfully help others fectiveness the director has . is and to solve problems when being proportional to the amount of ex­ faced with them. I would like to perience he or she has. I have served continue doing this as the Director of on the 1986-87 Community' Affairs Community Affairs. Council Board, am the student ap­ I believe it is important to expand pointee to the Chico Area Recreation on ideas such as the Halloween District Board, and have worked a FeBtival and a community service great deal with Adventure Con­ event during Pioneer Week. Com­ nection, a student-community munity involvement is eSBential for oriented A.S. service. improving Btudent·community The student· community bond in relationBhipB. I intend to Berve the Chico needs to be strengthened. I ABBociated StudentB along with the plan to facilitate this through community with my upmoBt Bin­ programming that benefits both cerity and dedication. CSUC students and the Chico Community.

Jeff Nightingale t '" .• Director of Community Affairs

The office of Director of Com­ munity AffairB requireB l'iinovative Rudy Minger' ideaB and knowledge of community Director of Community Affairs iBsucs. My goal is to use my Bkills as a communicationB major to develop and Btrengthen relations between Hello. My name is Rudy Minger studentB and the community; making . and I'm running for Director of each more aware of what one iB doing , Community Affairs. I want to get rid . for the other. of Pioneer DaYB, throw all the Having been a member of the ffaternitics and sororities out of Marketing Club, Organizational' , , Chico and get longer library hours. Communications Club, and currently While' I haven't got a prayer of r serving as an intern at Community winning, I'd appreciate '0 few votes I Environmental Education Program, ' just the same. I have gained a broad knowledge of !1 "f student and community concerns. I ','.! [ ,. intend to use this experience and ~' ! knowledge to be your student voice as A.S. Director of Community Affairs .

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David Stagnaro Director of Community Affairs Robert Faulkner Cultural Affairs The office of Director of Com­ munity Affairs is an important one, it provides a Vital link between you, a As the current Cultural Affairs member of the student body, and the Director and part of the Cultural community. Affnirs staff for three years, I've I believe it is the responsibility of. developed a detailed understanding the Director to promote un­ of the A.S. During the last year I've derstanding and cooperation bet­ provided diverse, quality programs . ween CSUC students and the at a low cost· to students (AI Stewart) I~ surrounding community. Through and have brought the first major an improved relationship we can' concert in two years back to Chico begin to solve problems such as (Wang Chung). As a board member, parking and how Pioneer Days is' I've fought fol' student issues and conducted. have represented students best My experience in business and as an ' , issues. My re-election will ensure the intern for a state asoemblyman will continuity needed from year to year

enable me to effectively carry out the in order to keep the concerts coming ,"" :{ duties of this office. With your vote I and guarantee a student oriented can attain these goals. voice on the Board of Directors...... ,L _.'-'.e· .-" ,_ - __ •.______• ___ ' _____.. . ' ". - ._._-----_._-_._-. .March 4, 1987 ------tlteOrion'------23 ~1917

I " •

Shannon Finley Mott Petersen John Cooper Director of Multicultural ond Director of the Student Union Director of the Student Union Student Affairs My name ill Shannon Finley and I I 'mthe only can'didate for Student As a student in my fourth year, I am running for Director of Union Director who had direct ex­ have felt the walls of the BMU Multicultural and Student Affairs. perience within the Associated closing in. Recently the initial steps As a Native American residing both Students. I'm a voting member of to reverse this trend were taken. If on and off the reservation, I have both the Student Union board and not acted upon the momentum. will seen the need 'for a change in the the Policy Council. I'm very excited be lost. The BMU needs fresh ideas policies and attitudes affecting about the upcoming year and I want and renewed energy. It's time to minority groups. I believe this to be able to represent your views in elect a student who understands the change can best be facilitated on our the decisive and important issues students'ineeds and is able to in· campus through successful facing our student government. I'll terpret and provide for them. I am educational programming. My in· be here two more years to make sure this student. Having finished a year· volvement with the Multicultural - Board, as well as many dif~ . the things you want done are ac· long term· I!.s presiden~ ok;~y. complished. Continuity such as this fraternity, I have ample time, skill ferent groups has helped me to will ensure the improvement of our and the experience to make decisions develop the necessary skills for Union, campus, and community. I which will best serve and represent adnunistel'ing this program. I am hope you'll invest in your educational the students of CSUC. confident I can successfully address experience and vote March 11·12. the needs of CSUC Students as Director of Multicultural and Student Affairs.

*Term papers 100 EQB-5 * Resumes * Application Equalizer IBoOB ter Letters 50 - WATT

\ G~ I@,11'11~1~~.1 lit WORD PROCESSING We dOli blc dwelt Clarion roo, d~ - cycrylhing we do '* TfIM PAPERS to mnke it perfect· Play With $89.95 for you! man $1.50 per page ,. :".1 A Full Deck a.:'''':''''' ,j 9th & Mangrove (, 119 BROADWAY, SUITE 215 guaranteed Chico upstairs 1/ professional 343-5552 (916) 343·1774 Installallon good through 3·14·87 ~x'plr~s;3~ 17 ~8!. ' . 24 ... _____....,. ______"'''''''''._;...______'''''''4.l987.

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. . . and everybody' had fun last night

Photo and Design by Tim Rowe' ------M=h4.1987 WANG CHUNG , 'Matth4.l987------:--:-~-~---:"-----25 WOWS CHICO

fun last night

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:26,!""'.'.'.'·.'.·.".·.".'.'.".'.'.. ','.' .. ".' ______-----,theOrion------March4,1987' , ~ARTS AND LEISURE ICool On Craze Wang Chung hrings to Chico soundtrack to start the show.: Inst~ad it gently rocked the by Beth Miller Instrumentally, the song was audience who had been invited Assistant Adviser similar to most of the others by (unnecessarily) to snap their having, dominant bass and bass fingers along with it at the drum, subtle background per· appropriate beats. Look a t them now. cussion and synthesizer "Lets Go Baby, Lets Go" It's been four years since programming. which is currently getting a lot of Wang Chung hit the airwaves It's the way Hues and, Fold· radio play, was another success ,.j with their singular sound and man put these elements with the crowd. The very simple intriguing lyrics. They were so in together, however, that sets ("Let's go baby, lets go baby .I phase it was hard to resist them. Wang Chung apart from other come on") but catchy tune really Despite predictions that bands, Though their recent hit, got the bodies swaying. they'd never make it past their "Everybody Have Fun Tonight" It was "Dance Hall Days," :) first album, "Points on the was one of the best received however, that didn't need an Curve," the band, carried by the songs of the night, its Top 40 introduction. After hitting a I unique vocals of and simplicity doesn't do justice to couple of the first chords, Hues bass guitarist , the group, It's the syncopated merely had to say "Do you want 1 keeps popping up in the most funk of songs like "Dance Hall to hear this?" unlikely places, The Top 40 chart Days" and "Don't Let Go" that The crowd' was coolon this I is one. Acker Gym is another. brought Wang Chung into the craze as they related to a time ! Though the nudience that limelight, It was "To Live and when "I, you, and everyone we gathered in the gym last night to Die in L,A.," which utilizes knew could believe, do, and share see the London band was not to Hues' smooth vocals and in what was true." capacity, it was filled with another ingenius beat, that kept The band would have had a faithful fans; many of whom' them from gaining flash.in·the-/ tough time getting out of Chico if were probably driven to the show pan status. they'd decided to leave at that by their parents. , Unfortunately, these songs, point. .Fortunately, a lot of It almost seemed like being at r,ely heavily on studio, applauseandagymfullofpeople a Day on the Green: the choice programming which can't be alternately yelling "Wang was to stand or sit in the duplicated live, so they suffered \ Chung" and clapping twice, was Wang Chung - Jack Hues entices the crowd. bleachers; girls' in front of the a little in the translation. Ad· enough to lure them back for an stage were perched on shoulders; ditionally, Feldman's vocals fell encore. and not lost' behind Bryan Hitt's and lyrics which gave the final and one girl occasionally protty flat on "Don't Let Go." , In a fitting conclusion, they drums: guitarist Mikal Reid got song its strength: swigged off a smuggled·in beer. Still, the songs and musicians /' picked "Look At Me Now." a chance to wax his skill on the It's hard to recall how we were It took only a little en' themselves were strong enough Perhaps more than any other, strings again:' and Feldman, at school \ couragement from Hues to get to' carry them, and the crowd this song allowed each of the whose looks and mannerisms ourambitions'and conditions I, \ ( everybody to have fun last night. , seemed to be saying "I'll never instruments to be heard. Dobra heavily resemble King Crimson's and our hopes for the future. II The band chose, appropriately', give up on you." Dob~n, who aloo sang some Adrian Belew, had a steady and The teachers we had, our mums if Another song from their movie fantastic backgtound vocals, I 'Wake Up Stop Dreaming" off simple bass line which pulled it and our dads, their decisions and track, "Lullaby," might have, added a percussion flair: Graeme' all together. revisions their "To' Li~e 'aiid Die In L.A," been expected to be a s!eeper., Pleeth's keyboards were clear mtimately, it was Hues' voice and their hopes for the future". The Palrnz: King of live music in Chico

by Pot VIlughan tastes go, be it rock, blues, Staff Writer reggae or what have you." Despite its small town location, the club carries a , Before entering The Palmz heavyweight reput,ation with night club in Chico, one should national recording artists. In the cleanse the musical mind to a past two years the Palmz has healthy state. boasted appearences by Upon doing so, expect no bluesman Robert Cray, Elvin Beastie Boys bonanza, leave Bishop, 'rhe Byrds, The Ven· thoughts of Janet Jackson at the tures and most recently, a sorority house, and it's, surely paclEed performance by Greg against all odds that Phil C. will Kilm. be heard from. Buczek feels there is a reason

The Palmz is a hip doWntown for this friendly' affiliation with , ' nightclub, and unlike most of its these well known artists. !, Chico counterparts', focuses on "They come back to The i [i ~ original live music rather' than Palmz, because they like playing : the robotic sounds of the Top 40, here and they're treated well. '5' or MariE Goodman's video Kihn really likes playing here, ~ vexations. and Cray used to play here quite ' I! Palrnz manager Mike Buczek often. Bands that play here ~, comments, "We feature original almost always call back right l' live music from all over the away after their show to book j world, and the music io very another gig. Musicians like it i 1:1" diversified. Last week we had a here." band from Nigeria,tonlght we Buczek would like Chico State ' Rack Rail - Fabulous Blue flames light h up Friday night at the Palmz. The hllve a local band. As you clln see group Is just one of many bands who play the club. we're very open liS far os musical see Palm: page 2ii

I i r < i F:~~~i~~~~E'SURE ;;"";"""";-;;;r:WH]~~~~M"Yi~,~S"'iARf=.~1 ~~\" '~'~0~ .•~,~~'.l-~ ~-".l. Rain hrings to life ~E~P~- ( ~ \j _ ~~C>£..""'p:dtb=:o.-~~tidu.- ~' ~dD __ ~=d""'~ck~ ___ ------, byScottCornwell BiddJe.whopla:yedthelate.JoIm job.. W"1tht&era:ert.~0f ,,(~ leN - - - r=:"'the'-5 ~;=: E~~=::~ ,:-__ ...;;_.;;;;~.;;;;_;;D;;;_=·::S:.·_134""::"';;;~.:,~::;l::~.,.y::o___ -l ] unfamiliarwithisapmblem.that yunknowtursongs. I'mgIadto JOe Bitbm:a. ~ Gange 1pIagnes many rock bands wbm Ire3r our albums have been Hzn:isan.. smg~ComesSfle - f ~~~probIemRainbas ~m:!e ~~ ~= ~~~~~ { oo~e:~y night Rain ~ came back ~ =:~:; ~ pedormed "A Tribute to the dnsst-dintheSergeant:Pepper-'S solohrroaIdha're~ ~ Beat!es" to a full bow;e at Lonely Hearts Club Band ReJphCastali.I!5RingnStaa. Laxson Auditoriwn em tbeCbim ~ and pbt.yedp:sycheOO&: smg -Wah i!!. ~ Help From I_ State campus.. The band playa! scmgs sudl as "Lw:::y in the Sky My Friem!s.~ ftfmring tms so:ag ~~~afnrn!:wendoo: :~~:;~~ !:er:~=~~and 1 receptive crowd.. theLife.... - WheDRl!iosaid~lhe } Rain came onstage dressEd in· With the help of Mark Lewis: e:dire ~ stood lG ~ " bladt and white suit.s., and on sunthesiur- the songs _them f:ea. 0Ir2t0la-~ started wi!.h "1 Sa.- Her SlHIl:ldai surprisingly like the HtbeirbckoftimE.~ Standing There~ and -I Wanna odginal recordinp. Even many ti!q cnaId mly pb:y om= ~ - 3. Hold Your- Hsnd." 'liue to of the bU.arre fiIlefs the BmtJes ... the baod ~ mm. e. beart- ~

SECOND ANNUAL ART EXHIBITION

& AUCTION.. tobe beld at ASSOCfAilON FOR RETARDED CITlZElIS ~ENTER . 501 P.Urn2. St Chico. CA 95928 ith Saturday • .:...~ 7.1987 lui • RECEPnOfu1lWor::18m.r 7:00PM .. Beittles conttrl.!l. theaudttorium m-known {or W8eindudtit 1IIItming~of ..Let It. by we mWwitb ~shriclt5 At the CQnclUllion or the MCUnd lion D'o'unu &- a.m,.sn .m b. sent:\li .. fromyoung-womm. $lt. the band took II .eII deserved ""-Rain said lhe7 fftlI1y e:ajoy«l A piece of Une art wtll: 'lie gtvtln away as a door prize. Joe)' CuratoltJ. who porUayed bteak..Thf!yCAtGebl1dr.~ playing Chfc:o bKIIIU5e- th" Paul lI.teCart-ney, 5Duttded in casualllixtie5 gub to perl'nnn Audience was ~e and a tot nmIlIrbbty lib the legeJd he mObster hits "Hey Jude:' "Back nf~giIh wen- sawning • THiS IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO VIEW AND ACQUIRE WUetDulating. Heplayedrigbt­ in tho U.s.S.ft." "All Yau Ntoed at.thml.. "Wap)a.:rllkltofgin on THE WORKS OF AWARD WtNNtNG, AMERICAN AND hiUldl!d. and hls ba55 guitM WlUI is Lave"ond ··RevclUliGn... joints and the mwic ill ju.!t 11 AND !UROPtAN ARTISTS. th tuml!d. up too loud. but. far D $3 Riddle. donning a long wig, bsdgrowuf lOr- gup wru, ~ admissian f~•• bo could cum­ round. tint.t!d !!pllCtAcle. a ~ IIooldog: fur .. part:nt:rl:. said be plnin? jacket. tho nppropriato IDIlll­ It!ddI~ • Vtso. htGsl'mlnl & Amlrltal'l E_P.fUS Wilt b. u:~Pfl!d" ..n­ Curatolo a~ to the Chico nllri!lm!l Gnd It !Ifuging vuke R.Iift hu bHn topther- fir 10 ,.. auditmtl! eDdy an by bribglng up mmUllr to Ute originGl. was YilIlf&. ad have bfto.n ~ FOR MORE INfORMATION CONTACT ARC 891-5865 And !:'Onfirtning the n:cat· 5pC!ClatUlar a5 Lennon. lheir (I.UHIlt rannat [or £out' ta PlayboyraUbg. "1'heactJngaspecto( the!_. ,.,.. sbwt the bnlak-up 01 .. In their CGt1IR!fWdw dte! tho is a5 mueh fun Il!f playtng the B_Uemuf.t.Aid.R1cfdlL b' gn'Iup played. 45 mJhI1lO ad. of musfc. E\"t!Q'body ImoWJI bow A.fttor the show the band >It cwly hlta iududlng "RDUover lhay acted." saId ruddle. "Wa nturned homct itt L.A. for • I' Bl!C!tboVllh" Ind '''I'wb;t Ilnd aU haY1l I0Io projC!CU -.re'~ couphtofWMb. tht.n to Npada Shout." ",hlch promplC!d many workitlg on. but It.'. a lot. of run to play a. HlmM. (or • few ta of the balcony menbl!ta to do playing- the Bellie. ~ "A.fU:r that tho fairs jllltthat. "WC!plAncm~thndqWl.tDit. .tart. We'D hit. asoat of tMm,." ASSOCiation11arc for Retarded CItizens 'The end of thla 1M. left. Jim potonoul.. l'mnotftJoldna-fcra uldB11hom. : ...., " ~, . "':... -I -···-~·~·-""··l···~··'.!.'·"'··""~." ~ ~., ~. Ow, ... ,-'I."' ...... - •. ,,_ •.•.. , ..!."" .f •• __ "._: ... .,.,.",' .. . ., ':~I._._- - ,...... ' .,'.~ . '~ . "'." ' ••', •• I". ..- .. '. , ."

j." ;2~r·········· the Orion------March4, 1987'

STUDIOS -ARJ~AN.. D LEISURE 1 BEDROOMS Baseball cards a hit at Ehhets 2 BEDROOMS by Paul Finley dollars. The most important thrown away. Staff Writer determinant for a card's value is Since the early days, baseball I Luxury Apartments whether or not it is the player's has expanded into a national I Quiet. country like atmosphere rookie season. The further away hobby/business which often takes form as swap meets and Convenient to town. campus, Quick, try to name a business from the rookie season a player's in which a $2 investment can, in card is printed the less value it conventions. This year's national I medical. and shopping. a matter of months, tum into EI retains. convention is scheduled to b!l small fortune of $30, $40 or even If a rookie does exceptionally held in San Francisco. $50. It's the stock market all well, his card value increases, The question most often asked 920 W. 4th Ave. 345·5779 right, but on a smaller scale; kids and if he does poorly the value is what is the most valuable card can playas well as adults and it's decreases. ever. Strong says the consensuB Chico Professionally managed by f P1M F} ,fun too. There are three companies that points to II card of the early The name' of the game is print baseball cards. Topps is the 1900s great, Hanus Wagner, baseball card trading. granddaddy and the best known, valued at nearly $10,000. Mickey In a small, unobtrusive room but Freer, and especially Mantle's rookie card is in the Upstairs Mall sits Ebbets Dunross have established estimated at $3,000. : IJNlf.S. S(~Ul~l.ll~ Field, Chico's version of the New themselves as premier Companies will sometimes put 22H·:.!aO Salem York Stock Exchange. It is here . distributors. Each year the together packages at the end of a that kids of all ages come to companies will print a certain season. called "specialt'y wheel. and deal their cards in amount of cards at set prices and packages." These include cards hopes of coming away with each card's value will rise or fall of rookies who started slow but another score. according to a players per· came on to have exceptional The store's manager and sale formance. Dunross has recently seasons. Specialty packages of NOW OPEN proprietor Becky Strong runs been printing fewer. cards 1987 are already valued at $18· 9:30 to 2 am the business hersAIf and often making theirs valuable com· $20 since 1986 was such a good tues. - sat. finds herself surrounded by modities. year for rookies, scores of serious traders. The trick to successful trading Though the stakes of card "It gets pretty crazy in here," is having a foresight for cards trading are getting increasingly Wednesday Special says the bright·eyed energetic that may be potential fortunes. higher Strong feels tradirig Strong. "Sometimes there are 30 Everyone has their own system, should be done for fun. Long Island Ice Tea kids in here at once. I'm almost but Strong's is probably the "I like the game aspect of to the point where I might have least scientific. trading," says Strong. "I don't in a Communal Bowl to hire a few more 'Becky "I look at the pillyer's face and know all there is to know about Strongs'. I never. thought it if I think he feels he'll have a baseball so I learn from people $1.50 per person would come to that." good season I'll buy it," she when they come in. Just like they \ Strong took over Ebbets Field says. "I'm usually 90 percent learn the business aspect from L just over two years ago with two accurate. It must he women's me. Trading should be fun. When other women ..Her predecessor intuition. " people do 'it for money that's owned the business for a few According to Strong, the when it's no fun anymore." years but lost interest soon after history of baseball cards dates becoming invblved with two back to the late 1800s and early Chico State junior Brian Long other stores also located in the 1900s where pictures of players agrees. "I've been saving cards Upstairs Mall. After her part· appeared on the back of tobacco since I was a kid. I have about ners 'became disinterested, silks. Later, cards were sold with 20,000. It's fun trying to sec if Strong bought their shares and packages of gum as well as on you can get a whole set. I've became sole proprietor. the back of miniature cereal always admired baseball players Strong supplements her card· boxes. The latter cards have and their achievements. Card trading business by worldng at become very valuable since few trading is a way to share and Chico State as public relations .were made and ~any were learn with other baseball fans." photographer, and free-lances for weddings, portraits, and other events. "Photography is my real work and this (card trading) is ... well, my play work," she says. Her play work may consist of only half·days, however, it does Ii provide the major portion of I I Strong's income. Since taking over Ebbets Field, Strong has, built a loyal clientele of traders from Paradise, Colusa, and as far away as Red Bluff and Redding. The eoger faces of traders don't \, always belong to kids either. "'--~""~.. 119MAIN "Qh I get lawyers, ac· ill. and Q1.cl..er' ",... countants, medical technicians, ~ all kinds. A lot of white-collar with: \5 o\ef " workers are very much involved with card trading," says Strong. '. f u""e 1\\e " Trading baseball cards, to ,1\\e & those who aren't familiar with it, involves more than admiration Door Prizes of a player. A number of clements combine to predict a (L·RJ\~ Nolan free playmate swimsuits and tanning sefsions card's value and often times Avid Baseball Card Collectoro seemingly trivial factors such as Lee, August Lee, and Jim Schwartz sort through stacks of 'riday after hours club 1:30am • 4:00am " a team's location can mean the cards ~hlle store manager Becky Strong checks, current difference between five or 10 prices.

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I:". March4,1987------....----- ...... -----theOrion------29 . .'1 -ARTS AND LEISURE ~ 11 The Great Disappointment

Thoughts Ltd. by Matt Olmstead ".': .

I remember the first time I ever had soda perlences with cookies the more the an­ crackers. ticipation became unbearable. It occurreaat Joey Pendelton's house In I hoped he had cola, but I was going to Pullman, Washington during the second settle for orange or root beer soda grade. crackers. Joey was my first best friend. He was a What he brought badl stili makes my tall chubby kid with black curly hair. We Jaws clench. did everything together, mostly because he They were ordinary saltine crackers: lived next door. I envied him a lot because Joey was from Boston and they called he was the only kid I knew who owned one them soda crackers back there. of those big red Fat Albert Whlffleball bats. When he offered me those familiar, dry, Not only was It big enough so you could plain squares of crumbs glued together, my pretty much be guaranteed a hit, but Angle day was Immediately ruined. 4th St. & Palladln, a spoiled bratty girl who lived In I should have known. Saltine Crackers. Broadway the apartment below Joey, and whom we The lowest link on the food chain. The both hated, was afraid of the bat. Needless stuff you ate when there was absolutely 894·8100 to say we never wasted an opportunity to nothing else to eat. I mean, they were chase her around with It when her parents even worse than graham crackers. ' were gone. In my fit of disbelief, I slugged Joey and Mon.-Sat. Anyway, Joey and I were blowing up demanded to know why he got me so " 10-6pm some old Tonka trucks with firecrackers excited over some lousy saltine crackers. when he asked me if I had ever had soda He told me he didn't know, but that I didn't crackers. I said I hadn't, and he couldn't have to hit him for It. believe It. So, he led me upstairs to his Joey knew I was upset, and he felt pretty family's duplex to get some._ responsible. So he went and convinced his i thought I knew everthlng about Joey, mom to make us a couple of big glasses of even the fact that one of his relatives had chocolate milk. I accepted his peace of· tatoos all over his body,so when I heard fering begrudgingly. We drank the that he had been holding out on me with chocolate milk on his steps while Joey these soda crackers, I was a little upset. quietly ate some of the saltine crackers. While he was fetching them, I tried to I can remember' that as being my first Imagine what they were like. I knew that I real disappointment - that hollow, trivial, had eaten (or at least seen) nearly every yet nonetheless strong feeling of not cookie or cracker made: Animal Crackers, getting what you wanted. Dreos, Chips Ahoy, Pinwheels (I had only After we finished our glasses, Joey knew , seen those), Nutter Butters 1 the list Is I was stili angry, so he grabbed the Fat ,endless. The more I reviewedI my ex· Albert bat and we went looking for Angle. / Palmz We know we have the best .• continued from page 26 Despite its reputable status snacks. but ,OU be the iudge with recording artists, The Although the obvious draw of students to share thos.e feelings. Pnlmz may suffer from its a unique music club brings in a "We would like' to have reilitively incognito locale. Says reliable patronage, The Palmz students come in more often. Buczek, "We're actually at 824 remains somewhat of an enigma . It's a friendly, unique at· Oroville Avenue, but we tell to many Chico State students. \ Burger Hut mosphere, as it adds some people we're at 8th and Main, Savcrien SIlYS, "I can't un· culture to a culturally deprived across from the' Chevron derstand why more students area," he says. stlltion." don't frequent The Pwmzj it's Bu@~rs Chico Stnte student Rick The Pwmz is presently open the best place in Chico to listen f,,'Em 1llr ~'ay rou mr 'Em, Sliverien cOmInents, "It's a little Tuesday through Sunday nights, to tunes. There' B none of that dlfferent beat than the other but plans are underway to ex· teflon sugar rock that my kid <:133 Nord Ave (corner of W. Sacramento & Hwy. 32) , Chico. 891-1418 bars in Chico, in thllt the music is pond the hours to include of· sister listens to," Imulti-fllccted. It's more like a ternoons, and possibly install a aDen Mon,·Thurs 10·930. Fn & Sat. 10·10, Sun, 11·9,30 club you would find in a larger FridllY afternoon happy hour, No, none of that. Just city." equipped with a live band and everything but. .~ . .:..'~ ~ ~ -,- ...._- .. --, -.... ~ ~. :~.-.,,-.,." .... - ., .. -." .... -..... -.- 1. . -, .•.. _. "" .. ' ._ .... " . ~-"

, '. of .~_.'.. '.. '.'.' .. ' '.'.'.'.' '.'.. '.'.'.' ·.·.·.·.·.'''.'.·,------theOrion------______March4,1987 3 __ ARTS AND'LEISURE Economical nightlife available in Chico by Becky Johnson Ilvoiding undue stress, the week, from 5·7 p.m. Also offered drink prices in town along with fered every day, with everything 1/. Staff Writer serious Chico bar·hopper on Il during this two·hour time slot the best specillls Ilnd the highest from Bloody Marys to Orgasms, budget clln save time as well by are pitchers of margnritas Ilnd qUlllity IllcohoI." normally priced at $2.50 Ilpiece, studying the following in· daiquiris for $2.95, domestic The Madison Bear Garden - offeredllt $3.50 for two. The month is only half over formation carefully - it could beers for 50 cents, and pitchers Another one of the hot spots in La Fonda - Not only does this I and Illready the forecast for the prove to be some of the most of beer for $1.25 and $1.50. Chico for students is The Bear, well·ostablished mexican upcoming week looks dismal for useful data a student will ever be . The Top Flight also IlC' which offers drink specials every restaurllnt offer daily food Margarita, a typical Chico Stllte exposed to. commodates those individuals night IlS well as a daily happy specials, but the drinks are student and part· time bar· Rice Bowl - Although it's who clln't make it during happy hour. During happy hour from 3· inexpensive IlS well; Well drinks hopper. located in a remote part of town, hour. On Tuesdays from 8-10 7 p.m" pitchers of beer are 'are 50 cents off, domestic beers No, it's not the weather which this fact hasn't seemed to p.m" Long Islands, Melon Balls aVllilable for $1.69 Ilnd free and wine are $1.00 and concerns this student. It's the discourage the large following of Ilnd a host of other 23·oz. 'peanuts Ilre offered, On, Friday, margaritas are $1.75 during party outlook which appears college students which have tropical drinks are served for appetizers, like pizzll and tacos hllppy hour from 3·6 p.m. dllily. bleak, made this restaurant, $1.00 Il piece and Mai·Tais Ilre Ilre offered free with drink Sunday·Thursday, com· The last couple weeks of heavy specilllizing in chinese cuisine, $1.50. Says one of the dllY purchases from 5·7 p.m. plimentary chips Ilnd bean dip partying has virtually exhausted popular during its daily happy bartenders who wished to remllin The Bear celebrlltes "over the are offored with drink purchllses Margarita's monthly party hour. Ilnonymous, "The house serves hump night" on Wedne6dllYs by from 10 to 12 p.m. funds to nil. With only $10 left From 3:30·5:30 p.m., guests good money vlllues for whllt offering Long Island ice tells for "At La Fondll the drinks are to party with for two weeks, can enjoy any well drink for a you're getting." Il $1.29 from 9·12 p,m. ThurdllYs weak but I like it because you Margarita, needless to say, is in $1.00, which includes an Ildded The Graduate - While The are "Chico appreciation" nights can eat, drink ond be merry all at a panic. bonus: appetizers in the form of Grlld, as it is better known, with well drinks selling for 79 once," SIlYS Chico 'Stllte senior Although the Ilbove example teriyaki chicken and eggrolls. doesn't offer a happy hour quite cents. Jill Pckkain. represents only Il hypothetical Explains the manager of the Rice as cost·effective IlS the Rice Bowl Chico State student Derek Other drinking estllblishments situation, it is a phenomenon the Bowl, who wished to remain or Top Flight, the "countdown" RYlln votes The Bellr IlS his ' in Chico worth giving a try in· majority of Chico State students anonymous, Friday afternoons offered every Sllturday night is number one Chico drinking c1ude: The Oasis Bar and Grill, are likely to experience at some draw the largest crowd of college perhaps the cheapest deal in estllblishment because "The beer with its 10;cent beer!! offered point in their college careers: students: The lounge, which is town. For the price of a $2.50 is cheap and it is close enough to every Friday Ilnd Saturday from running out of party money built to hold 30 normally ac' cover charge, beginning at 9 cllmpus to walk over there when 7·8 p.m,; JB's Ilnd its unequllled before the next month's allot· ' commodates an averllge of 150· p.m., one clln get Il mug of beer I get out of c1llss." ladies' night special of two·cent ment arrives. 200 people on Fridays. for Il mere 15 cents, a tub of beer Joe's Bar - There are mllny well drinks on WednesdllYs from Fortunately for Chico State "Usually the students have lin for 30 cents, a well drink for 30 reasons why this compact, cozy 7·8 p,m,; and Raffles, for its two· students, the trlluma of being itinerary set. The'Rice Bowl is cents and Il Long Islllnd ice tea hllng'Out is packed IllmOSt every for·one specials on well drinks, left without any means of usually the first place they hit for 50 cents. The prices increllse night, says bartender Kenny Ilnd beer and wine for "men sUpporting one's party habit can since our happy hour is offered at every hour and return to their Keith. "For the size of the drinks only" on Thursdays from HI \ be avoided entirely by shopping the earliest time, and then they regular prices after 12 p.m. Ilnd the amount of quality p.m. L around for the myriad deals make their rounds," says the The Friday Afternoon Club is alcohol that goes into them, you Although there are Il host of offered daily by drinking Rice Bowl manager. the Grad's' version of happy renlly get your money's worth, other places in Chico where one establishments in town. Top Flight - An even better hour. From 3·7 p.m. every People are Illways having a good can find great drink specials, Il Learning to drink on a budget deal can now be found during FridllY, all well drinks, wine and time." space constraint made it im· can save the over·21 crowd not hllppy hour at this popUlar, domestic beers are half'price and Happy hour at Joe's begins at possible to fit them all in. only a bundle of money, but can : centrally·located nightclub. For tIlCOS, taquitos and corn dogs are 12 or 1 p.m. daily and l'Uns until For the consumer·minded ,I I also spare it from unnecessary' 75 cents, a patron can enjoy a' sold for 30 cents. 7 p.m., with pitchers of beer at Chico State student, every hour anguish. well drink, Ilppetizers, and the Rick Medlen, manager of The 81.00 off the regular price. Also, can be ft happy hour by learning Besides sa~g money and music of alive band seven days a Grad, says, "We've got the best· a different drink special is of· to drink on a budget. Hogweed ,by Kevin llemp,

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W.I.C.I.: Not just for women

This Week's Campus . won't think it's for women only. something similar to that. We communication forum was reully Clubhouse looks at Women in have a speaker planned that successful. Communications. Our in· we're reolly excited about, Gary terviewer spoke with Kristi What kind of fundralscrs have Pike .from Pike Communications Eagle, President of WIer. you hlld In the post? in San Francisco. What else can you tell us nbout WICI? . We're planning to have a car Well, currently we hove about 20 Is WICIlor women only? wash when the weather gets What do you have planned lor --. , warmer and we're hoping to have tholuturo? members and if anyone's in· No! The national club is in the something like a spaghetti feed terested in joining WICI, they process of looking for a name or taco feed. We did a com· In the past wo've had the slime cOn sPeak to nny officer 'of the change that's more generic, or' municatlon forum a couple of kind of, fundrllisers that we're club or call our advisor; Som rather, unisex so that people years ago and we'd like to do planning for the future. The Edelman at 895·4336.

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, I 32" .... "" I -CALEND T~~ay Th~~sday Friday "Sunday Tuesday March 4 March 5 March 6 March 8 March 10

Student Diatetic Assoc. ESPW Lecture and Slide Range Conservationist, Dr. Political Film Series: The Distinguished Visiting Meeting, with Dr. Morales Show with Alix Dobkin on Jeffrey S. White, Soil Year of Living Dangerously, Professor, Fred A. Diehl: speaking on "Jobs in 1987." Women-Hating, Racism, "Conservation Service.' Ayres 106 ,.7'00p .m., $2 . Mastery Versus Com- Konkow Hall Study Lounge, and Violence in the Top40, Frequency Approaches for JIj------1.l petency in the Classroom: 7:00-8:00 p.m. City Council Chambers, 4:00 Montioring Rangeland National Dilemma in to 6:00p.m. Vegetation, Holt 170, 4:00 Science Education, Ayres p.m. 120, 8:00 p.m. Pro cti ce Interviews Distinguished Visiting Workshop, Placement Professor, Harold Internationally Known University Film Series, Center 103A, 9:00 to 11:00 Stevenson: Children's Artist Betye Saar lectures ,Ayres 106, 7:00 p.m. a.m. Achievements in Taiwan, on printmaking and other Japan and the United art related topics, 7:00 p,m. States. Ayres 106, 7:30 p.m. in Ayres 201. Sculpture Lecture with San All You Can Eat Taco Feed, Jose sculptor Rand Schiltz, sponaored by the Recreation r;------!II! International Folk Dance ~------f'.l 7 00 p.m.lD. Ayres 129 . Students Association. 5:00 Club beginning class. 7:30 : to 6:30 p.m. at the Oasis, to 8:30 p.m. in Acker Gym. Chico Symphony Concert 1007 W.1st. Street, $2.50. Request dancing follows at and Brunch, Call 895-5791 Planned Parenthood Lec­ 8:30p.m. for more information. ture, Women" and Stress: ~------!'.l How to Handle it Al4 with Gwen Faulkner, RN, Enloe Promotion of Health " Monday Stress and Health Center. Program, University Center, Noon to 1:00 p.m. at the rr------~ noon to 1:30 p.m. Butte County Library, Internft"tionally Known' March 9 Chico Branch Conference Artist Betye Saar Room, 1108 Sherman Ave. demonstrates lithography, t"---=---~---~~;:;:::-;:;:::;-~;;:;:;;::i~----,------I 11 :00 a.m. t0 1:0 O p.m. m• Saturday DistinguishedD VisitingJ Taylor 207. Professor, r. ames Cummins: State of the Art in language Instruction, Ongoing Miller Analogies Test March 7 Instructional media Center, (MAT), C&CP 103, 10:30 Studio 3, 7:00 p.m. a,m. ~------~ Distinguished Visiting I------~ Birth Control Information National Teacher's Exam Alcoholics Anonymous, Professor, Lucia Albino campus group for students, Jack Daniels Silver Coronet Clll6s,Student Health (NTE) General Knowledge- \ Gilbert: Understanding faculty, staff and" com­ "\ Bond, Lnxsan Auditorium, Center. 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Core Battery," Glenn 216, ;, Dual-Career Families, Glenn munity. 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. ! 8:15 p.m. §_------1 10:40.m. ' 212,7:00 p.m. Tuesdays in University r Center 108. '! Lithography Lecture with Distinguished Visiting Oakland artist Margo Professor, Howard S. Humphrey, 7:00 p.m. in Becker: TeliAboutSociety: AI·Anon Meeting for fJ-A_yr_e_S_2_0_1. ______--iI The Representation of Social husbands, wives, relatives Facts, Holt 170, 7:00 p.m. and friends of alcoholics. Wednesday, noon to 1:00 Breaking Into Business p.m. Location is con­ Without A Business Degree, fidential, please call Beverly" Placement Center 103A, Verlinde at 895·4645, or Pat 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. C., at 343·7641.

Mike Walnke In Concert, Time for Motivation· Women's Gymnastics Meet, i Laxson Auditorium, 7:30 Workshop, MLIB 226, 3:00 Acker Gymnasium, 7:00 p.m. i i to 4:00p.m. p.m. Online Catalogue In· 11 struction, Monday through Ceramics Lecture with Ohio Friday at 11:00 a.m. and Josten's Class Rings, BMU Chico Symphony, Laxson ceramic artist Kirk Mangus, Mall,~ll day. " Auditorium, 8:15 p.m. 11:00 a.m. in Taylor 103.

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:,~arCh4';1987-"" ____------the OriOIl------....-.-.- ..-.-.-. -..-.""'!.,--.-.""'! ... "!'.• ,'!"'.,,33e

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MALE BURLESQUE Thursday March 5th 7-9:30pm 21 and Over Come Watch the Men of "TAKE IT orr' 'The Best in Northern California' -Champagne Specials­ Doors open at 9:30pm to the men. Come meet Interested in a campus DAVID CHAN­ club? PLAYBOY Photographer Wednesday &

~' Thursday Nights!

Check out the campus clubhouse

','/" ,:. in the Orion

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I ·34 ------theOrion------March 4,1987' " _SPORTS Earl Reed named interim coach ! Mathiesen resigns as CSU basketball coach l by Phil Midling Mathiesen declined comment by the league's coaches, actually Managing Editor on the reports. performed better than most expected, considering the I Assistant coach Earl Reed was Wildcats relatively inex­ named interim coach until a perienced lineup. Chico State The Chico State men's replacement is chosen. basketball team is without a' often played the role of spoiler head coach for the first time in The university is currently this season, knocking the U.C. 17 years; Pete Mathiesen conducting a nationwide search Davis Aggies out of playoff resigned that post last Wed- for a new coach, and according to contention in the final week of nesday in a surprise an- athletic director Don Miller, the piny with an upset win, and nouncement. field is wide open. barely losing to the league When asked what promted.. Until a new coach is hired, champion Stanislaus State Mathiesen's sudden resignation, however, Earl Reed will continue Warriors on a last second shot. he replied, "It's just time to go." this season's recruitment While at Chico State, The local press' however, process. Mathiesen's team Mathiesen amassed a 17-year reported that Mathiesen finished with a 10-17 record this mark of 250·232. His teams resigned due to "differences of season. captured five conference opinion" with the athletic' The Wildcats, who were picked see Mathiesen, page 36 .department. last in the NCAC pre-season poll' BEnER DAYS· Things appeared to be going Mathiesen's way until this season. 'Cats beat Aggies -earn NCAA bid

by Susan Bushnell Chico State lost control of the Wednesday, in the first round Staff Writer game during the last minute of tournament play, Chico when the Aggies hit two free .defeated Hayward State, 66·48; throws to pull ahead. Despite the lopsided score, the ,I Chico State's women's Samantha Copenhaver tied the Wildcats struggled against the basketball team was forced into game, and ultimately sent it into Pioneers. They connected on I,, double overtime by UC Davis in the first overtime, by sinking only seven of 35 shots and had 12 the final game of the Northern two free throws. Copenhaver turnovers in the first half. California Athletic Conference scored 22 points during the tournament on Friday, but the game. With 2:46 to go in the second Wildcats eventually prevailed to beat the Aggies, 65·58. The victory enabled the "All year people have been saying we win Wildcats to become the NCAC by 20 points, so we had to mal(e this one choice for a Northern California Athletic Association Division II exciting." regional tournament bid. . Deann Carlson Before the contest, Coach Fran Coslet said with smile, "I think we're going to win." In the first overtime, Chico half, Chico State was ahead, 54· State and UC Davis rallied back 46, but the team managed to And win the Wildcats did. and forth, but had to settle for a sink 10 of 12 free throw attempts They erupted in the second tie, at 54·54. in the remaining minutes to overtime, paving the way for a widen the final margin. sparkling 22·6 overall record. But Chico State picked up the Kim Young sparl[ed the pace in .the second overtime Chico State led throughout Wildcats' victory with 19 points, I: period and never looked back. ,\ most of the first half, but UC while Joanne Hernandez, who Davis assumed momentum in The Wildcats outscored UC had 14 points, grabbed a game­ the last four minutes of the first . Davis 11-4 in the period to ice the high 13 rebounds. Deann Carlson win. half, pulling ahead 25·23. tallied 12 points and 11 rebounds. The opening eight minutes of Mary Ann--L'iizzarini, an the second half were dominated assistant coach for the Wildcats, ,.------. by the Wildcats. Kim Young sold defense was the major Editor's Note: Chico State will tossed in two baskets during the contributing factor in winning 'play Eastern Montana College in spurt, and Deann' Carlson tho game. the first l'ound of the NCAA Division II Championships contributed . with two free Kim Young had 12 points in Saturday night at Acker Gym. ~. throws. the game, while' Deann Carlson Tipoff is at 8 p.m. It marks the I s . . ~ , ( 1 II! The game continued to be contributed with nine points and first time the Wildcats have ; J )i ~ closer In the second half than six rebounds. received a post·season bid. ,) .~ - " l' Chico State probably would have When asked how It felt to win Eastern Montana posted an a liked. tho close game, Carlson said, "It 18·10 season record, 12·2 in the ~ Continental Divide Conference. =.:...... ;"....;"..:.:.;:j~=±~ "'. With three minutes left in the fools good." She added, "All year Chico State will be riding a 10 TOE TO TOE· Chico State's Sue Eccleston went high second half, the Wildcats con· people have been saying we win game winning streak, including nected on only 15 of 45 shots, by 20 points, so we had to make 16 of their last 17, into Satur· II ItI Into the air to grab this rebound from a UC Davis player. and held a slimlead,45'44. this one exciting." da 's contest. , ) 'I 'J l \ )1

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'March4,1987··.··.. · ------....----;,;,,;, ... ----theOrion------aS. -SPORTS Chico' Giants? Gymnasts edged in meet By Mark De Sio by David Bassetti round event - the vault. No Haggerty was the all·around ' Chico. Staff Writer Aggie scored below 8.15. champion with a score of 34.40. Sometimes this place really gets Rebekah Ower s 8.9, Ellen Davis' Owen came in second kicked around. I guess you could Hale's 8.85 and Lynette with 33.35 and Fenton's 33.2 call Chico the Rodney Dangerfield Chico State's gymnastics team Baughn's and .eslie Harrison's placed her third all·around. of small cities - it gets no respect. was defeated by UC Davis 8.8 enabled avis to take a The meet was Haggerty's final Herb Caen, a columnist for the Saturday night in the Wildcats' i 84.80·83.80 .ead after two performance at home. The team San Francisco Chronicle, once : final home meet of the season. rounds. captnin's four-year career wih wrote "Chico Is to cities what The Aggies scored 167.25 total The lone I right spot in the soon come to a close. Velveeta Is to cheese." points, edging the Wildcats' second round for the Wildcats "I'm glad I performed the way Pretty flattering Herbert. 167.15. The loss dropped the ' was. Haggerty's 8.55 on the I did," said Haggerty. "We've Then came Hugh Hefner and the whole Playboy scene. Thanks to Wildcats' seaso~ record to 7·6. uneven bars. Her score was good been concentrating on cleaning Hefner, a man who has about as much Intellect as the blank spots In his for second place in the event. up our routines and sticking all magazine, Chico has been transformed from Velveeta Town to Party All Anderson had to say about the moves. On the balence beam Town. Chico State was down by 1.5 points going into the fourth and the second round was,"Our I did a back handspring, back' But lately, things have gotten even worse for the city of Chico. A final round of competition. The performance on the bars was handspring. I usually don't stick "definitely serious" attempt Is being made by Tom Carlson of Wildcats last event was the floor down." . it but, I did tonight." KCPM/Channe124 News to bring the San Francisco Giants to the North exercise, while the Aggies Valley. finished with the balance beam. And this Is where Chico leaves the Rodney Dangerfield category, and "We've been concentrating on cleaning up enters the hopeless department, The Wildcats' Stacy Mac· Carlson, a sportscaster, Is trying to gain enough support to move the our routines and sticking all the moves," Millan, Maureen Haggerty and Giants to either Chico, Redding, Red Bluff or Gerber, . Maureen Haggerty Wh'ere In the Hell Is Gerber? Karen Fenton placed first, second and third in the floor Carlson, who has been waging his campaign for several months now, exercise, but it wasn't enough to believes Chico could lure the Giants away from San Francisco when the overcome the Aggie's lead. team's stadium contract expires at the end of the year. Behind the floor exercises of Anderson attributes her I spoke with Carlson yesterday about his plans to bring professional Baughn, Downes and Sharon gymnasts consistent per­ baseball' to Chico. He told me that the Giants "couldn't help but consider "I thought we had a chance ,Sternfeld, the Aggies stretched formances Saturday night to the North Valley" If about 20 thousand pledges were made for season going into the last round but I their lead to 1.5 points after new tactics used in practice, tickets. Davis stuck the beam well," said three rounds. However, none of "They worked two events per Carlson, an obViously brilliant man, said that games could be held In Wildcat Coach Shirley An· their exercises placed in the top day three or four times each," Chico's Bidwell Park If "the fences were moved back." derson. three finishes for the event. said Anderson. "They performed As a way of showing the Giants that· they're wanted In the North Meanwhile, the Wildcats were as if it were live competition. Valley, Carlson and the KCPM "Home Team" have been staging pep Chico State opened up a 43.30· battling to stay close. Their Fifteen minutes were allotted for. rallies for the team at local high schools. This tactic, which features 41.15 first-round lead behind the showing in the balance beam was warmups before practice and ;1 hundreds of screaming high school students during their lunch hour, Is 8.85 vaults of Haggerty and "better than usual," says An· three minute wlirmups were supposed to persuade Giants owner Bob Lurie to move the team. . Fenton. Stacey Adams con" derson. taken before each event, just like But Bob Isn't talidng to KCPM. Carlson says Lui!'e 'won't comment on tributed with a vault of 8.6. ;; Adams and Haggerty led an actual meet. Throughout the the subject because "he doesn't want local papers to catch wind of it." Chico State's third round on the season; the girls were beating Davis' Jean Downes scored an Smart move Bob. (Bob, please don't tell Harb Caen about any of balance beam. Adams tied for themselves on tension in war- this!). 8.75 on the uneven bars in the first with a score of 8.6. .mups. They were putting too Aggie's first round. It was the As I spoke with Carlson, I tried hard to keep from laughing. Let's face Haggerty's 8.4 was good for much pressure on themselves. It top performance of the night in It, Bidwell Park just can't accommodate 20 thousand season ticket third place in the balance beam. looked like practicing the event that event. .~ holders. After all, there would be no place for the players to chang~ The Aggies then went on to live really helped." .\ (sorry Tom, trees don't count). seal the victory with their solid The Wildcats travel to Davis \ Hey, we all know that Chico Is a great sports city - right up there with Davis gave a strong team . performance on the balance this weellend for their final dual ,,\ Boston. But coul:! the Chico State Wildcats survive If its 50 fans switched performance in their second beam in the final round. meet of the season. " loyalty to the Chico GIants? :'l Chico. Sometimes this place really gets klcIled .around . .\ .. .'J ;'11i--·~-- .. --~--~·~------·------I. . ... ------. i') 1 . >~ 1 ;!~ I 2'~ 1 .::t~: e(J.~ ~ttA,. " S¥e 1~ ~2 CO~~~I~:~UT ~2 All Runners Welcome to tho [~ FF cP:=#~k' FF! Bidwell Classic Pizon s best deal in town p.t~ON. ~. ~~~~1~~l r PIZZA PARLOR ~ 1 :,l,\ I 305 Nord Ave. 342·8389 t-~:~f ALUABLE COUPON : Mention this Ad .••. Ij, >,~!'I,~!. ------_ .. - _ ••• - _. ---- • -- _ •• -- - _. - _. ---- _ .. I 1-______--' ..'Jj;~ ,. ~, '- - ~ .',.-' .: 1"''10'''-;:- ...... : .~._.:..;... J...... ,...... "" .•""'~~'"" .... '''', ...... :.:.:..---- ...... ","' - . ", .. ' I, ... {r-­ I ., ' ••••. I , ~, '. '. ' • • , • I I • I , •• t , •••• , , • I ,'f" • ,', .• , J .• ,. I , I ,., -, •• I , r I :- ~ _ , .. ' .' ••" r " ,. " • , ' , .' .' .••. .'. .., j', • .'. • , .'. .'. I I • • I I • • , • , I • • • • , • , • • • • • • • • • ~ ,.. , I • ~ I I , ,36 ------theOrion------_SPORTS

continued from page 84

championships and competed in 1 two NCAA Division II national f championship tournaments. A four· time coach-of-the-year selection, Mathiesen coached his I teams to a 111-97 record in conference play. 300 Broadway Mathiesen came to Chico State Phoenix Building in 1970 from College of the Redwoods in Eureka, where he compiled a 72-58 record. Prior to . Konnle that, he coached at South Fork High School in Miranda, and Camden and Del Mar High Koupons Schools in San Jose. are Back! A 1958 graduate of Humbolt State, Mathiesen earned, his master's degree from San Jose Haircut .. " .. ". "Reg. 112 ... ", .. Now 18 State in 1963. He then received Cello/glaze (clear only) ...... Reg, s18 ..... ,. Now t10 his Ed.D. from the University of Highlight" ..... "Reg, 130 ".". Now t20 Sarasota, Florida, in 1972. Perm" •. "" ... "Reg, 145 " .... Now 130 Mathiesen will continue as a Cou(Jon thru 3-25-/17 TAKING CHARGE· Earl Reed,a former Chico State faculty member of the physical basketball star, will serve as interim coach for the Wildcats, education department at the Konnie. until a replacement for Mathiesen is found. university. Wrestlers exceed expectations The International Festival . is March 21 & 22 by Bill Williamson Middleton will be at 158, Mejia much better year than I ex-' Staff Writer at 167 and Scott will wrestle at pected," Brett said. "This was at the' 177. supposed to be a rebuilding Silver Dollar Fairgrounds Coach Armand Brett said season." In what was supposed to be a Mejia, Ramirez and Ulrich have The conference champion t.c:~oo<>o-a-c~><:lO<>-<>-~I:><)oC~oo<>o-l><~><::iO<>-<>-~ rebuilding year, the Chico State the best chance to win their Wildcats placed fourth at the wr'cstling team is sending six weight class. ,Western Regionals Feb. 21 at Circle R Country offers: wrestlers to the Division II Ramirez, according to Brett,- UC Davis. . i' National Championship at will have an extra challenge at '; I TIle Wildcat~' six qualifers -coli:ntry wood andl potpourri Ii Southern Illinois-Edwardsville the meet; he usually wrestles in were the most of 'any school brewing pots' . ! this weekend. the 126-pound division, but has' competing at the Western (7 different designs) The six wrestlers advancing to qualified for the meet in the 118- Regionals. "The Wildcats are the nationals are Tony Ramirez, pound" division. "I've been currently ranked 17th in the -12 to 14 different scents Walt Ulrich, Joe Grabski, Jerry working real hard," Ramirez nation for Division II schools. _of brewing herbs MiddJet.on, Tom Mejia and Phil said. "Ithink I can take it." Brett said his team is "riding Scott. high" into the national cham­ Ramirez will wrestle in the' The team's outstanding play pionship, and hopes to finish in -assorted ceramics U8-pound division, Ulrich has been a pleasant surpiaB to the top 10. pac/caged in baskets, competes at 134, Grabsld at 142, coach Brett. "We are having a Great-for Gifts

I I Ii Ii------iI I

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Chico's first Bed & Breakfast Inn I Buy one entree at regular price and I I offering overnight accomodatlons I I for out of town visitors I get the 2nd entree of equal or I seeking nostalgic. country com(orl. 6pm • J2pm I , lesser value at half price. I FOR ADVANCE RESERVATIONS". Call (916) 342-5912 813 Nord Aile. I good lIIonday - 11111rsdny I Near Sac. Ave, I not good with siny other I BULLARD HOUSE I prolllotiun or Oil IIrd~rK to go. I 256 East lSI Avenue. chico. California 0502i limit Two Per Order . Your HOSIS: Patricia 110 Palrlck Macarthy \1:L ______CHICO LOCATION ONLY -'I iI l -.~---- .. -._.- . __ ._-- .. _- •• , t...... , ••• ' ...... '''__ ,.' ...... 'March4,1987------theOrion------' , -SPORTS 37.

Sports Briefs winning run in the bottom of the I Swimming Swimteam Softball sixth. Mike Barney had a two­ run single in the fifth. Barry Robin Cook and Kelly Jesfjeld The Wileats hosted the Early Miller was three for three at the qualified for the NCAA Divsion qualifies Bird Tournament at Hooker Oak Baseball plate. II Championships, which will be last weekend. Eight teams held this weekend at Long participated. Chico State tied for Chico State lost three out of Beach. At the NCAC Cham· ,seventh place. four games last week to Division Editor's Note: In the "Sports pionships, Cook qualified in I schools. Brief" section of the Feb.18 for NCAA diving and Jesfjeld qualified in Their only win in. the tour· The lone Wildcat victory, 6.5, issue, the Orion erroneously the 100 yard backstroke. nament was a 5·4 VIctory over came in the nightcap of a reported the baseball team lost Dede Fritch qualified in diving by Andren Priolo San Francisco State. Tina' doubleheader against Oregon three games against Nevada·Las earlier in the year. Staff Writer Dufresne had a two-run double in State Saturday. Vegas. The team actually won the winning cause. Bobby Matta singled in~the . the third game 19·15.

Chico State's men's swim team will be making its 11 th straight appearance in the NCAA Division II Championships under the leadership of Coach Clark Yeager. The Wildcat's have qualified for the national championships consecutively since 1966. This year's team, with a 9·1 record, is one of the best Yeager's coached in his 11 years at Chico.' The team is ranked second in the country. Yeager says his team's strength comes from their ability to work well with one another...... "-_,.I® "I've labeled them the junkyard dogs," Yeager says. . 111C American Expre;so Card can get you virtually "They're a scrappy team." evcl)1hlllg from a leather jacket to a leather-bound classic. Whether you arc bound for a bookstore or a bcolCh Presently, 14 swimmers and in Bermuda. So during college and after, it's the perfect two divers have qualified to way to pay for just about anything you'll want. compete at the NCAA Division gellhe II Championships on Mar. 11-14 How to Card before graduation. in the Belmont Plaza at Long College Is the first sign of SUCCeiS. And because we believe in your potential, we've made it easier Beach. to get theAmericlil Express Card ri~lt now. You mn Last weeRend the team quali~ even before you graduate with our special traveled to Pacifica to compete student offers. For details, look for applications in the U.S. Swimming Meet on campus. Or just call i-800-TIIi\-CAllIJ, and ask hoping to qualify more team for a student application. members for the 'national 11w American Express Carel. championship. [lon't Leave School Without It:" Although the Wildcats compete in the national cham· pionships each year, they have yet to win a national title. Yeager says the "competition is much better and bigger" at the nationalleveI. With 50 teams competing in the nationals, Yeager says it will be difficult to break into the top teams. "Because of the way the nationals are set up, they don't benefit us," Yeager says Yeager says he expects swimmers Tim Nelson, Kent Gasch and Brent Farris to do well in their events. Each swimmer had qualified for the nationals in December. Yeager noted that diver John Blalle, who has qualified for the nationals, "is a solid diver and has a good chance." . Despite the success of Wildcat swim teams, Yeager says he does not deserve all the credit for winning. He explains himself as "just another member of the team." "I give all the credit to the kids," says Yeager. "Good ~ swimmers make good coaches· I o• S8lVICES don't do anything speciaI." .- ---..... ~:~.-.. -::::-:.-- -- _.... _-_ . .. , I •.. i. I, ., - ~ --.~ ...... - - ... -... ~-.. ---.- ~ ... - '- ••• - ....p.#~ ... - •• ",- •••• ,...... ,_ •••• - •• , ...... , ••••• - ...... - ..... _ ...... -."., ••-' ',' I" , ·3S· ..···... · ------

i' -CLASSIFIED f' II you enloy lalklng 10 your Irlonds and BRETT (PHI KAPPA TAU)· Boo· KARA CHITJIAN FOR DIRECTOR OF -ForSale'" olhers, wo noed you. Wo havo an op· YOU WERE SO NICE THE OTHER NIGHT. Whal a weokondl Rocordlng studios, PROGRAMS AND ORGANIZATloNSIl Round Irlp plane IIckol with Northwesl porlunlty lor you 10 earn exIra cash SOiling THANKS FOR SHARING THE KAMIKAZES Sac, brownlos, champagno, 5am wakeupl Tho bost chalco Is 10 Movo Ahoad with a 1-':: Orlonliinos. Anyplace In Ihe US Ihallhey our sorvlce on a lull or part time basis. AND TAKING ME TO THE BEACH. WISH I SF 'In stylo' Shopping, sphaghoUI facloryl Loador-· Flrsl on tho Dalloll ,I , t fly 10. Will sell lor bIg dlscounl. Call 342· Earn as much as you want on a com· COULD HAVE TALKED TO YOU ON Noxl tlmo loIs make It a real advonturel ,, 2012. mission basis. Acadomlc Rosourco FRIDAY. SIGNED, ME. Tho worlds roady lor youl AX In houso: You gusy are alilho bosll Dovolopmenl can be your key 10 Iho Lovo, I'm looking lorward 10 anolhor lun and \. Singlo waler bed $35, Now rod Vuarnol luluro. Slart earning cash lomorrow. Send Bonita Dubs wild somoslor. Thanks for Iho smllos and sun glassos $50, Manual S & CIypewrltor Rosume 10 2290 Belladonna SI. Roddlng Thoy always say: Hoy Baby, you be one laughs. Lovo yal $20, 20 Gallon IIsh lank complole wflh CA 96002, or call 916·221·2604 ' fine chick I Bul sorlously- you aro ono GOITlm· Dla I _sland $75 OBO 893·3114. -----______• Suavo duck. Oon'l bo chowlng any bluo Savo rna a danco aoaln allho noxt --Room mate s_- .EASY EXTRA INCOME· $60·$48B/wook velvel· bocause Jollroy • lis all ovor now. soclall Alpha Gams ROOMMATE WANTED 10 sharo 2 bodroom sluiling onvelopos al homo In your sparo Tho Woll Drossod ono, ·Your no.ll01 woman Gol roady lor a swlngln night on Iho town Toni and a fun wookond with our Dad's. apl. In qulol 4.plox, closo 10 campus. tlmo. For moro Inlormatlon sund stampod· Lovo, AN AGO Porloct lor oldor non.smoklng sludont. addrossed onvolope 10: UNIVERSAL Ooar Loadod Sisters Allontion Omoga Mon· Drink much? Holly and Chris· how aro $20B/mo Incl. ullllllos. 895.1084 Belore PUBLICATION CONCEPTS PO Box 15112 . To: API Phi with a mossongor, 9am, altor 7pm and wookonds. San Luis Obl~o, CA 93406 Rovongo Is lusl around Iho cornor. It your s.I'S? Ann· almosl a lasl mlnulo will bo worso Ihan walor balloons I lucky dogl Karyn· Hoy· Iloy· what's up? I drank lasl nlghllo mo and you, First tho -f'ersonals-' Tho womon of Omoga Chi Thola Chris' havo onolhor boer I Thanks for a boor, and I hoard a boo. Than Iho coolor -Want Ads ~., Allontlon Thr09 stoogos: San FranCISCO killor wookondl wont down cool and smoolh, I know Ihls Collogo sludonls oarn $6.$10 per hour was lun bul Long Beach will bo a blasl· Red Barnors • Lovo you Friday wo'li mako our movo. Tho I· working part·tlmo on campus. For more Gol roady to ragol Lovo, Iho girls. . Thanks for Iho oulragoous soclall 'Rod Kasey champagno will bo savod lor Iho spacial Inlormatlon, cull 1·800·932·0528. p.s. bring your crayons. nlghl Tho scono at California Park will bo ------;...--~-.=:;..-=.-. Barnl GOI, apart wo oro greal, logolhor ' AGO, OX, and EK, qullo a slghU Gol roady 10 drink and gal ------. S.DURMAN: wo'ro awosomo' • Slovo Labrlo. Can'l $10·$500 wooklylup mailing circulars I wall til our P·day soclall Was thaI a fanlastlc 4·way·or whal?l? roady 10 parly, Docauso wo're going drink Rush soll·addressod, slamped envolopo : I HEARD YOU GUYS THE OTHER DAY. Only Iho lour 01 us could 'act' IIko wo woro lor drink and you'ro going to bo sorryll YOU JERKI MAYBE YOU CAN PACK UP Thanksl A·l, llB20 Vonlura, Sulle 268 OEP.CP., GOI having D groal lime. From: Aroady Sigma Nu Studio City, CA 91604 LIKE YOUR LImE GIRLFRIEND. YOUR Tho mon of Sigma Nu NOSEY NEIGHBOR. P. S: Congradulations 10 Dalla Chi lor Iholr MISS PINK· Enorgollc people 10 soli gills and lays PhiChiTi;;;t;------· HEY G.D.I.III lull accoplanco In 10 I.F.C., and a spoclal HOPE YOU HAVE A FANTASTIC WEEK Ihrough a calalog. No Invoslmont· no thanks 10 Iho Delta Chi sOI·Up crow. You I'LL BE THINKING OF YOU. ' supply cost. Froo Iralnlng, porlocl lor Congralulatlons 10 our now Plodge Lat'e all plan on getting . KEEP SMILING classl Work logolhor and support oach guys did a groalJob. colla go studonls. Set your own hours, wiBtod .... Friday, Merch ME I. Fun· earn monoy and Itoms Irom calalog. olhor and mosl Imporlantly • havo fun I You guys aro awosomel I'm looking ATIENTION ALL GAMS: Call Collocl· 674·9307 TRUDY 13th .. 'Undor tha Gol Psychod for P·days '871 Wo'li be OMEGA CHI RAGERS· leroward to slgnalurosl Good Luckl THE STAGE IS SET FOR OPENING NIGHT Carole Stare' ... ot California awosomol Wanl 10 spend Ihe summer In Ihe High ---""':""'------Wo lovo you guys OF CHICO'S LATEST. HOT SPOT I Siorras working with child ron· Wallon's Park Pavilion III Spirit Commlltoo FEATURING LIVE ENTERTAINMENT \. ,i . Grizzly Lodgo Summor Camp will bo To Ihe Mon 01 Della Chi, DANCE FLOOR AND REFRESHMENTS: Inlervlowlng on campus. Mar. 11 pick up Thanks for making our lIower pinning a Semi·Formal HEY ALiSA (EN)III GROUP MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE. your application al Iho Sludonl Em· nlghl 10 romomber. You guy are $12.00 per couple FOOling bOllor? Ho loft, so Iharo's no ono HOPE YOU'RE READ FOR ROUND II. ploymonl Contor. awosomol Looking lorward 10 soolng you loft 10 Iinx our social lifo I I only havo one Club TKE again on Friday. LivoMusic SI68------. 'j quostlon· Who's Frod? ~ Tho Womon of Zota Tau Alpha Food and Fun! CERNAC Gol psychod 10 ombark upon ,:1 l., SUMMER POSITIONS l;' ., From 8pm to 1am Margarltavilio lomorrow olghlllllllll fI I: AVAILABLE TANA· gol soma sloopl Klrslon· Alpha Gams I',. Tho nlghl 01 Porrys, I had Iho bosl tlmo. 'I KENNOLYN CAMPS JANA· 'rosarlla knows' (I'm nol a rolrlod Chico Clippor availabla: KDSoyandii;is';"------· boon) I can'l mako Ihls noxt IIno rhymo. I hopo :1 Will be on cum PUB BATMAN·lho loyal sox?? from 12em to 10m. . wo can slill go oul Thursday nlghl, Thanx for Iho groal Friday night. You j, boca usa soelng you Is quito a slghl. Tako two wero groat,lots do It again somotimo. l ,~' TINK(Sklppor)' happy valentine's day Ticketa. will be available Tuo8day, Murch 17th & (AGH pouChl) caro of my lope and swoalor. Lov Ihoso IIgors. I,.', " Wodne8duy, March 18th. PAT·RICE· you glvo ma a hangover Tuesday through Friday. Granl Luv D.D.D. ,.... :' ' TRACERS· you 'va given mo worse anal P.S. Why havon'l you wrlllon rna Ihal P.S. Rammm It Homel recruiting for KAY'lurnoll Iho slove 101l0r? .Huyoamiiiii--=..,..------· BUMMER BTAFF MERTZ· don'l crawl up tho back Ilalrl King Keng, . G. 0.1. 's LOOKING FORWARD TO OUR TRIP i ACE· for YOUR benothl How lonoly oro yeu? I hopo this will SOUTH OFTHE BORDER I , .\ . I'vo navor soon 10 many airborn boerl Bee Placement Office for STltlA· nOlO In air, bull up, ·O.K. walk brighton your day. Whatovor ticklol your The man of Dolla Sigma Phi . "1' LAURA· OH O.K. AYIII Fancyl In my IIle. ThaI parking lot wUl navor bo I further information. ------STEF· Monday nlghl madnm, cln you Who lovol yo? tho samal Thanks 10 Proton Clallor, and Dalla Chi Paul drlva? Sis wolcomo 10 our now Social Director, Diona Hope you havo a happy 22nd birthday. SARA & SONDRA· Oasis ovll, watch Ihm Plukanl 001 raady for Lambda PII I'll miss yal Tho Dapt. 01 Communication DOllgn Is KYLETON looking part·tlmo Instructors for Iho horns I GDIOfficers· Lava, SUZy· your Irown II bailor Ihan your ImUo Sorry I was In a bad mood on Salurday. Suslo 1987/88 acadomlc YOlr, contlngonl upon Jlmmarl, funding and adoquato onrol(11onll. A . DZ In houso girls & othorl, baing a S.D. Is nol much fun. Bul Friday Lovo you lonll (Iwollod hOld?) WII a blnt. Romembar Itook plcturoll Your main Iquoazo In Chico mlslol you To Co·Altltudal and Iha rosl of tho Mlller'l Degroo or oqulvalent In Com· bad. Kaso Ind I aro galling plychod to munlcatlon or ralaled' llald roqulrod. ·Vlrg national qualillarl: t'\' . havo a hoUID hUlband on Iho 201h! Happy Previoul unlvorllty toachlng or work RENO GAMES GUYS W;hlo-;;,------· Congrals on mBklng Nallonalll Long Lall 100 an Improsslvo Ilockhoidorl 11 monlhll . Beach Is gOing to bo a blasll oxporlonco dallrablo. Dutlos Includo one Horo'l to Champagno, Hal tubs, I Lava Youl or Iwo clanal In ana of tho following roport. Smlo prelly for Iho camorasl So Lovo, product 2 wal a bomb- producl3 will bo Holiday Inn, Awesomo Dlnnorl, Dancing, Christina Mill Prlss and tho Lady In Rod Sludy Iron: Graphic Doslgn, lIIultrlllon talking, ROld Irlpl, Iho Park Burnln' Doslgn, Wrlllng lor Media, Copywrltlng, a Illrlll Prosl on dOlpHo Ihe 'olhor' admlnlstrallvo problaml ...• HOUIDI, SUnsals, loonls', a~d Being AGDWondy I am pUlhlng for a bill to bacomo Ilw Ihat . Broadclltlng, or Compulor Graphici. logalhor, I'll AlwaYI chorlsh thalo Our man will bo ovar any tlmo, Tlloy aro Application deadllno Is March 18, 1987. Your Rono Marketor will allmlnale alumni DUES and your . momonlsl 1I0voyou, LUtia Rhino. taking a bUI, no a Iraln, no a 747, yaa position on Iho board. If my bill falls allho Apply 10: Prol. Turnbull, Chair; Dapl. of ------..:..--- their coming on a 7411111 Comm. DOllgn; Colle go 01 Com· MARK (BX): board.1 will arranga to pay for your Alum Happy Wodnosdayl Thanx for bringing ZTA New Olllcors: Signod, DUES. I'll make you an ollor you can 'I '. munlcalkms; CSU, Chico; Chico, CA' AFrlond Down the HALL 95929·0504. Includo relumo, throo rofl •. my Orion 10 clm ... you didn't lorgol, did looking forward to working with you this rolulo. I'm a vory olloctlvo lobbyllt along. you? haha Whal a aportl Tana and I had a lamusler. Remembor our goals. ROlraat wllh a lalonl 10 cook a romanllc can· . and an 'Application for Toachlng Position' RON DALENA (avallablo from Ihe Dopartmanl- 895- blast Ipendlng Saturday night with you. wal qulta an experlanca. Paybacks aro Iho dlollghl dinner for two. If you havo Iho Spagholll dlnnor and manaoorlalstratogy, pits.... . NICE BUNSIIII tlme,l havo tho Corona and Lamon Doar. 4048) CSU, Chico Is an Equal Opportunity YOUR PRIVATE BAKER Afflrmatlvo Action omployor, and loud roommalos and gram crackors, oh, Zola LOVD, Rach. Signed, and don'l forgollho colloo· you know Ihal Pallenlly WAITINO lor '51h' 001011 . minoriliol and women ospaclally aro 00 ZTA Toams: Hoy flro flghlln' ItERO oKT, SkIIng was ancouragod 10 apply. doos to mo. Can'l wall for SchlllZ, ylppool Sullorlng through 261, Our learn Is going io como oul on top In It,o too much fun· and gamin' wo'ro doing It To Iho wanna·bo's who asplro 10 IIvo In Lovo yal groal 'Fill Tho Shlrls' raco. I'vo gol a again soonl No plcklo smoking Guru's 818. WANTED· Prlvalo parly would like 10 buy a allowodl Slay In lauch and good luck with ladlos ring. Prolor gold, with or wlihoul Dobblo (DZ) socrol slralogy. ZLAM Rach Koop up tho good work, you guys can only p.s. lol's slart sludylng for tho mldlorm a nanananlnotoanl got boltor. stones. I would also proler a band. . _ Lovo, SUNA AGO _ Loulso 343·3813 111110 soonerthan wo slartod Iho casal To AX Kolly Millor Rhino and Tlnman HAPPY 241h BIRTHDAYI ------P.S. Know your stuUII DON'T WORRY· WE LOVE Boobs· Havo Iruck· will movo, dellvor, plck·up, Attenllon: ALL FRATERNITIES and You had fun al Lako Almanor and I had SORORITIES, Wo havo Walchos lor salo 01 YOU ANYWAYII Pinky· pull andlor haul. I am also a handy·mon. LOVE, fun In Rano bul how about a wookond In No leb 100 small. Incrodlbly low prlcosl Including Rolox, . Chico togolhor. 'I promlso loIS of ad· Whallo say·. Sun. nlghl WDS so spoclol yol, l;, Guccl, Cartlor and olhors, Porfocl for PRESH DUDE Call M·F beforo 100m or allor 5pm. Ask CICEL BAOINA and vunturo. notallissottlod I lot's hang on 10 what wo r1" casual, dross, and all 01 Ihoso formals' havo and hopolully all will work oull II. lor Russ BENDY TlfE REST OF TIlE Lovo, 342·1538 coming up Slut Thanks for your pallencol Call BOO at 891·8223 SAR·BEAR IN·HOUSE YOUNGSTERS Lovo·ME ! ,., ... ,., ... " .... , ... ' • Murch 4, 1987 . .

- CLASSIFIED ...... DENISE CATE, To: Dalla Chi, Sigma Kappa & Sigma Nu, ·GDl's· To the tolally bltchon dudos of Thola Chi, _Personals- Wo lovo you and aro all bohlnd you I Do wo know how to party or what? Wo. ToJohnCoopor, Thanks for the fun and lalonled 4·way II's IIko only two woeks until tho lotally rad Congralulallons In advanco. You'ro social last Friday. Wo woro glad to be a should all Ihank RB for a greal social. soa·n·skl soclall Full • on wavos and SNAC Bobs· part alit. Good luck wllh P·daysl Now alloasll know what's on all 01 you gnarly slop os· Indoor and ouldoor party doing an admlrablo lobi Thanks for all your supportl Tho rlvor trip minds; SEXII Yes thore Is dirt on Good Luckl KIKI Love· The Woman of Alpha G~mma Dolta soason wllh tho boach bunnlos of Omoga was a blasl evon If wo wore oalon by ovorybody Ironl Ihls wookond; ollicors Chi Tholal ------Polson Oak. I hoar Conlral Amorlca Is Includod (KASEY, CHRIS). Just Kovln Lloyd GOI Brian Millon, Happy 23rd Birthday, Broil Prolly soon lovoly this limo of yearl Miss Hollogs What color? Always black for youl romembor, tho formal Is only two Vlooks AX DARI· U.S.A.I Lookoulll Whoro's your undorwoar? Tlgors and away. Thore aro many wUllng and ablo Just a frlondly note to say hollo, from we'll hava 10 pUI you In a whoolchalr and dalos out thoro. Lot's sao ya In lull forco. push you around 10 Iho barsl Lol'S go oul Luv·EVP Bully Zobras·Lovo III your S.S. who lovos you so, Have a groat and colobrale soonl eMF ------~~!'..------. week and all, And good luck Captain, In . Lava ya, Lamda PI: Sorority Sohball. Love your S.S. Aro you guys roady for this wookond? ------,-_. Wantod: Sheri TKE's, An Olympic Updalo: REALMEN If you thoughl last limo was good, lust ------Sido by sldo, Applications are now baing occoplod. To tho rad men of Sigma Nu, wall. Wo will be In full lorco Ihls lime. Wo will compolo, Thanks for tho Incrodlblo rush woekl ROB MARQUEZ, Wo'ro looking lorward to III Ploase conlacl Gina, Joanna, Laura, Hey 111110 bra, wo really klckod some On one sldo a bornor, Lauron or Monlqua Carrlbboan Cruise, Hacky·sac, psoudo· Sao ya this wookond On Ihe othor a TKE, bar cyclo ... 11 was all a BLAST. Horo's 10 bull on Iho chug·oll. Koop up Iho hard GDl's work, and Ihls somoslor will be one 10 Wo will spin your whool, GDI· Thanx for Iho groat social on many more wild tlmos to come. Wllh lava romombor. Thanks for going 10 reglonals. Causo It's no big doal, Salurday. You guys aro a lot of fun. Lois from your now III sis plodgos, Susie, Christi, and Ambor. Dig Brolher Slevo RESEARCH Evon Ihough wo aro your poors, do It again soon. ------Rod Barn always drinks moro boorslll RED BARN Denlso Cale - You'ro no.l and wo love WIDE RANGE OF TOPICS It'll bo a bash, Kim Barry· Congradulatlons HUH? --'------Thanks for Iho Caccoon oyos. HABID. youll (Social BciencBB. RED BARN Todd(loss) and Tlm(ba), Wo think you'ro 'SPECIAL'. But, If you bUBineBs, humanitieB, fine ToG.D.I. Lambda PI· Lambda Chi Alpha Jell· two NAPPERS don't mako us dlnnor soon, Wo'ro gelling 'psychod' and 'slokod' Rona was a blasl. Thoso who didn't go looking forward to a groal Social friday. I wo will roll our MAGIC DICE al you, and artB, etc.) 15 yearB in wanna go HawaIIan. for Friday's soclall Soe you thonl missed out on tho winnings. Rona noxl FALSE In your gonoral dlroctlon. Wo will · . All tho G.D.I.'s monlh? Conclavo '88 for sura. bUBineBB. 891·6015 From Lambda PI TAUNT you with FLAMING CHINESE lambda Chi Alpha Jollroy NOODLES and PDP our ROCKS al you a anBwering service. PI Phi's· socond tlmo. So lots hold pinky! soon and AX Lashaun; Thanks for goiling down & dovilish with Hoy woman I Looking forward to friday To Iho man 01 TKE· concontralo on lifting that tabla. Mor oil, lor vldoos, lunk food and fun with our In Iho raging rock slar Iradillon, Ihe Piggy· us Thursday Night. Wo all had a blast. In a momont It will bo ovor and wo will ladlos of Omoga Chi Thota oro roady to What can I say • opposltos attract· Romomber tho RED WAVE has no Morcyl slstors. Until thon, havo on awosomo RUN AWAY· RUN AWAY, nover to soo weokl Lovo, your sacrat sisler. -lock lomorrow nlghlll wo'vo provod that. What a frlondshlpl La Hope wo rago again soonll oach othor again. ------Fonda's meant so much· Thanks a bunch TEKES Your DECENT nolghbors, Lambda Chi Alpha Jon: for ovorythlnglll Shorrl and linda To my ALPIIA GAMMA DELTA SISTERS: TlIiNK DoSToN MARATHON II See you Whoro's tho koy? To Iha stlllsinglo Bacholors of Phi Kappa Look forward 10 sisiorhood, fun, smllos, P.S. Suggestion: ROOFTOP, CANDLE· anargy, SOCllls, and mora sisterhood. I Salurday, brig hi eyes. Lovo Ya, Tau· LIGHT DZ Rocky Bubbles The dating glme was wondorful. slncorely thank all of you for this honor. Got raady for the time 01 your lives. Thanks for Thurs. night! Dating Game Julia Regln, DETA THETA PI: REDDAHN· Klssesl Thank you for putting Into words whall Priority numbor one: sislarhood and funl __ Congralulallons on a wall played You people ara CRAlYI We hid a bllst Tho stili slngla Bachalorettos of Omoga could not regarding Dona Sigma PI. But Lava your one and only NELL. hockey geme last Sunday. Good luck whh allhe Graffiti Social on Saturday. Hopo Chi Thatal . balween you and mo I don't think Barnoy · Olano Paukan, Glad to hlvo you aboard IS Ihe following gamos. tho Ink camo on your bDBr·covorad will ever undersland. Dana Chi Sclmhars bodies I Can't wait for tho noxt social (p. SUUUE· a now loclal dlraclor. You'D hava I grOit Days)1 Hoy, I'm coming out to vlsh. It won't bo . Kyfa, · tlma. Wa'ra tooklng forward to working G.D.I. tho same II I can 'I sao you. How does whh you. Lovo, Shlela, Suzla, and Linda, I'm madly In Iovo with your choice and . ChriS and Krllton GDI Social Dlractors. Hey chlck·a·cllasl Just wanled to say somltlme balwaen April 11 & lBlound? madly In love wtth you. Phi Chi Thatl's laura Strain and Tatla 1l0LA ... to a bunch of girls that would do Cln'twaH, ·love DabblG· For Dur'AGD Noll' . . hoi' for money?l? Justloshln'. Wagnar: . love Jack .. You Ira doing an awasome lobi Wa all f: love ya, Honl Thanks for all y»ur help In thD compuler BRAD· lab lilt semestar. t probably would not ba love you and support you 100%1 Lova·N· .' Jackie Susan and Tamara, Abolated lIappy 21s1 to ona of our baslast hugs, Your Sistars. ~._------sana today without you guysl Drosslng rooms, bluo chip cookies, Buddies. Don't worry wo'li nurse your . -GDI's· Congratulallons Tallal You'll ba groall slanted cab and Navy ships made up for shoulder back 10 haanhl And than ... Carolo CONGRATULATfONS TO DELTA ZETA'S Hopo you all had fun on Saturday. Hey and evantful weekand. Ara we roally Your Prlvalo Nursos Iactlvos ofiho monlh.Jana Koster and Tana don'llorgello gal datos for tho formal on 21??1I Just romembor· Beworo of tho ------,----- To Iho Orlan Sloff· Matthows. Thank you for all of your hord Ihe 131h. groan ball. ODI'~· work. Whh lovo, your slslors. P.S.· Laura P. has boon oloclod D.B. It was Iho bost $20 I evor spont. Keop Lovo Heard the Rod Darn social was a Ragorl chalrporson. up Iho good workl Jacklo (wo hoard obout yo Kylel) Doc Ek To Iho roal Covor 1I0g, whal can I say? Coo GORDY'S FISH Tho past 3.5 monlhs hove' boon In· GOI's· --~------~~.-....:------crodlblo. Sorry wa could~'t bo togothor Lambda PI· SHARKS: O.K. all you fish, ospoclally GORDY'S JuliO Soltz, Tho four·way was awosomo. You guys soundod groal ovor tho last wookond. You pick tho plao and I will Aro you roady 10 malorly soclallzo Ihls FISH, lot's sao yo 01 Iho social wllh Tho acls woro rad. Lol's got It togolhor, buy dinner. Lovo, yourfavorlto D·Chl. Friday? Wo oral LOI'S mako II as groal as wookond - Whon aro you going 10 ad· Lambda PI. Got roady to partylll and hiliho ORADI J. Iho lasl anal vortlso? Diona (now social dlroclorl Lambda Chi Alpha. II's supposed 10 ba GDI P.S. Don'tforgetthe formol (Frlthe 13th) Mary MarDarot: Rona or bust, NQt bolhl Doar SmarKyKlns ------Mlto a luv Loe lay Deo b In trostad Inn ------I wove woo mora than my wlttlo To Iho A.S.o. Team· Hay: fK, EN and AGDI " dyo nlng Ann Dan zing will me 2 morrow Scandals olG.D.I. Krlslon: looking hot In Wo'vo como a long way, 10l's keep up Mochoklns. You are my smookums, bo Doy says 'golllo·geo' did wo havo a . nlto? Eyo hope sow. Thai fatal charm of ;Ihat now drossl Marty: Who's Iho new, Iho GREAT work. Forgol Iho pasl, Ihe my willa lovoyklns, I'll be your forwuver fundorfull time lasl Friday night. Tho cool yours Is devlstatlng. Apl.'(undarsland). now squaeze? Hoather:last seon trying fuluro II oursl . WOVBr. thing bolng thai wa sol a benchmark, In Love L.H.T.P. ------10 blow start a Ha~yl Coo: Maybe you Rhino and Tlnman that you don't have 10 drink to have fun. ! BARRY BARNES: should bo a playboy photographor? Chris: Los hombres de Doha Chi. This so master Is going to bo groat. Keop Hoard sho's got a hot dato for tho lormal. AOD Anne, OmagD Chi Theta LII Bros· up your great attltuda and koep up your Doha Sigma PI, Kyle: Marrlod but nol dead. Kmy: Jusl wanled 10 lei you know thlt I am You guyura groal grades. We noed to Improva on your squaozo much? Brian: Tlgarl and thinking about you I HavOl groat woeklll You can't be bOIl Wo, tho Zala cliliway •• rl looking forward to baing 'shlpwrocked' whh you ·chugglng ~nd foosblllabUhles. Your big . · Zebrl's on your boxors? Noxt woak· now love, BUilt's war brothor Grlnl. · adventurol of 'Deys of ouroHlcarl'. Your Sacrat SII Nexl time we moet! Thursday night. So III hindi on deck, Tha Lldlas fof OMEGA CHI THETA we'ro rOldy to rlgo. Tho womln of Zot ------Tau Alphl. G.D.I.IRED DARN; Rod Dlrn- CRAIG MORTENSEN: THERE ARE RAD PARTIES, THERE ARE · Thlnx for tho groillocial. Botween tho I'm glad Ihlvo you I. my big brolhorl Rod Dlrn, ------FAD PARTIES, AND THEN· THERE . Iwo of us, wa can knp chico It. no. 1 In It should bo I somntor to romomborl I don't know whll you gUYllhoughl, DZ lIli Hligerl· ARE,O.D.I/RED DARN PARTIES, APART Iho nltlon. DH YOD, whOle thlt guy 'Itan Thinks for ovorythlngll builihoughilhe Oraffltl Plrty WII grollli FrldlY night- Wining 45 mlnulOl for I· WE ARE OREAT, TOGETHER WE ARE Iho min'? Thlnuglin, 0.0.1. Om Wlrl looking forwlrd 10 our next locili. Mollter Drlu. . Where'l Stacy? HI'I AWESOME III DEST SOCIAL OF THE Wo'vo both provon Ihll loglthor WI Ire ------tlklng hlr to whora Ihll weeklnd?l? SEMESTER. lET'S DO IT AOAIN. CAN p. Slgml Nu II SII PLodgel: To Dahl Chi· thl blD90111nd Iho bOl1l1 Wilking Timmy Ihl hunk homo ... Ilumber WEEK WITHSTAND US?? RED DARN. Congr.dgulillonlind wllcomo to I Hid Congrltulltlon on your Iccoptlnco Into ThDnks Iglln for SII. Plrty II lambdl Chi? Sleeping BelUly· ----~------lomlltor wMh Slgml Nu. Proplro I.F.C. Mlrty Fum· 001 You'rtthl bastf 1I0va you 1111 Hoy Foryl looking forwlrd to our nut yourlDlf for. wlld'lOl' Ind don't forgot From Llmbdl PI love In DZ, Annie threo hour Inlo~udo. p.l. I'M ~rlng thl Ibout tonlghlll tho Bm, 6:00 p.m. Bo FoHow 001 Dnlcorl· wine I EndllBl Lava, 'YourWomln' Looking your bOlIlL ZTAExocuUvollnd Progrlm Counc": Alrlghl glng • I hlVD ImUl an ALL of To AR Compiling Drglnlzlllona: ------'I NEVER' hid I bettlr rotrnll DrOit you; 10 IUltlly oHII Anyona of you Illrt They IUlpend.d UI, bul IhlY. clnnot , . Om Wily· . · If ------you're from CANADA·WI nOld you. Wo bllbblng • I'll PHINT Iho Imulll Thlnkl gOlls,ldoll,lnd ovanll hlvo boon lit, 10 conilin ull . Rendozvoul· 111.m. ThursdlY It tho Iro planning I rOld Irlp Ind wlnl to \Ilk to lilian your lOll bonl oVlryono for I for I KILLEH wHklndl loVI you IHI P·WEEK IS ALL OURSIII BMU. don'l bellle ... Lovo,.Thl BalVor. Inyontl from CANADA. PltIIO Clil Rich II lallllk: lima Ihlldlll Kllay RED BARN 981·4320. Jlckle P.S. Sorry Brlln Ind Zlkll :.:,,:,·;: ..... ·"' .. .:.7··· \.' :.. r'" ."~" ~"..,.' . '. ··"' .. ····:... 1, ...... : •••• ~.'.': •. ~ .... ~,. _ ....., ...... ,. '_'" • n' ..• ~.~ •..• _ ...... , .... ~ '-'~.' ...... _ "d'__ ""':~_':':'~':··~·':"~·""""~·'~:'·~::;;,:;:;~ :.. ;. ,I, :_ .... _._ ...... ,~ _~. "" ... ,. ,;." .. ',,, ..... _~_.:.:;; ..:.. ..:.::.:::. __ ::. .. ', ._ ..... ~_ :.J"~ ._",: ," '"' ,~,II ,,' 'I /' , .' " 40------the Orion ______Mnrch4 .19871 .... FIRST CARE POST .. IT'YKoTes t, .JL r\ " MEDICAL I~CARE wUk 3ktick! /, CLINIC -, r' Walk-in Health Care I irrolTIPt action requested. o Work at your usual speed. providing ... PROMPTTREATMENT OF MINOR TRAUMA AND ILLNESS cc:President Reagan 6l1191·RPPln( EVERY PATIENT SEEN BY A PHYSI~IAN 'r ")APP, Inc, NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Don't let 60 Minutes get hold of this! IJU(MlJlIl>fIl'I(

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