QUAKER CAMPUS The Voice of Whittier College Since 1914 Volume LXXYin, Number 20 March 12,1992

INSIDE THE, QUAKER CAMPUS Honor Code Back in Action NEWS By Caitlin Duffy Duke University (NC) and invited members of BOG to can be conveyed toth e students." Managing Editor Barnard College (NY). attend in order to get exposure Lodging for participants of AIDS TESTING Don McCabe, professor of to other schools codes. the conference was paid for by Annonymous AIDS testing BOG, which is in the process Business Management at Prior to the conference, the Bell Atlantic of New Jersey and will be offered on campus to of making final revisions to a Rutgers University (NJ) and BOG members met with New Jersey Bell telephone Whittier College students on proposed honor code, sent three organizer of the event, presented Princeton University's honor companies. March 25. members to a conference in a survey which dealt with a council in order to find out how BOG and President James Page 4. Newark, NJ last week, titled comparative analysis of student their honor code works. Ash's office are sharing the travel "Academic Integrity in the and faculty academic integrity The conference, McGlynn expenses; estimated at $1300, 1990s." based on findings from 28 schools said, was beneficial because it McGlynn said. INP STILL GOING Kevin McGlynn, ASWC that participated in the study. allowed him to learn about how Information that McGlynn, Joyce Kaufman, director of President; Melissa Chabran, The emphasis of the other schools have implemented Chabran and Winger obtained the Whittier College Community Liaison; and Nicole conference, held March 5-7, was honor codes. from the conference will be International Negotiations Winger, Freshman President, discussion of academic integrity "We got exposure to a lot of instrumental in the completion Project (INP), extended her attended the conference in which and presentations of different different honor codes from of the current proposed honor leave of absence through the 70 people from colleges and schools' honor codes, McGlynn differentschools,"McGlynnsaid. code for Whittier College. 1992-1993 academic year. universities across the country said. Chabrdn said that the This document was started Despite her absence, INP will participated. As Whittier is in the process conference was "really by an Ad-Hoc committee in the continue. Schools in attendance of considering the possibility of educational... I hope that all of fall of 1990 in order to put forth Page 5. included: University ofVirginia, adopting an honor code, McCabe the information that we learned Please see HONOR on page 4. VIEWPOINT Computer Equipment Whittier Professor THE RIGHT TO VOTE Does the right to vote really Stolen; No Suspects Clawson Remembered matter? Two students offer By Jennifer Buddemeyer housekeeper, said she noticed years with Ford aerospace. opposing views the subject. Assistant News Editor that the door was unlocked when By Julie Amiton While working for Ford, Page 3. she arrived that morning, but News Editor Clawson got his Bachelor of Arts An estimated $1630 worth of she did not enter the office. degree, at the age of 45. He was computer equipment was stolen Initially it was suspectedtnat Approachable, funny, 53 years old when, in 1988, he FEATURES from Wardman Hall on two the burglar had entered the office accessible, and knowledgeable got his Ph.D. from Ciaremont separate occasions last month, through the window, but Malone are just some of the adjectives Graduate School. TAX TIME according to Campus Safety said, "There is no way that students and fellow colleagues Junior business major Kevin Chief Ed Malone. someone could have gotten into McGlynn said Clawson's "views Discover someof the quickest used to describe Tom Clawson, the office through the window on management and business and easiest ways to prepare On the night of Feb. 10, the associate professor of business computer of Richard Archer, from the outside" due to a spring were in contrast to the books, taxes - and do it before the administration, who died last Associate Director of the lock mechanism on the window. and brought a realm of the real April 15 filing deadline! week after suffering from a heart Whittier Scholar's Program and "The point of entry had to be world" into the classroom. Page 9. attack. professor of history, was stolen the door," he continued. "There Clawson began at Whittier Charles Laine, chairman of from his office in Wardman Hall. were no signs of forced entry, so in 1988 teaching "Business the Business department, said ARTS & ENT. According to the official the the intruder either had a Policy,"" Business in Society," Clawson "was an excellent report, the theft was reported by key or access to a key." and 'International Business." teacher because he had a nice A TOUCH OF JAPAN Donna Smith, administrative On the night of Feb. 20, two Before coming to Whittier, combination of academic Chiyomoto, a new Japanese assistant for the Scholar's computer keyboards and some he had worked as a manager in training plus practical business restaraunt in Uptown, offers program. Juana Ortiz, Please see THEFT on page 4. the aerospace industry for 15 experience." good food and service, and Accordingto Laine, Clawson Karaoke, as well. was "a person with a variety of Page 12. interests." Laine described Franklins Can the Rock Clawson as someone who "had written television scripts for SPORTS M*A*S*H (but never had them produced), as well as being an amateur baseball player who had gotten a hit off of (Hall of Famer) Bob Feller at an exhibition game." Wendy Guthrie, class of 1991, a former student of Clawson's, said, "He kind ofkept to himself, but was always open, willing to talk. He had a great impact on students." This impact, many said, was LAX STILL PERFECT not only in the classroom but The Whittier College men's outside as well. lacrosse team overcame Dave Anderson, junior distractions in Arizona and business major, said, "He was won its three games there, very open to students and their upping its record to 6-0. suggestions ... he would bring Page 16. up a point and wanted our opinions." McGlynn added, "He was INDEX roiiowing rranKiin society iraaiuon, IITO KOCK was covered wiin peer oum> very student oriented." News 1, 4-6 the night of Wednesday, March 4 by members of the society. "This has been Dusty Brunson, a junior Editorial 2 business major who was doing a tradition for at least 20 years, so we decided to do it again," Ashley Gray, research for Clawson on a book Viewpoint 3 Franklin Vice President, said. Due to time constraints imposed by the Comics 7 he was writing about Features 8-10 College during New Member Initiation, the society was unable to complete management, said, "He was Classifieds 10 this event during that period. According to Gray, "Canning the Rock" was knowledgeable not only Arts & Ent. 11-13 cleared by Steve Gothold, Dean of College Life. Gothold was out of town and Sports 15-16 could not be reached for comment. Please see CLAWSON on page 6 ^iu^mMMmum'i 2/QC March 12, 1992 EDITORIAL Don't Prejudge the Honor Code and are vehemently denied. The tested, will they think you're Penns Deny William Penn Society feels that gay? This is no joke for most Since President James Ash proposed the Involvement both an apology and a retraction men — homophobia is alive and idea of having an honor code back in the fall of from the accusers and abettors well and our society punishes Dear Editor: are in order. men who are thought to be gay. 1989, much has been said for and against it. If you're female and you're After a year of researching other schools' This letter is in response to Sincerely, tested, will people think you've honor codes and another year of drafting a the irresponsible reporting and The Wm. Penn Society been sleeping around? Will document, a committee is now making final innuendo recently contained in Box 8615 people wonder if you're an IV the Quaker Campus (March 5, drug userorthatyou're involved revisions to the proposed code. During this "Lancer Society Victim of with people who are? process, confusion and suspicion has arisen as Theft"). There is still ignorance to what an honor code really is. The William Penn Society Get Tested about AIDS and the fact that it Just what is this mysterious honor code and empathizes with the Lancers in Dear Editor: is making its way into the their recent loss. However, we how will it affect the college? heterosexual population. There resent the implication by the With apologies to David is still prejudice against and Many feel that an honor code would be an author and interviewees in their Letterman, here are the Top 5 condemnation of homosexuals. infringement on students' rights: an attempt statements alleging that the reasons that people don't get We are not yet at the point that by the Ash Administration to restrict the Penns had anything to do with tested for HIV: getting tested means only that the loss. students in some way. 5. Fear of what people will you are acting responsibly to The Penns are no strangers think protect yourself and others. But that is a misconception. to this type of loss. During the 4. Fear of what people will If you decide to get tested, Contrary to popular belief, the proposed recent pledging program, our think you will quickly encounter Nos. honor code would not govern students' social society emblem was maliciously 3. Fear of testing positive 2-5. Waiting a week for the lives. It would focus only on academic issues. ripped from the front of the Penn 2. Fear of testing positive results of your testing gives you House. In January of 1990, we 1. Fear of having blood a lot of time to think about This means that, among other things, if found our scrapbook, which drawn positive test results and the adopted, the honor code would allow professors dated back to 1935, desecrated No. 1 is relatively easy to impact on your life. The fact is to give exams that are unsupervised and taken and strewn across another soci­ treat, but Nos. 2-5 are tough that those who test positive for outside the classroom. ety house's yard. The Penns did ones. They add up to a lot of fear HIV may lose friends, jobs, and not then, nor do we now, resort about very real problems, but opportunities long before they Doesn't this sound more like a freedom than to public blame, ridicule, innu­ fear alone won't protect you from lose their lives. Facing the a restriction? endo, or accusation. the risk of getting AIDS. On possibility of positive testresults Students would benefit from an academic In the complete absence of March 24, students will have will make the threat of AIDS honor code. They would be given an increased any evidence, the Lancers, with the opportunity to be tested for much more clear for you — and the aid of the QC staff, now HIV on campus. The purpose of that's the point. Fear of testing sense of responsibility and trust. blame us for the loss of their testing is to increase students' won't help you, but fear of AIDS The implementation of an honor code would throne and pledging documents. awareness of the importance of can cause you to take actions show students that professors trust them These accusations hold the testing in stopping the spread of that may save your life. enough to take exams without supervision. Penns up to public ridicule and AIDS, but we know not everyone diminished public respect. The will get tested. Why not? Sincerely, When the honor code goes up for a vote in accusations were and are made If you're a male and other Jeanne Miller May, make a choice. Decide whether or not you without justification, are false, people find out you're getting Director of Counseling think an academic honor code belongs at Whittier College. It's your choice... if the student body doesn't want it, it won't be adopted. Letters Welcome But, by all means, weigh the pros and cons The Quaker Campus welcomes letters to the editor for publication. and make an educated decision. Letters should not exceed 250 words andmust be turned in on a 31/2" Macintosh diskette. Don't vote on the premise of misconceptions. All letters submitted must be signed and include the writer's name, year in school, box number, and a phone number where the writer can be reached. Letters from groups must have a name and phone number of at least one person whose name appears on the letter. Letters without this information will not be published. Diskettes will be returned. Letters may be subject to editing for space consideration and clarity. They will be published at the discretion of the Editorial Board. As a matter of policy, the Quaker Campus does not accept annonymous letters. Pen names are unacceptable. Letters of a nature in which the author wishes to remain QUAKER CAMPUS annonymous should be brought to the attention of the Editor-in-Chief. Diskettes containing letters may be mailed to the Quaker Campus Editorial Board, Box Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor #8613, Whittier, Calif., 90608 or delivered to the Quaker Campus office, located in the Josh du Lac Caitlin Duffy Student Union. Letters from out-of-town may be faxed to the office at (310) 945-5301. The deadline for letters is 5 p.m. Tuesday, the week of publication. Letters turned in after 5 p.m. on Tuesdays will not be run. News Editor Julie Amiton Features Editor Marce Scarbrough Arts & Entertainment Editor Jenny Colville Sports Editor Jeff C. Walter Copy Editor Adam Webster Photography Editor Sarah Gammill Assistant News Editor Jennifer Buddemeyer Assistant Features Editor Sarah Knoell Write Now!!! Assistant Arts & Entertainment Editor . . . Jackie Poole Assistant Sports Editor Chris T. Martin Assistant Photography Editor Eric Berg Advertising Manager Peggy McKinnie If you are interested in being a writer or editor Faculty Advisor Dr. Gary Libman for the Quaker Campus, or if you would like to take photographs or create editorial artwork

The QC is published weekly except during examination, vacation and for the paper, please call the Quaker Campus interim periods. The student staff strives to address issues that concern the Whittier College Community. office at Opinions expressed herein are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily coincide with administrative, collegiate or editorial viewpoint. Editorials that are signed by the author reflect that individual's viewpoint. Unsigned editorials are written by and reflect the opinions of the editorial staff. The QC office is located in the Student Union. The telephone number is (310) 907-4254. Advertising inquiries should be addressed to the Advertising 907-4254. Manager, Whittier College Box 8613, Whittier, CA 90608. VIEWPOINT 3/QC March 12, 1992 Your Vote Does Not Matter Exercise Your Right to Vote By Andrew Tate VI,V By Andrew Tate By„.-,„.... Tony Strickland. & i "The boys got the power and they ain't going to give it up," Tip O'Neill, former Speaker of the House, said. These words are representative of every president, We, as Americans were not given the right to vote. Voting is a privilege that from George Washington to George Bush and, every man who has ever put on a our Forefathers fought and died for. Too many times I hear people saying that their crown and called himself king. Even in a democracy, power in the hands of the few vote does not count. True by number, one vote does not make the difference in a Presidential election. Yet there are certain cases that come to mind when three has always ruled the many. That is the way it has been, and that is the way it votes made the difference in a local campaign. always will be. For it does not matter what form of government rules the state, the masses must be kept submissive, because they are not considered intelligent In my hometown of Thousand Oaks, the race for supervisor was decided by enough to have a voice in the successful function of government. exactly three votes. Maria Vanderkolk beat Made Shiver by that narrow of a margm Do you think Vanderkolk thinks one vote matters? I say yes. I thought Alexander Hamilton, though conservative in his political views, shared a about the fact that my friends and I put Vanderkolk over the top similar belief With many ofhis constituents in power at the time the Constitution was written: Democracy was a threat to all those who held power in America. In Think of our Forefathers. They were taxed by the British government without any form of representation. But here in America you not only have representation fact, take a close look at the Constitution, and try to find the word democracy in it. you have the right to voice your opinion through your vote. And if others thought You wont. Government in America has always, though we like to believe otherwise, this way, the views and concerns of the constituents would be adequately represented been filled with many myths. in our government. eoe«ieu The first phantasm associated with American democracy is the one that claims our government should be regarded as being so "high and mighty," compared to all Just think of George Bush and his re-election campaign; if no one voted Bush would assume that he was doing a good job because no one would have exercised the rest of the governments in the world. The second, and probably the biggest of their right to tell him otherwise. Bush has heard the voice of the few Americans all the myths, is the one that claims that this is a great participatory democracy, who have taken an interest in their country and have cast their ballot to send him and that your vote can really make a difference in an election. a message. However, Bush has yet to lose a primary. Do you think Bush would For some reason we tend to think that we actually have a say in the election react differently if he lost a few primary elections to Patrick J. Buchanan. I think process in America. In reality this does not happen. Actually we are presented with so! The only way Bush can hear this message of disapproval is through your vote two candidates, and we are limited to picking one or the other to win. Normally the candidates are supported by people who are from the same financial and social loo many times people use the excuse that they are forced to choose between status. It doesn't matter what side of the political fence they claim to be, they are the lesser of two evils. As I have said before, by not saying anything you are saving driven by the same fires that burn in all of them — power and money. yes to the majority. Ifyou are not happy with Bush, but you don't vote, and he wins you will be part of the silent majority who helped keep him in the White House On During the '60s a generation of Americans watched as its heroes fell to the the other hand ifyou did go out and vote against Bush and he still won you would bullets of assassins. While no proof exists to support that the assassinations of not have wasted your vote. The reason for this is that you would have voiced your Martin Luther King, John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, and Robert Kennedy were part opinion and made it known what you stand for. of some kind of plot to keep the lower classes from establishing a voice in American politics, it does help to explain the voting apathy that exists in America today. I feel the problem does not lie in who the candidates are, but rather the problem There is now in the United States a generation of Americans who voted and voiced is apathy among our citizens. Too many people don't even care about what goes on their opinions and, were indirectly told to shut up. Even when the same "good oT m our government. I find it ridiculous that when I ask students who they are boys" lost in a fair and square election, they still seemed to find their way to power. supporting for president they reply "Who's running?" This makes me sick because many of these people are the same people who don't think their vote counts It has been nearly three decades since the Civil Rights Act was passed. All one needs to do to find out how much a vote counts is to take a look at any city in America All it takes is some effort to find out how your representatives voted, then to and see the conditions of minorities. Have their lives changed by the fact that they decide whether or not you agree with this vote. Upon findingout thatyou do or don't can vote? Prejudice is again on the rise, hate crimes are again increasing, there is baTbt y°U S°me bSSiS °" WhlCh y°U °an l0°k Up°n When yOU Cast your hardly any minority representation in government, and nearly 50 percent of the people in this country still live near the poverty level. Our education system is in It gives me a great feeling to go to the polls on a Tuesday morning to exercise shambles and our government still feels that it is more important to build my right to vote. Just think: people have died and are still dying to enjoy this right machines of destruction, than to provide low-cost housing and establish a national a right that we in America take for granted. Ninety percent of the people of health care system. Nicaragua turn out to vote with the threat of violence, but in America a 50 percent turnout is a good showing. People in America should rethink their priorities In America exists a interesting political system. We can boast of freedoms that exist here that are not prevalent in any country in the world. We can make claim 1 he next time you think your vote doesn't count, think about those people in to the fact that state is restricted in its capacity to coerce and control us. After all, Nicaragua who risk theirlivestovote, think about our Forefathers who fought and died to give us this right, and think about the countless number of countries that the police cannot enter our houses and stop us from saying what we feel. Yet, on would kill to have this right. the whole, we do not make use of any of those freedoms. Why? Because there are built- in fail switches that protect those in control; indoctrination, elimination of Tony Strickland is a junior majoring in Political Science. popular organizations like unions, media that are far from being bipartisan in their reporting and the isolating of groups of people who can come together to share ideas and work side by side thus becoming a unified voice inthe election process. We have in America what Walter Lippmann called, "manufacture of consent." That is to ensure that actual power is in the hands of what he refereed to as a "specialized class." Those who believe this also believe that the general population Wanted: is not smart enough to make decisions and, thus are capable of nothing more than mistakes. Norm Chomsky states, "The Founding Fathers had very strong feelings in this respect. The Federalists, for example, were very much afraid of popular democracy." Viewpoint Articles As it stands today,w e are the only democratic nation in the world that does not have a labor-based political party. How can a middle to lower class individual in this country expect to have a voice in American politics if there is no party that truly represents the needs of the working men and women? The people in this country have been reduced to an unresponsive and submissive mass. They are allowed to participate in the political system, but only as consumers, T he Quaker Campus needs article ideas for the Viewpoint and not as true individuals. Theoretically, they have a say in what decisions are Page. Ifyou have an idea for a column or an op-ed, then please made in government but, all the avenues of self-information, organization, and call the QC at 907-4254, or stop by the office located in the communication have been eliminated. In reality our leaders control us, we do not control them. Student Union. Voting in America is just a ceremonial expression for the chosen few who hold power. We no longer have men or women with political views. We have faces that stand in front of teleprompters and echo the same political rhetoric each election. Ifyou have a piece you would like run as a guest column, The funny part is, they all agree we should get out and vote for who we believe in. then please submit it on a 3 1/2" Macintosh diskette by the Yet, they are the very same people who do their best to make sure that the ones that do vote are of the chosen few. Sunday before publication. Diskettes will be returned. Finally, to those who think that by not voting one runs the risk of having a man like David Duke come into power, maybe one should take a close look at the present leaders in America. Ifyou look close enough you might find that Mr. Duke wears Turning in a piece to the Viewpoint Page does not his political agenda over his head, whereas all the others are hiding their caps behind their artificial agendas and their stage-managed conventions. Unless you guarantee publication. Viewpoint articles may be subject to plan on voting for the same faces and agendas that rule each election, then I am editing for clarity. afraid your vote is as meaningless as a professional wrestling match.

Andrew Tate is a junior majoring in English. 4/QC March 12, 1992 NEWS Aids Testing On Campus By Josh du Lax: (students) will be tested." cost $25, will be offered for $10, Editor-in- Chief Students will find out the as BOG will be paying for a location of the test site over the portion of each test adminis­ Sexual Harassment Panel On March 24, the second day phone and each will be given an tered. of AIDS Awareness Week, appointment time and a num­ "Results are completely A panel comprised of Jeanne Miller, director of counseling anonymous HTV testing will be ber to use to ensure anonymity. anonymous," Millis said. "Only services at the College, and attorneys Joe Beachboard and offered on campus to Whittier Results will be made available (a person who tests positive) Jenifer McKenna will take place today at 4:30 p.m. in Hoover- College students, Jack Millis, April 3 and post-test counseling and the person who gives post- Lautrop. The topic for discussion is sexual harassment. Chairperson of the Whittier will be offered in case anybody test counseling would know — The discussion is co-sponsored by the Student Organization College AIDS Task Force, said. tests HTV positive. and the counselor would not for Multi-Cultural Awareness (SOMA), Students Organizing To get tested students need "AIDS is an important issue even know who you are, he Students (SOS), the Whittier College Green Party, Pi Sigma to make an appointment by call­ ... we're talking about life," Millis would just know you by a number. Alpha, and BOG. ing 907-4239 between March 18- said. "People need to be very 20. careful and that is what the "Our hope is that no one on "Because we want it to be as testing is for. our campus will test positive." Playwright Craig Lucas On Campus anonymous as possible," Millis "(Contracting HIV) can According to Millis, ap­ said, "well have people call. We happen to everybody — Magic proximately two out of every Award-winning playwright Craig Lucas will be on campus need appointments made be­ Johnson showed us that." 1000 students nationally are Monday, March 16. Lucas will meet with students and cause we need to know how many The tests, which normally HTV positive. faculty during classes and meals throughout the day. A luncheon will be served in Stauffer House at 11:30 a.m. for a limited number of guests. Contact Dallas Rhodes at ext.281 to reserve a space. At 3 p.m. in Stauffer House there will be Luminarias: An Evening on an informal discussion on play writing sponsored by Sigma Tau Delta for a limited number of students. Contact Anne Kiley at ext. 350 to reserve a space. the Nile Comes to an End Lucas has written several plays including "Marry Me a By Jennifer Buddemeyer Luminarias than I do for other Jeha said that she received Little" (with songs by Stephen Sondheim), "Longtime Assistant News Editor events like Spring Sing or good feedback from those who Companion," "Blue Window," and "Prelude to a Kiss." He also Homecoming," Jeha said. attended the event. wrote the screenplays for the film "Longtime Companion" A "different attitude" There were no reports of Chris Williams, junior, said and the forthcoming film "Prelude to a Kiss." prevailed Saturday night at the problems by the security guards that the event, in comparison Beverly Hilton as 320 members or the management of the Hilton to last year's, "depended on Dr. Tim Melister To Speak On AIDS In The '90s of the College community linked to the event, Jeha said. who you went with." gathered for Luminarias, It was initially advertised Michelle Payne, junior, Tim Melister, M.D. will conduct an informal discussion on according to Tina Jeha, that alcohol would be confined said, "A lot of people the current knowledge of AIDS and the outlook for the future Program Board Chair. to the bars and not permitted complained about the carding" on Monday, March 16 at 7:30 p.m. at Stauffer House. Melister "Last year, Luminarias was within the dance area, but Jeha in reference to the alcohol is a surgeon in New York City, has done extensive work with a big party; this year it seemed said that hotel management let policy at the dance. AIDS patients, and is currently conducting research on the to be more of an event," she people take drinks into the Williams said, "The alcohol disease. said. dance. policy was too stringent. Luminarias is a non-profit Alcohol sale was regulated to Liability or not, you should be Publication Reception For Gold event subsidized by the those of age because "people able to have fun." •"Program Board special events could only buy one drink at a Dave Berliner, junior, said, A reception will be held in honor of Steve Gold, professor fund. tinfe, and then only after "The prices (for alcohol) were out of hand." of sociology, on the occasion of the publication of his book Jeha said that this year showing proper identification," Program Board spent $7000 "Refugee Communities: A Comparative Field Study." The Jeha said. It was not difficult for Regarding the location of on the dance, $600 more than the security staff to keep track the event in comparison to the reception is Tuesday, March 17 at 4 p.m. in the Mendenhall last year, but still under of whobought drinks in reference Queen Mary in Long Beach Gallery. budget. to who was drinking them, she where the dance was held last "I budget more for added. year, Williams said, "The thing Final "Evening With the President" Scheduled that was nicer about the Queen Mary was that you could go The final opportunity to meet with President James Ash Saunders, will make the final outside and get fresh air out on in an open session of questions and answers will take place HONOR revisions to the document with the deck Ifyou went out of the Monday, March 23 at 7 p.m. in Stauffer House. Ash will input from McGlynn and dance area at the Hilton, you address concerns brought up by those in attendance. continued from page 1. Winger. were in the lobby." An education process will AIDS Awareness Panel Will Address Issues the possibility of Whittier begin in "a couple of months," adopting an academic honor Chabran said, in which public code. forums will be held in order for Several people with AIDS will make up a panel discussing students to learn about continued from page 1. issues related to the virus on Monday, March 23 at 7:30 p.m. Following an informational trip to Haverford proposed code. :ftftftft:ftft:ftftftftft:ft:ftftftftft:ft:^ in the Stauffer Hall Main Lounge. Following the panel College (PA) last September, McGlynn and Chabran additional computer discussion, there will be a question and answer period. by members of the Ad-Hoc hope to have the students vote equipment was removed committee, the document was on the code by the first week of from seminar room 'A' in Condom-Grams To Go On Sale revised. May. If the faculty approves Wardman Hall. The completion process of the document and the students The thea was reported by Condom-grams will be sold in front of the Campus Inn the document has been vote it in, it will be implemented aresidentwho discovered the from Monday, March 16 until Thursday, March 19. The difficult, McGlynn said, next fall. equipment misbing. There grams will cost 25 cents each or five for $1. They will be because due to"th e uniqueness "The student body are the were no signs of forced entry delivered on Friday, March 20. ofWhittier College" there is no ones to decide whether they into the room from the one honor code that the want it or not," Chabran said. windows. This room is kept Cheerleading Information Meeting committee could model it after. "If students want the honor unlocked for student use. "We have taken time so we code we hope that the faculty Report*) were filed with An information meeting will be held today at 12:30 p.m. in can present to the community will accept it," McGlynn said. the Whittier Police Department for both of these the Student Union for all those interested in cheering for the a document that we can feel McGlynn is in favor of the honor code because it can events, according to Malone. Poet football and basketball teams during the 1992-93 school comfortable with," McGlynn said. promote "a sense of community, -We've interviewed and year. pride in work and trust between followed upon anything and For more information, contact Paula Monaco at 696-2876. The proposed honor code encompasses academic aspects students and faculty." everything we can: unless of student life, not social ones, Smith, is also in favor of someone conies forward with WCSSLHA To Sponsor Yard Sale Saturday and allows professors to give having an honor code at information, we will have to unproctored exams. Whittier. "My own sense is inactivate the case," Malone WCSSLHA, Whittier College Student Speech, Language The current Ad-Hoc that (an honor code) would be a .'•i.ifti. and Hearing Association, will be having a yard sale on committee, consisting of really good thing for students. He added that anyone Saturday, March 14, in front of the Rock. Proceeds from the Chabran, chairperson; Jenny The code would improve the with information regarding event will go towards such WCSSLHA activities as student Kelly, President Pro-tem; Joe climate of academic life... but, either of these cases i 8 urged hearing screenings in May and sponsoring monthly speaking Price, professor of religion; Bill it clearly needs to be a student to contact Campus Safety at decision (whether or not engagements. Mullowney, College Council; ext. 211. AU information will Fritz Smith, professor of Whittier should have an honor be held in strict mathematics; and senior Alycia code," he said. NEWS 5/QC March 12, 1992 INTERNATIONAL Kaufman Extends Leave of Absence; INP Program to Continue By Julie Amiton At Maryland, Kaufman is Iowa simulation will begin in News Editor training two regional the spring of 1993. MOSCOW coordinators on the INP program Based on her experiences at Joyce Kaufman, professorof at the high school level, using Whittier, Kaufman estimates The prime ministers of the 11 member countries of the political science and director of Whittier as the model. the program will take about 12- Commonwealth of Independent States are to meet Friday in the International Negotiations "The program has gotten 18 months to implement. This Moscow to address some of the crucial economic issues effecting Project 0NP)at Whittier College tremendous press," Kaufman includes recruiting high schools the loose new grouping. Among the issues are the customs who is currently on a one-year said. "This is a wonderful to participate, writing scenarios policy for the newly created boarders that exist among the leave of absence, has extended position for Whittier to be in." and the actual running time of former Soviet republics; tax coordination and pension her leave for an additional year. Whittier became affiliated the program. guarantees. Kaufman, who is presently with INP after receiving a grant In addition to coordinating All the members of the former Soviet Union have joined working at the University of in 1987 from the National the INP program, Kaufman is the Commonwealth, exceptfor the Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia Maryland, will return to Science Foundation to purchase teaching a class on Defense and Georgia. Whittier in the fall of 1993. computers, printers and Policy and Arms Control at the It is routine for a faculty communication equipment. University of Maryland. ISRAEL member after seven years to In 1988, Whittier was According to Kaufman, the have a sabbatical," Kaufman awarded another grant from the high school INP program, will said. "Faculty are usually given United Institute of Peace to continue "whether I am Menachem Begin, former prime minister of Israel, died in sabbaticals to do research, or do expand INP, which would allow physically (at Whittier) or not." a Tel Aviv hospital after suffering a heart attack last week. things that benefit the College." high schools to participate. The However, at the college level, Begin was a leading figure in Isreal's first formal peace with When Kaufman agreed to program expanded further with Whittier, one of 25 colleges and an Arab state and in later directing a war in Lebanon that was go to Maryland to adapt the INP a grant in 1990. universities in the simulation, Isreal's longest and most divisive. simulation, her sabbatical was Kaufman, working with will not participate. switched to a leave of absence, Whittier College students, To facilitate the success of KENYA because her visit is paid for by implemented the high school the program, Kaufman uses the host institution. version of the simulation in the Whittier students to help implement it. The experiment in multi-tarty democracy in Kenya Based on a desire to see the fall of 1989, with nine high The seven students working appears to be deteriorating into partisan violence, and some final implementation of the INP schools participating. Currently program she is working on, 13 high schools participate in with Kaufman include: put much of the blame on the government of President Daniel sophomore Lauri Hitchingham; Arap Moi. Mobs ofyouths identifying themselves as supporters Kaufman requested an California (11), Oregon (1) and Arizona (1). juniors Leigh Ann Cardinas, of the ruling party have attacked opposition leaders, and extension to her leave. According to Kaufman, the Jenny Kelly, Chris Hansen, police have prevented some opposition party officials from Kaufman was granted the idea behind bringing the INP Melissa Chabran, Marce opening local offices. Riot police tear-gassed several elderly extension following a meeting with members of the political program to the high school level Scarbrough; and senior Adam mothers of alleged political prisoners and hundreds of their science department. "The was the need to focus on issues Rosenberg. sympathizers who were staging a hunger strike in a Nairobi department has been supportive that effect them directly, such The Whittier students serve park. Their vigil had attracted thousands of supporters, and of my deci si on to stay," Kaufman as the Pacific Basin and Latin as "facilitators," or discussion leaders of Kenya's recently legalized opposition parties. said. America. leaders to high school students. Most of Kaufman's courses Based on the success of the They also monitor the will be- covered by part-time program, Kaufman is training performance of the high schools. faculty, according to Mike three regional coordinators, with In addition, the senior student McBride, political science Whittier as a model, each is responsible for creating the department chair. focusing on issues that directly scenarios to be used in the NATIONAL "There is a trade-off (with effect them. simulation. Kaufman then Joyce being gone)... the program The three regions selected reviews and distributes the will not run (at the college level), are Connecticut, which will deal simulations. but Joyce is building increased with issues such as North According to Kaufman, the expertise upon her return," American "free" trade; Iowa, issues are changing. "We have CLINTON SWEEPS THE SOUTH McBride said. which will focus on agricultural moved away from an emphasis "Everything I am learning and industrial issues; and a third on weapons and are now focusing Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton swept the Southern states while at Maryland, will directly site which will be selected at a on more global issues, such as in Super Tuesday's Democratic presidential voting, re­ benefit what I do when I come later date. the environment, human rights, establishing himself as the front-runner for his party's back. This puts (Whittier) in a According to Kaufman, the weapons proliferation and the nomination. unique position as a model," program in Connecticut will be international trade debt." Former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas, Clinton's Kaufman said. running in the fall of 1992. The principal rival won his home state as well as the Rhode Island primary and the caucuses in Delaware. But Tsongas did no better than second in the Southern We're Making a states, including Florida, where he made his biggest commitment of time and resources. Difference. In addition to Florida, and Texas, Clinton came in first in the primaries in Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Louisiana, and he won the caucuses in Missouri. The victories Tuesday brought Clinton 418 delegates, 0 contrasted with 208 for Tsongas and 23 for former California American Heart Gov. Edmund (Jerry) Brown. Association

A Public Service of the USDA I your State Forester. BUSH EMERGES UNDEFEATED

President Bush emerged from Super Tuesday still undefeated in his drive for renomination. Bush easily won all eight of the day's Republican CAN YOUR TRASH primaries, continuing to expand his already huge lead in convention delegates. And in several of the contests, his margin ofvictor y over challenger Patrick Buchanan improved BEACHES ARE in comparison with earlier primaries. FOR SAND,- Still, the results showed that voters in the eight states— six in the South and Southwest, two in New England— continued a pattern of protest voting set in earlier contests. Bush consistently lost between a quarter and a third of GOP voters. A Los Angeles Times exit poll found 41 percent of GOP voters said they disapproved of Bush's job performance. In Texas, Bush's home state, the poll found 33 percent disapproved.

Compiled by Julie Ami ton/Information obtained from the LA Times isney World, Tne Wall Disney Company 6/QC March 12, 1992 NEWS Cohen and Hansen Speak on the Changing Role of the Health Care and the Environment in the f90s By Letty Loza implementing good education. News Staff Tt makes no sense to spend all this money on education and The changing role of the training ifyou haven not made environmentwas the primary investments in health care," she focus ofthe talk presented by said. visiting scholars Joyce Cohen According to Hansen, there and Fred Hansen titled is disagreement as to what "Creative Public Policy- professionals and public view as Making for the ^Os: Health high risk or environmental Care and the Environment" problems. "We've been making on March 4. poor choices and need to be more Cohen focused on the conservative when making health care in the environmental decisions," he presentation, while Hansen said. .concentrated on an Cohen gave an example of environmental aspect. deficient planning. She spoke Cohen emphasized the about an incident that took pi ace importance of redoing health fifty years ago in the Columbia priorities in order to assure a River, without much concern of healthier population. She what it might do to the said it is essential that environment. A dam was built everyone has access to a basic to support and encourage cheap health care package. power marketed to aluminum This can be accomplished plants. As a result, this cut by changing social policy and irrigation, severely affecting the making intelligent priorities, farmers' crops. according to Cohen. She also Hansen mentioned several said it is necessary to focus on recommendations to follow as a Eric Berg/Aut. Photography Editor prevention, having access to priority in dealing with diagnosis and the significance environmental issues. They Oregon State Senator Joyce Cohen spoke on the changing role of health care in of placing priorities in care include: the need for educational the '90s. Husband-and-wife team Cohen and Fred Hansen visited Whittier for women and children under responsibility to be improved, through the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship program. the priority level. focusing on pollution prevention; Cohen said there are looking at environmental issues and is not addressed," Hansen preserve natural life not just for Quality for the State of Oregon. constant new forms as a priority along with economic said. this but future generations," he Cohen and Hansen's visit implementing good education issues; and valuing natural "(These are the) added. was made possible through the to make sure students are well resources in the long-term. recommendations that must Cohen is in her third term in Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow trained. However, she "The number one issue that fundamentally drive us and we the Oregon State Senate, while Program which matches experts believes health care should makes all other things pale is if need to be able to take them at a Hansen is the director of the in various fields to small liberal be as essential as the world's population increases national level if we are to Department of Environmental arts colleges.

Whittier Scholars Council, CLAWSON working with both the governing body of the Council continued from page 1. and with students on their bookwise, but his work senior Same Owners for 2 Years - Rather change the name than the quality. experience was fantastic. lie ;;rGft-t" ~, lie t\as -aW *«->• FREE alv. ays nasi example, fa- faculty advisor for Alpha Pi 6557 Greenleaf experience to put behind an DELIVERY! Delta, the honorary business OPEN fraternity. TO Uptown Whittier According to Brunson, "He showed a real CLOSE Clawson was in the process of sensitivity to student goals ... EVERYDAY get ting a contract for his book. 11A.M.-10P.M. (310) 945-3341 and reacted well to students," and "He had people interested, but Richard Archer, Associate SUN. 12-9P.M. nothing concrete yet," Director of the Whittier OUE PESSAS ARE'BKGGIEK? Brunson said. Scholars Program, said. Clawson had published The Business Department MEDIUM PIZZA LARGE PIZZA one article in the Harvard is compiling a collection of I A* Business Review and had mes, I another reprinted in a College community. Students $iC99 i $799 REG. • TAX I collection published by the who interacted with Clawson | REG. # +TAX Wall Street.Journal,according $9.19 6 | $11.27 * I during his time at the College ro I/iiTio are invited to add to the book 14" ONE ITEM 16" ONE ITEM 00 FOR EACH ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS I $1.05 FOR EACH ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS I In addition to teaching, in the Business office. The 1 NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS | Clawson was one of eight NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS volume will be bound and vj~>i^c» Mill, delivery of $8.00 for faculty members on the presented to Clawson's family. |«.U utiKCJU* ^ WhlttR.r c^e students! NO CHECKS Wlurtier (j; s;ilde„j *100 OFF SMALL 12" PIZZA ANY SMALL PIZZA (one topping) $200 OFF AND $Q99 ASIAN FESTIVAL SPAGETTI y +TAX ANY MEDIUM PIZZA WITH GARLIC BREAD R EG. ASIAN CULTURE WITH AN EXPLOSION AND $12.12 $3°° OFF 2 MEDIUM DRINKS * DRUMS * ANY LARGE PIZZA .75 FOR EACH ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS Minmill,. uvuvkideliverjy v»oif .9>j.\j\r$8.fX) IVfoMr _ JVIII1Min.. deliverUCIlVCiyy oOif -»0.»-A$8.00; for * COLORFUL COSTUMES * [NO1 CHECKCHECKSS WhittieWhinierr CollegGillewe StudentStudent: s I NNOO CHECKCHECKSS WlurtieWhinierr CollegCollegee Student Stud s * DELICIOUS FOOD * EACH TOPPING COVERS THE WHOLE PIZZA FRIDAY, MARCH 13TH Everyday Lunch Special *Lasagna *Spaghetti *BBQ Chicken & Ribs 6:00PM IN THE FACULTY CENTER $1.87 for Slice of Pizza and Large Drink *SaIad *Sandwiches $6 STUDENTS WITH ID Discount with *BEER *WINE $9 FACULTY AND FAMILY Whittier College I.D. TICKETS ON SALE AT THE MAILROOM OR AT THE DOOR NO CHECKS NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS ASnU*8*MIS*MM?S3«i»SMf*-.!

COMICS 7/QC March 12,1992

Larger Than Life by David Gallagher U F£ IM 3

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Hereon Planet 10 By Guido Zolke and Dirk Finger

For people like Lewis, waitress mistakes, far from being disappointing, are welcome excuses to give a cheap tip.

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The first tape recorder, actually invented in 1716 by Claudius Emil, was soon destroyed when he discovered what his voice sounded like on tape. 8/QC March 12,1992 FEATURES A New Set of Ruyles I Family, Faith and Soccer: A Look By Jonelle Ruyle I at the Life of Senior Ozzie Rodriguez By Sarah Knoell Assistant Features Editor The almighty weekend trip The Rock (Whittier College's is an important aspect of alumni magazine) called him "a college life. man with a mission." That Getting away gives a sense statement reveals the true na­ of freedom beyond the dorm ture of Osvaldo "Ozzie" room. It gives a feeling of Rodriguez, whose devotion has enjoyment away from the touched all aspects ofhis life. usual FACU party or sports Born in Havana, Cuba, event. Rodriguez commented upon the It also gives a whole new determination of his parents, perspective on Whittier who traveled to Spain and ac­ College. This last weekend I quired visas to the United States went to Arizona and even in 1974. "We were fortunate to though I had a great time, I was glad to come back to all that get a visa to Spain," Rodriguez is familiar. said. "You could never just leave For many students, Whittier and its social environment Cuba and go to the United States leave a little to be desired ... especially for those expecting a due to the lack of diplomatic large crowd at every sporting event and a rip-roaring party relations. afterwards. Some students get that "I've got to transfer" feeling "In Spain we were extremely and look around at other schools for academic and social poor and lived in the outskirts of opportunities. Madrid. However, Cuban fami­ Many travel to places in search ofthe excitement they can't lies are really tight and our cul­ find at Whittier. ture and our love for one an­ Yet most ofthe time, they come home with a new perspective other kept us strong," he said. on good ol' Whittier. Three years later, the During my freshman year I had that transfer bug. I was Rodriguez family moved to just tired ofthe same old faces at the same old places. I was Huntington Park, on the east >ft'^^4....''^.^m\. ^ ready for new action and new members ofthe opposite sex. I side of L.A.. "My dad worked V'A "I thought that I knew everything there was to know about two jobs upon our arrival, while Whittier and I wanted a change. attending school to learn En­ My friends felt the same way that I did so we decided we glish. My mom also worked ex­ ><**%& -d needed to get away. tremely hard, helping my dad Sarah Gammill/Photo Editor We went down to San Diego State University to hang out at with one of his jobs while hold­ Ozzie Rodriguez has played varsity soccer for four the school and stay with some friends in their apartment. We ing down a job of her own. years and coaches at Whittier Christian High School. were going to party at a big school and really see a social scene "When we arrived, none of us the way we'd always dreamed. We were in our own little world. dents attending this occasion, lence. could speak English. In order to tiU The whole way down to San Diego we discussed our options. learn, we set up house rules and and I was floored.Th e professor "The two main goals of the Should we transfer or should we stick it out another three Spanish television was forbid­ popped in for a few minutes and group are to educate the Whit­ years? den. The best way to learn the then left. It was very imper­ tier community and to aid We were freshmen and we didn't know any better. We language was by watching the sonal." women in crisis pregnancies. It's didn't realize that Whittier is actually a great school. commercials on TV. The same At this point, Rodriguez de­ very hypocritical and disgusting Even though there were parties at all hours and different simple lyrics were repeated over cided to reconsider his thoughts of those opposing abortion not to people at every turn, there wasn't the same kind of secure and over along with visuals that about Whittier, asking to meet help pregnant women." feeling that there is at Whittier. The SDSU students told us of helped us to identify. with a science professor to dis­ Rodriguez works at the Whittier going to parties where they met new people every night and "As time passed and we ac­ cuss the program. "I met with Pregnancy Care Clinic, which going to Introduction to Psychology with 200 people in it. quired a knowledge of the lan­ Dr. Hansen from the biology gives free pregnancy testing, Well, none of us transferred. We ended up leaving at two in guage, the rules changed. Only department for an hour and a counseling and finds places to the morning so we could sleep in our own beds. On the way Spanish could be spoken in the half. Here I found a professor live and jobs for expectant home we talked about the advantages of going to a small house in order to preserve our with a Ph.D. willing to spend an mothers. school. tradition. extensive amount of time with a The athletic, academic and We liked knowing the people at parties and not feeling like 'The love and support of my high school senior. The other social achievements of strangers at our own school. We liked going to class and having family is critical to me. I can professor could only spend five Rodriguez placed him among the professor call us by our first names. Big schools have more always be sure that they will be minutes for 400 people. That's the nation's finalists for the numbers but small schools have comfort and security. there for me at a moment's no­ when I knew that this was the Rhodes Scholarship. Rodriguez So if you feel like the size of Whittier is making you a bit tice-day or night. This support place for me. feels that the entire process, claustrophobic, take a little weekend trip. Everyone needs has provided me with moral en­ "Whittieris a wonderful place including an intimidating mock them to help gain a new perspective on Whittier and to make couragement," Rodriguez said. to prepare students for medical interview with a board ofWhit­ them thankful for novelties of a smaller school. Since the age of five, school. They really take care of tier professors has prepared him Rodriguez has known his dream their pre-meds. 56 percent of for his future. for the future: "All I ever wanted pre-med students at other "When I first came to NOBODY to be was a doctor. My uncle in schools are accepted to medical Whittier, I had a lot of precon­ KNOWS 945-7691 Cuba is a doctor, and I've looked school. In contrast, 92 percent ceived notions," Rodriguez said. 8808 S. Painter Ave. up to him for as long as I can of Whittier students get ac­ "I became affected by my sur­ LIKE (at Lambert) remember." cepted." roundings. Whittier taught me DOMINO'S At nine years of age, the Rodriguez asserts that how to look at everything from a Rodriguez family moved to Whittier offers a lot of opportu­ different perspective. This place Call Us! — Open for Lunch Whittier, and he attended Whit­ nities. "I have spent four years has taught me how to analyze HOURS: Sun. - Thus 11:00 a.m. - Midnight tier Christian High School. playing soccer for the varsity my values and develop a funda­ Fri. - Sat. 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 a.m. "When I was a freshman in high squad. I'm also a coach at the mental basis for my beliefs. school I experienced a signifi­ high school I attended. Basi­ Tve learned a lot in my four Coke Classic and Diet Coke available in 12oz cans cant change in my religious cally, I play year round and it's years here, especially from the views. I realized that God is not a great release." close interaction ofthe students about religion and laws. He is One of the founders of Love and the faculty. One ofthe things for Life, (the campus pro-life LOW LOW PRICE CHEESE PLEASE about personal relationships that has been most important to and sharing. My relationship organization,) Rodriguez me is my relationship to God. I Mix & Match Double Dazzler with God is as real and as valid claimed the process was both believe that one's faith should %QQ One Medium 6 ^ QQ One Medium interesting and stressful. "It 7 7 as my friendships with others. never be a crutch to accept me­ iJ' * r~^ Pizza Feast •^•% ** Cheese Pizza After this, my life took a more was nice to see something grow diocrity; it should be a standard serious turn." from an idea to an actual orga­ to live up to. Two For ij Two For Your Choice of feasts: Deluxe, N 99 $Q99 When it came time for nization. Starting the group in­ "My biggest fear would be to Meai7.7a, Pepperoni or CheeZZa. Rodriguez to apply to college.he volved becoming educated upon look back and wish that I had Expires: 3-19-92 13 Expires: 3-19-92 the issue and debating different Valid at participating stores only. Not valid with any other Valid s: partopating stores only. Not valid with any other didn't consider Whittier at first. done something differently. I coupon or otter "Vices may vary. Customer pays applicable coupon or clef, prices may vary. Customer pays appfcaHe positions, finding a sponsor, and n sales tax. Del.; -y areas limited to ensure sale driving. salss tax. De&very areas imited to ensure sale drivirg. "Then I went to a meeting held definitely don't want to live with Out drivers cany less than (20.00. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. ' ©1991 Domino's Piua, Inc. •* C199I Domino's PizM. inc at UC Irvine for minority stu­ setting ground rules and fun­ any regrets, and therefore, Fm dents interested in the sciences. damental principles. Our main going to continue living life to There were literally 400 stu- principle is not to advocate vio- the fullest," Rodriguez said. FEATURES 9/QC March 12,1992

As April Approaches, the Tax Man Cometh ot« JratricK s Uayi I he JKeai By Marce D. Scarbrough Features Editor Reason Why Irish Eyes Smile - April 15 is almost here, have you filed your taxes yet? Ifyou are like most Americans, you'll SA March 17. What does it bring to mind? To people in the ftft wait until just before the oP^ty i r ' ^ deadline. Label (~X T —•—^™:— United States and Ireland, it is known as the day of green, However, most college Sail ; .;•:: cksD.'i students file early, either to get Who exactly was St. Patrick? According to a few Whittier their refund, or to qualify for students, he is "a tiny, green leprechaun who guards a pot of financial aid. But the process, gold", "some Irish guy," and "the Patron Saint of Ireland." In something most Americans reality, he is the Patron Saint of Ireland. participate in, can be a Al though itis unclear the exact year of his birth. writings bureaucratic nightmare. from his "spiritual biography", Confession and Epistola, Filing taxes can also be a rite suggest that he lived during the fifth century A.D. of passage. Preparing a tax Whenhe was 16yearsold,he was kidnapped by Irishmen return shows the world you've raiding Britain's shore, and taken to Ireland. It was during earned your money, and as a this time of crisis where he looked towards religion to guide result, the government is taking him through what was to become six years of slavery as a a portion. But it's not as simple herdsman. He eventually escaped from bondage after as that. dreaming that a ship was waiting to reunite him with his To begin with, there are all i'am i! y i n Brit a'...:. ftft::;:|A - those forms, each with their own After returning to Britain he had another dream in which number and letter code. Most he received a letter that beseeched "the voice of the Irish " to students will end up filling out return to Ireland. Thus St.. Patrick began his plans to spread the 1040EZ, or a 1040A. Each Christianity throughout Ireland in spite of his feelings of year, millions of forms and the educational inadequacies. However, once he reached Ireland instructions to fillthe m out, are and began teaching Christianity, his hesitations and fears sent out through the mail by the quickly vanished into the air. IRS. Additional copies are also As in the case of many religious parsons, St. Patrick available from most libraries. becamealegendary figure,especially among thelrish people. As if that were not complex The most renowned legt;ndis that of the shamrock. To many, enough, each taxpayer is the shamrock symbolizes good luck. However legend has it responsible for collecting income that St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain the concept of statements: W-2s from the Holy Trinity to a non-believer. He used the three leaves employers and 1099s frombank s from one stalk as a comparison to the Christian belief of three ft',; • ur in uiit G< ] and other financial institutions. Fred BiwiVStaff Photographer Two copies of these forms are In Ireland St. Patricks day remains primarily a religious mailed out at the beginning of April 15 is the last day to file income tax returns. the year, one to the taxpayer, services, enjoying family and community gatherings and and one to the IRS. cross off the old address and fill to 1040 forms only. wearing shamrock* According to Lisa Durham, a in the new one. This will help Often professional tax In the United States, St. Patrick's day is a secular Certified Public Accountant speed up the return. preparers will fill out forms for holiday. Often the special day doubles as an excuse to drink with the firm of Andersen and Some people don't seem to dependents. But the IRS green beer and imitate the culture and traditions of Ireland. Associates, in Tustin CA, the mind filling out their own return. cautions that if you do prepare Many people wear green clothing, dance in the pubs and first step is "to figure out if "I filed the 1040EZ [form]. If s your own return, be sure to march in parades. The first St. Patrick's day was held in parents are declaring the pretty simple if you read the double check the math, to attach Boston in 1737. Today the holiday is commemorated student a dependent or not. directions," Michele Karchesy, the W-2s, and check to see that nation wide- Knowing this will help students "St. Patrick's day is not really explained at all," Kim a senior, said. the forms are signed. I decide which form they need. But some students find the Whether you are expecting Stumpf, sophomore, said. "When I think of the holiday, I "All W-2s are supposed to experience as pleasant as going to get a refund or cut a check, if think of green beer. You don't really hear much about the have been sent out by the end of to the dentist. "I hate doing you earn income, be sure to file traditions, \\xst the] »r»,ies January," Durham said. "If taxes, I never understand it," a return. Robert Yoshimura, sophomore, joked. "Being from students have still not received Regina Brandler, a sophomore, If students don't file, "they Hawaii, St. Patrick's day is a day where I don't wear green, forms from their employers, they said. "I don't understand filling will usually get a notice in the and girls get to pinch my butt. For me, holidays seem to have need to contact them right things out. It's confusing and mail from the IRS saying that lost their traditional symbolism and have become just an away." complicated," she said. they have not received a return For a faster tax refund, the There is help available. The based upon reports submitted You don't have to be Irish to celebrate St. Patrick's day. IRS recommends using the peel- IRS provides a Volunteer Income by employers." Durham said. You don't even have to be religious. Just put on something off label provided on the forms Tax Assistance (VITA) program. After April 15, the IRS begins sent in the mail. Even if the They have a toll free number, 1- assessing penalties and charging address needs to be corrected, 800-TAX-1040. Help is limited interest on any amounts unpaid. (Information was

^1111^.^1^^0111^ .aUl-W .ullltlta. iilllllto. -Ultou. .dlllllb. .tilingft.Ulltlu. iulllll... ffl- MODELS Whittier Collage wanted by PROFESSIONAL Conference Staff Pssitlons PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO for upcoming photo assignments. Summer 1992 Pro & Non pro. Male Female Call (818) 508-8680. Do you like to meet new people? Would you like to stay in Whittier for the summer? Do you need a position that includes room, board and vioung Away or Graduating? salary? Would you like to work in a challenging and rewarding position Don't lose the good friends you made. Now you can have a personnal with international students and people from alll over the U. S.? address good for 50 YEARS! A Call Todav lo Order -WORLD DATA SYSTEM (818) 333-1255 ex3 APPLY MOW 1911

Applications available now in the Conference Office in the Philadelphia *EARN EXTRA INCOME* House. Deadline to apply is March 20,1992. For further information call the Earn $200-$500 weekly Conference Office at 907-4226 mailing travel brochures. For information send a stamped addressed envelope to: Travel INC., P.O. BOX 2530, Miami, FL 33161 10/QC March 12,1992 FEATURES

Healthwatch By Andrew Tate, Staff Writer

588SK8SSSS Ozone Depletion and Your Health: the News Is Not Good What is very big and effects "We do not like what we see. that the Environmental 1. Find out all the facts everyone on this planet? Give This is not good news." Protection Agency predicts that about you and the sun. Are you the protection promised on the up? Here is another hint. If we According to Anderson, a the thinning ofthe ozone shield susceptible to skin cancer? bottle. Apply sunscreen 15 to 30 do not do something about it hole in the ozone will most will let in more harmful 2. Picture whatyour skin will minutes before going out in the soon it will not matter because directly affect regions ultraviolet rays from the sun. look like after years of tanning. sun. we will no longer be around to underneath. This will allow What all this means is sun It may look good now but your Remember, scientists feel the worry about it. If you're still increased levels of dangerous sensitive people, plants and, skin could be all gone by reported damage to the ozone is unsure, do not worry, for the ultraviolet radiation to reach animals are going to be subjected tomorrow. only the tip ofthe iceberg. Ifyou depleting ozone is never the lead much of Canada and parts ofthe to large amounts of ultraviolet 3. Avoid peak hour exposure. like to lie out or work out in the story on our favorite evening United States, Europe and Asia. radiation. Consider alternate activities sun take care of your skin and news program. But it should be. New research conducted in 1992 Each year over 300,000 new between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Try cover up. Lastyear"Healthwatch"took revealed shockingfindings about cases of skin cancer are reported. your best not to follow the noon a look at the effects of the the global ozone layer. It According to the Skin Cancer sun. depleting ozone layer. The revealed ozone depletion as high Foundation, 90 percent of these 4. Use sun block wherever Allresearch facts about ozone ramifications of this as five times greater than what cases are related to over­ you feel vulnerable. depletion came from Science environmental hazard are was previously estimated. exposure to ultraviolet rays. Sun 5. Have a partner check to News Magazine, Science increases in skin cancer and "The immune system of the rays can also cause premature make sure you always have Magazine, and the Discovery harmful ultraviolet radiation atmosphere is weaker than we aging. enough sunscreen on. Channel. which effects the lives of animals, expected," Anderson said. And Doctors have been reporting 6. Wear sung] asses designed plants, and the whole ecosystem. while President George Bush large increases in all types of to absorb the sun's UVradiation. One year later, new studies have announced that the United skin cancer during the last ten 7. Use a wide-brimmed hat found that not only is the ozone States will halt production of years. Now they feel there is a that will keep the sun off your layer weakening at a faster pace ozone-depleting chemicals four correlation between the thinning face. than previously reported, there years ahead of schedule, he has ozone and certain types of skin 8. Keep track of existing or Andrew Tate, a junior, is now a hole forming over left a loophole in the law, under cancer. Think about that the newly developing moles. is a certified fitness populated regions of the Ifyou must go out in the sun, which significant amounts ofthe next time you decide to lay out. leader for the YMCA. northern hemisphere. chemicals can still be produced. Ifyou spend extended periods in please use a protective James G. Anderson of These studies are even more the sun here are some things sunscreen. You must apply it Harvard University commented, disturbing when you consider you should remember- generously or you will not get

ClassifiedGROOVE THROUGH THE s HELP WANTED Papers, Reports, Etc. FAX ser­ FORRENT vice and laser printing. Call Kim NIGHT! PERSONALS (310)947-7602 * EXTRA INCOME '92* Staying in Whittier for the ASIAN FESTIVAL Friday, Tiger Fly nn - Lumie was awe­ Earn $200-$500 weekly mail­ summer and need a place to March 13,6:00pm in the Fac­ some! You know my weak­ ing 1992 travel brochures. For live? We are subletting our 3 ulty Center. Tickets on sale nesses!! P.S. Wanna go for a more information send a bedroom, 2 bathroom apart­ NOW in front of the C.I. and DRIVE? stamped envelope to: J.R. ment for June, July and Au­ Whittier Lacrosse Hats (blue at the door. LAST CHANCE! Travel, P.O. Box 612291, Mi­ gust. Call 696 - 4796 for more and white) for sale $15. Con­ H.L.: Thanks for being such a ami, FL 33161. information. tact any Lacrosse player or BEACH or DIE! March 15, good "front" - too bad you don't Matt at 945-7216 Manhattan Beach Trip - meet measure up Whitey! Love, the ROOM FOR RENT- 3 bedroom in Johnson Lounge, Sunday, Italian PART TIME WORK: Male or Fe­ house. Lots of space, fireplace, Lacrosse BOXERS - All New 11A.M.-OH YEAH! male to help in Optometrist's private bath, no utilities. $450 Colored Plaids $12. Call Amy Maple: The last eight months Office. Call (310) 698-9907. per month plus deposit. No dogs. at 696-0040 or P.O.Box 8673 VOODO GROOVE: live at the have kept me smiling! I love For more information call 690- to get your today. Roadhouse, Wed. March you. Klutz Do you know what's happen­ 9447. 18th. Take a party bus there ing in the world? The News and back for only $10. Cost Lady I PA Attitude Good Luck Section of the QC is looking GATHERINGS includes beer, admission Saturday!! Love your sisters! for someone to write the Inter­ SERVICES and the ride. Contact Ed national and National News LIVE REGGAE BAND EVERY Peterson at 696-2511 for more Kevin - It's been a great year. Brief Section. If interested NEED SOMETHING TYPED SATURDAY NITE AT details. Hurry! Spaces are Good luck Tonight. I LOVE contact Julie at 907-4254. QUICKLY!?! If so, Call me! Term MARTINI'S ! COME AND limited. YOU! - Lori QC Classified Ad Order Form NAME: Either return this form to: QC Classifieds Box 8613, or call 907- BOX: PHONE: 4254 to place your ad. If you have AD: any questions please call Peggy at the above number. You will be billed upon publication of your ad. CIRCLE ONE: Regular Print ($0.75/line) Bold Print ($1.25/line) ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ll/QC March 12,199

By Jenny Colville, Arts and Ent. Editor The Demise of Rock and Roll Leaves it Without Soul necessary accouterments. The By Jenny Colville experience, stage presence and trading cards, shirts with Arts & Ent. Editor beautiful bodies, and then the glittery decals on the front, disco factory operators do the rest. jeans with "cool" embroidered Rock and roll is on sale in The hopefuls dance and pose and on the pockets. America. You can watch it on lip-synch while the men behind three minute commercial/videos Being cool, my parents must the curtains operate the and then go out and buy it — have thought, was suddenly production like the Wizard of pre-packaged like a block of getting expensive. In the past, Oz. They push and pull the cheese. the cool kids were poor. From buttons of incredibly complex Rock and roll hit the market the tough parts of town where equipment to create the music in the mid-'70s, about the same rock and roll music blasted out and sometimes the voices for the time that John Travolta, of the alleys and auto shop production. garages. The essentials then revolving disco lights and roller- The thing that really killed skates became popular. The consisted of a leather jacket (worn every day until it rock and roll was MTV. MTV BeeGees took its beat and made rock artsy and pretty to synthesized it to the sound of a disintegrated) and a jar of Dippity-Do. Even after Chuck look at until it became a product bouncing rubber ball. instead of a feeling. Beginning My friends had collector Berry and Bill Halley and the Comets had gone, the style of in 1980 for 24 hours a day, every cards of John Travolta and Sean day, we watched skimpily clad Cassidy and they traded them rock remained cheap. There were the Beatles, clean cut and Photo by Martin Love models sell their bodies and long as if they were made out of gold. haired rockers sell their souls, My friends and I would celebrate economically dressed. And then slipped out ofthe plastic bodies there was Jimmy Hendricks and opener. and now it has gotten to be too our birthdays at Skate Country. that populate our TV screens The anachronism for the much. It's like getting hit over We would put on our nylon Janis Joplin who made rags and and is flitting about the universe dirty hair cool. Rock and roll has demise of rock and roll can be the head with a frying pajg.. running shorts and metallic like one of Plato's eternal truths. found in the band C&C Music Audiences feel numb and headbands and skate around the always had a lot to do with style, It's not dead it's just searching but it was never expensive. Factory. Commercialism and unaffected like some of the rink that looked like an for worthier bodies to inhabit. capitalism are the key words children that I have babysat who underground aquarium with In the 1970s not only did It is not hard to imagine here and if you add factory you are so used to TV violence that splashes of light darting across rock become an commodity, it what caused rock and roll to lose have an accurate analogy for they sit unflinchingly through the walls from the crystal ball also lost its soul. As soon as its soul. What we recognize now the state of rock today. C&C is a "Rambo" movies. There is overhead. We pretended that we people started shelling out the as the ultimate cool in music is group that churns out music definitely something were Olivia Newton John in bucks its heart and soul slowly computerized and preplanned— stars like an assembly line. They maladaptive about this. "Xanadu." We were only nine began to shrink. Its arteries as convenient as a garage door find young hopefuls with dance and 10 then and had no idea clogged and its liver withered Please see ROCK, p. 13 that we were witnessing the up. The body chemistry of rock demise of rock and roll. and roll completely changed so To us rock and roll was a that its guys became girls, like pair of roller skates with metallic Michael Jackson and its girls shoelaces, feathered hair and lost their soul completely and bubble gum lip gloss. It was became "boy toys" and patented innocent and dreamy. There was sex objects like Madonna. SUBWAY" little rebellion involved — no But I believe that rock and tension except for the pressure roll is still alive if somewhat we put on our parents to buy its shrunken. I think that it has uoW OPEN IN YOU* "NEIGHBORHOOD 'if

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7038 Greenleaf Avenue. Uptown Whittier. (310) 907-3300 (Program Information) Show Times Good for 3/13 - 3/19 ATTENTION WHITTIER COLLEGE STUDENTS!! CINEMA 1 THX AMERICAN ME ® Dolby Stereo SHOWS: 12:50,3:20,5:45, 8:20,10:40 ^^ 6 INCH COMBO Wait Disney's The Adventures of the DINEMA2 SEPERATE Great Mouse Detective ADMISSION SHOWS: 12:45 Dolby Stereo All seats $3.00 for this film. $1.49 Article 99 ® SHOWS: 2:15,4:15,6:15, 8:20,10:20 OR TRY THESE SPECIAL OFFERS CINEMA 3 DOUBLE Radio Flyer FEATURE SHOWS: 1:00,5:25,9:50 SUBUUnV^l [5UBUIf)V^ I Buy any Regular 6" Sub and 22 «. drink and get another1 Dolby stereo Hand That Rocks the Cradle (S) Starring Rebecca DeMornay >i«^ 6" INCH SUB* i SHOWS: 3:15,7:40 $ 1.00 OFF for only • THX Dolby Stereo -- 4 Channel Stereo in all Theaters FREE Parking in Rear QpENS ^ p - DAJLY AMY FOOTLONG SUB General Admission $6.00 Children 3-11 $3.00 ' Of equal or lesser value All seats $3.00 (Bargain Matinees) for showings before 6 pm in each theater Monday through Friday. For the first showing only on Sat., Sun, and Holidays. I 15030 Whittier Blvd. 15030 Whittier Blvd.

COUPON • COUPON COUPON umitone (Whittier and Colima) Notvaiidlumitone {Whittier and Colima) mma* FREE E • Coupon 1310) 907 - 4007 With Any Coupon (310) 907 - 4007 With Any I 1 for 1 • POPCORN • ™ ESOD;A "Per visit Offer Expires 4-30-92 Other Offer j 0 of youE r choice with the 0*'r Exjjwa «M2 Other Offer, Per fos* with the purchase of • Ai lUr A . ONE LARGE POPCORN . ™Spurchas™™~™Te of a large •ADMISSION • two large drinks «* POPCORN.^,e.nu.1, 3„,»3/19/322 15030 Whittier Blvd. (Whittier and Colima) espnort 3/19/92 m • •••••• • • • I • •••••••• • • • ••••• (310)907-4007 Hours: Sun-Th 10 am -12 midnight Fri & Sat 10-2 am 12/QC March 12,1992 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 1 Restaurant Review.Chiyomoto Japanese Cuisine Music: A Touch of Japan Not For Happy People in Uptown Cuisine By Phil Hickey myriad of ways relationships can format, while also tweaking it. Staff Writer By Jackie Poole tastes. be perverted and destroyed; not It alternates nightmarish, The petite waitress spoke just love relationships, but also pounding noise with interludes Asst. Arts & Ent. Editor Henry Rollins. This name with a mild Japanese accent the brutal severings of ties of blues guitar progressions. and was very patient with our ought to sound somewhat between parents and children. If you like the energy of Tired of quick trips to the familiar to anyone who ever local fast food restaurants and ordering. She returned to our Rollins also pokes not-so- punk, but hate its often simple table within seconds with the wondered what happened to subtle fun at the self-imposed nihilism, "" is grease pits? Well, ifyou are ready Black Flag. Rollins has been for a change of pace here is a first part of our meal, mi so soup, alienation that many affect in something to investigate. which is sipped from the bowl, recording albums since the Rollins' band has fused poetry, novel idea for you. Nestled in breakup of the premiere post amongst the Mexican, Italian, with no spoons. punk, noisy feedback and even I finished my soup and was punk band of the '80s, but his heavy metal into a sometimes Middle-eastern and American new one, coming on the heels of Black Flag has restaurants in uptown Whittier presented the entree on a huge melodic, sometimes hard to plate. Everything was his stint with the Lollapalooza listen to blend. I once heard is a brand new establishment, extravaganza, promises to passed away into the Chiyomoto Japanese Cuisine. delicious. The tempura Gightly Black Flag's music described as breaded, deep fried), consisting recapture some of the (well void where all good "deconstructionist", and while They are still having their grand deserved) infamy Rollins opening, yet they seem to have of shrimp and vegetables, was bands seem to go, but Tm not sure exactly what that crispy and tender, and the enjoyed as the most intense means, it's appropriate. Black already worked their way into performer on stage, period. Rollins' band the hearts and stomachs of the teriyaki chicken was tangy and Flag has passed away into the moist. Accompanying this was Unfortunately, only a continues to explore void where all good bands seem people ofWhittier. fraction of that energy comes From the outside you can't a fresh garden salad and a bowl to go, but Rollins' band continues of sticky rice. through on his new album. 'The borderline to explore the borderline really get a feel for the The meal was very filling End of Silence." But that little is psychosis that sits brooding restaurant, but as you walk psychosis that sits and a great deal for the amount more than sufficient for home inside all of us. through the door, and are listening. brooding inside all of food and the quality you You probably won't like detected by a laser, a recorded Let's just say that this album receive; two can eat for under of us. this album atall,ifyourlifeisat Japanese greeting is blurted out hasn't been sanitized. Far from $20. An additional feature of peace, and all you have are from a speaker. This is obviously it; with the average song length the experience is the set-up for happy and manageable to give notice to the hostess, as somewhere between eight and Karoke, a Japanese form of problems. You probably will she responded by hurrying over nine minutes, and topics that "Low Self Opinion," when he entertainment in which the hate this if you like songs you and greeted us with menus and cover the entire catalog of sings, 'You wear disgust like a customers are allowed to sing can dance to. And if you are a warm smile. feelings between hatred and crown," and in "Another Life," words toth e background music prone to outbreaks of tears, and We were given the option of alienation, it's not likely to be on he skewers the blind stupidity of their choice using a wallowing in sentimentality, sitting in the table area or at the Casey Kasem's hit list. This is of a drug addict. One ofthe most microphone. This can prove to then please don't listen. But if sushi bar, at off hours you have angry music, songs about rage, interesting songs, however, is be very entertaining when you are willing to strip away your pick. As we settled into our but it is more than mere teenage "Blues Jam," in which he watching family and friends proclaims "Believe me when I your protective camouflage, both booth I took note of the mild punk pouting. oriental flare that softened the performing. tell you, life will not break your musically and emotionally, then Take a break from the hum­ Songs like "Tearing, Almost you should listen to 'The End of immaculate surroundings and Real," "You Didn't Need," and heart, it'll crush it." This song drum of routine eating-out, stays within the classic blues Silence." Many times. brightly lit tables. The "Just Like You," explore the intricately crafted samurai experience a touch of the east sword which hung above was and treat yourself to the rarity definitely a conversation piece of good Japanese food in and gave a sort of genuineness Whittier. Also don't forget you to the Japanese experience. can make your "debut" at The menu proved to be quite Karoke nights. —* diverse, and fortunately entails Chiyomoto's is located at pictures of each dish and a 7007 Greenleaf Ave. Open for number, so as to accommodate lunchTue.-Fri., ll:30-2:30pm; those who are not familiar with dinner Tue.-Thur., 5-9pm and this type of food. There are a Fri.-Sun. 5-10pm. Karoke Fri. } variety of complete lunches/ and Sat. at 9:30pm. Closed UnJL> dinners and of course a wide Mon. Take out also available. selection of sushi. Be it beef, chicken, seafood or vegetables, *** — Very good food and This Friday the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra will be performing at Royce there is something to satisfy all service. Hall on the UCLA campus. The show will start at 8:30 p.m.and feature pieces by Haydn, Copland, and Ravel. March 15, the Ice House will present Comedian/ magician Nick Lewin. Showtime is 7:30 p.m. and the cover charge is $8. The Ice House is located at 24 N. Mentor Ave. in Pasadena.Tickets are on sale for The Joffrey Ballet's performance at the Wiltern Theater. They will perform May 8 through June 7. For tickets and information call (213) 388-3232. Drama Preview:The Country Wife P "The Country Wife," ignorant of the pleasures William Wycherley's bawdy enjoyed by city women. Restoration Comedy about Heading the cast as Mr. society in the late 17th century Horner will be Scott Sauter, will commence its five sophomore; Mr. Pinchwife, performances on March 17- 21, Joshua Machamer, junior; and curtain at 8 p.m. each night. Margery Pinchwife, the "The Country Wife," "country wife", Theresa considered by most critics as Colvello, senior; under the the finest early example of direction of Jack de Vries, This Friday in the Faculty Center at 6 p.m., the Asian Students Association will English Comedy of Manners, chairman of the Department present The 11th Annual Asian Festival. Tickets are $6 for students and the reflects the behavior patterns of Theatre Arts. which characterized London Tickets for "The Country price includes dinner and entertainment. Also this Friday the Whittier College society When the Stuart Wife" are priced at$5forTues. Film Series will present "Truth or Dare" in the Hoover Lautrop Auditorium at Monarchy was restored to the through Thurs. evenings, and 7:30 p.m. Admission is free.The Whittier-La Mirada Light Opera Association throne in 1660. The plot $8 for Fri. and Sat. evenings. will open March 13 with their production of "The Student Prince." For revolves around two Students, children and senior gentlemen— Mr. Horner, who citizens tickets are for $3. imformation and tickets call 944-9810. On March 18 in the Whittier College considers every young woman Tickets can also be ordered by Memorial Chapel at 12:30 p.m. the Midday Musicale wil feature student he meets fair game for his mail, reserved by phone, Oi" presentation of the work of J.S. Bach. Admission is free. romantic inclinations, and Mr. purchased in the Shannon Pinchwife, who has marrieda Center. For further country girl in the hopes that information call (310) 907- he will be able to keep her :4202ftft ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 13/QC March 12,1992

Album Review:PIL's Public Image Limited Unlimits Their Image

By Tat- feaadw&gdt* successes " very So bt Image John McGeoch, formerly of can onfyfeelandthink , Limit* ] new Siouxsie and the Banshees ;• . . i -,''..,.Ml r,..: . in the language of . "-• r. : ,.-.:-- r- .;,?:. r ftftA album "That What Is Not," a yVnftft; mm • : ' '• ft' ."*•.-• : Pistols were terrible and cliches others have self-a.-. work m has been trying to create that as istions concocted for you," his own non-punk image for as it answers. and then with PIL, Lydon ha$ :- ft"r ft; ftft: ft. abrvaysbeen a»H-as«thiioga»dl a As usual in a PIL album, Wh He PIL has never from the album God" Other songs to check out "That What Is Not," contains everything, and this is no is c zry are"' ft few - 4t)i\y been considered exception. "Wlis> mmt*ifo& gtiltar a»d (somatentarjr oa jsearssrs., I can d» it JByseMTfte different style than the "mellow," this is typical of Lydon's and previo one, rants in "Acid Drop." dissatisfied view ofthe "Lo\ i the certainly a new lllllft A A .ft. however, is not only : ' : y:.:\y. '.'••;: surpri so an direction. Some ofthe ;ftftft;ft; ••; •}:••• •, ft; A k

shinier the closer he got to ROCK gospel and country. But I will say it once more continued from page 11. before the completion of this In rock's recent attempts article just so that no one gets to sell itself through sex it has too worried — rock and roll is become sexless. There is no still around. It's just hiding out more rebellion, no more in lesser known corners. The excitement and sexual angst. Black Crowes, The Elvis's pelvis has ceased to Replacements, The Tragically shock us. Rock and roll does Hip, they are keeping it alive encourage us to reproduce, but on life support. not in the usual manner. Rock and roll is just not Heavy metal rock stars something for which we can go today are homogeneous. They searching. It is fleeting and it all have the same hair, the happens only in a moment like same spandex pants, and they an electrical impulse. Like the all wear eyeliner. They shock that you get when you encourage teenagers to touch metal after walking on a duplicate. And to duplicate new carpet, it makes your hair through mitosis like the cells stand on end (literally in some of a microscopic organism until cases). they are reduced to a nation of You discover rock and roll homogeneous organisms with the same way that most people propellant-like hair and an discover God- suddenly and outer layering of leather. unexpectantly. It's nothing to Rock and roll has lost its philosophize about. It is diversity. When rock was electrical, animalistic and young it was dispersed intuitive. Unfortunately it is throughout a variety of as hard to be struck with rock rebellious artists. It ran and roll's impulse today as it is through the veins of Bob Dylan, to be struck with the revelation Smokey Robinson, The Rolling of a divine and merciful being. Stones, Jerry Lee Lewis and The impulse has been The Sex Pistols. Our conception deactified by the hairspray of •— of rock today is that of a single pseudo rock bands and the Photo courtesy of Public Relations breed. piercing soprano voices of pop The rock scene today is divas. Artist Liz Chaflin's painting "Citizen Outrage/'pictured above, is one of full of blond men who look like The absence of rock's soul the paintings in her exhibit "Faces of Protest" on display at the Mendenhall they use Pert Plus and never leaves us so desperate that we blow dry. I think they care find ourselves down on our Art Gallery. Chaf lin describes her exhibit as a series of acrylic paintings more about their hair than they knees. PrayingforGod.praying dealing with individual expressions of major political and social events. do about their music. We for rock, and praying for "The work in this series aims to turn the catch phrase 'the personal is should have taken a clue from electrical storms. political' into 'the political is personal.' I am striving to capture and hold Elvis. His hair got bigger and images that fleetingly cross our consciousness," she said. The exhibit is on display until March 27 l4/(jt: March 12, I DM

They show all the stens of havmgHIY There aren yt any you can see. You just cant tell from outward appearance who is infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Know how to determine your risk. Call your State or local AIDS hotline, or the National AIDS Hotline at 1-800-342-AIDS. Call 1-800-243-7889 (TTY) for deaf access. AMERICA RESPONDS HIV is the virus that causes AIDS. TO AIDS U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES /"" Public Health Service | CDCENTERS FOfl WSf ASCC COM! ROl Centers for Disease Control \ SPORTS 15/QC March 12, 1992

LAX SPORTS SHORTS Continued from Page 16. Josh du Lac referred to as "amazing." After taking care of Arizona on Saturday, the Poets played The Graham Activities player now, but say that he was conference) and is led by Pat Arizona. State in what Locker called the "pivotal" game of the Center was packed Tuesday not that good in his prep days. Norville, a lefty out of weekend. night for a college basketball Didn't people say the same Saddleback JC, Steve "We knew it was going to be an easy game so we wanted to get playoff game, and the home things about Michael Jor­ Dempsey, who transferred it over with quickly in order to rest people for Monday's game team, led by a 6 foot 10 center, dan?... from Glendale CC, and Mike (against Manhattanville)," Locker said. won. Unfortunately, the home Winslow, a transfer from Cal The Poets were able to do just that as they went on a 17-0 first team was Biola, not Whittier, de Laveaga won't be an NBA State Hay ward. Norville is 4- half run in route to a 27-5 victory. and the center was Emilio All-Star like Jordan, but he may 0 with an ERA of 1.23, The game was a prelude to the Manhattaville game as it was Kovacic, not Whittier's Art become a star in the Southeast Dempsey is 5-0 with a 1.31 delayed twice before being moved to an alternative sight due to bad Phillips. Kovacic, the NAIA Australian Basketball League ERA, and Winslow is 4-0 with weather. District 3 Player of the Year, (SABL), where he will be play­ a 1.11 ERA... The original game time was 11a.m. but was eventually changed scored 13 points as the Eagles, ing for the Canberra Gunners. to 2p.m. The full force ofthe storm that dampened Arizona that ranked No. 4 in the NAIA, beat Although he has not yet played The Kingsmen have a weekend hit around 3 p.m., right in the middle ofthe game. Westmont, 90-75, in the Dis­ a game there, de Laveaga is al­ nine-man pitching staff... "It was really a mess," Locker said, Those were definitely the trict 3 final. The Eagles, 31-3 ready making headlines in worst conditions we've ever played in." and owners of a 24-game win­ Australia because SABLfans are While Cal Lutheran is av­ The weather also gave junior defender Neil Reeves a chance to ning streak, earned a spot in anticipating a match-up be­ eraging two homers per game, try his hand at goalie. the NAIA tournament with tween him and his brother, Whittier has hit only two all Joe Morra, the Poets backup goalie, had started the game in their win... Steve de Laveaga, who is the season, both by Tony order to give senior goalie Jeff Pulcipher a chance to rest for the two-time MVP ofthe SABL... Fimbres... Manhattaville game. At the end ofthe first half, Because of this, Pulicpher was in the team's van taking stats the rowdy Biola fans started Center Kim Stumpf, who Mark Barden is batting in order to stay dry. When Morra was called on a penalty, throwing tortillas in the stands led the Lady Poet basketball .477 to lead the Poets, while Pulcipher couldn't get out fast enough to get on the field. and onto the court... team to its 9-13 finish, was R.C. Chavez is hitting .333 Reeves was then called on to jump in the goal. Unfortunately, named first team all-SCIAC last with a team-high 13 RBIs. the thrill didn't last long as he had no saves and was scored on once. The Cal Lutheran week... Fimbres is hitting .358 with 12 The Poets play next tonight at 7p.m. as the take on Lake Kingsmen, winners of the RBIs, and seven extra-base Forrest (111.). SCIAC men's basketball Whittier pitchers Dave hits, and has been walked 19 "This is really a tough week for us. We have five games in seven championship this season, Berliner and Brandon times. In SCIAC games, days," Locker said. pulled off a major upset Sat­ Boettner looked sharp in Barden is hitting a conference- The Poets finish the grueling week this Saturday at UC San urday night in the NCAA Di­ Monday's game against South­ high .529... Diego before getting a much needed week of rest. vision III regional playoffs by western (Texas), but the Poet beating No. 3 UC San Diego, offense did not... The Poets have given up 88-70, at San Diego. Before more unearned runs this year BASEBALL Saturday's loss, UCSD had a The Cal Lutheran baseball (34) than the total runs given 17-game winning streak and team, which is 16-0 and ranked up by Cal Lutheran (27)... Continued from Page 16. had not lost to a Division III No. 3 in Division III, is batting run to dead center. opponent since the end of the .366 as a team (.399 in SCIAC), On the mound, Fimbres stuck out seven as he upped his record 1990-1991 season... has hit 32 home runs (an aver­ Mike Harris, a former all- to 2-2 (1-1 in SCIAC). age of two per game) and has conference cornerback for the The win came a day after the Poets wasted strong pitching Unranked Cal Lutheran, outscored its opponents 185-27... Poets, has a tryout with the performances by Dave Berliner and Brandon Boettner against a which lost to UCSD in its two Calgary Stampede ofthe World visiting Southwestern (Texas) squad. Berliner and Boettner previous meetings this season, The Kingsmen have been Football League scheduled for combined to give up only one run, which was unearned, in 12 will play No. 13 Otterbein led by Darrell McMillin, a March 20 atCal Poly Pomona... innings, but the Poets could not convert offensively and the game (Ohio) Friday in the Great transfer from Ventura JC, and ended in a 1-1 tie. Lakes-West Sectional at Eric Johnson, a transfer from Seth Berliner, the younger In the game, Whittier left numerous runners on base, and Gustavus Adolphus College in Cal State Northridge. McMillin brother of Poet pitcher Dave, squandered countless opportunities. Whittier's best opportunity St. Peter, Minn.... is batting .403 with 10 home may attend Whittier beginning came in the 11th inning when the Poets had the bases loaded with runs, 24 RBIs, 25 runs scored in September. Seth, who is one out. But the rally came to a screeching halt when Carter Devol Against UCSD, Jeff de and a .952 slugging percentage, attending Cherry Creek High hit into an inning-ending double play. Laveaga, the SCIAC Playerof while Johnson is batting .462 School in Colorado and is an "We're still looking for the big hit," Whittier head coach Jim the Year and an all-American with seven doubles, five home all-American high school soccer Pigott said. "We're getting men on base, but we're not converting shoo-in, scored 32 points... runs, 15 RBIs, and a .923 slug­ player and a pretty talented runs." ging percentage... baseball player, has reportedly Whittier, which is now 5-10-1 (4-4 in SCIAC), will next see People who played been accepted by the College action on Sunday when it plays Wisconsin-Superior in a home against de Laveaga in high The Kingsmen pitching staff and is giving it serious doubleheader. The first game starts at noon. school admit that he is a great has an ERA of 1.39 (0.84 in consideration...

THE WEEK IN SPORTS

Baseball (Second Game) Men's Track Pomona 020100 0-3 62 Ciaremont 137 Ciaremont 79 SCIAC Whittier 002 0002-4 91 Whittier Results Whittier 27 Whittier 44 Park and Anderson; Chavez Pomona 12, Whittier 11 SCIAC Tri-dual meet hosted by Whittier 86 and Campos. 2B - Osborne (P), Women's Track Whittier 100 033220-11147 Davidson(W). W-Chavez(2-1). L Ciaremont @ Pomona Pomona 600021310-12144 - Park (0-2). Whittier Results B. Annible,Schitano(6),Keller(7)and 200 Meters: 4. Omari Valentine 26.41,10. Keller, Johnson (7); Boettner, Berliner (6), Mario Soto 25.58 SCIAC Tri-dual meet hosted by This Week's Events Barden (8). 2B - Barden 2 (W), Ketcham (P) Women's Lacrosse 800 Meters: 3. Gilbert Salazar 2:02.83, 6. Ciaremont @ Pomona Shann Blanchard 2:11.12 Baseball: vs. Wisconsin-Superior (2) 2,Keller(P)2,Chavez(W)l,Schumacher(P) (Home) noon 3/15 1. W - Keller (N/A) L - Berliner (1-4). California Lacrosse Tournament @ UC 1500 Meters: 3. Gilbert Salazar 4:17.40.6. Berkley Shaan Blanchard 4:29.99 100Meters: 1. EulaliaAllen 13.36,3. Leslie Febuary 29 3000 Meters Steeple chase: 2. Ed Yuh Louie 14.09 Softball: vs. Ciaremont (Away) 2 p.m. Whittier 5, Pomona 1 9:57.80 200 Meters: 1. Eulalua Allen 27.43 3/13; vs. Pacific Christian College (Home) Pomona 001000 000-161 Gomel 400 Meter Hurdles: 4. David McGrath 400 Meters: 3. Leticia Zavala 69.6 5 p.m. 3/17 Whittier 020 002 Olx • 5 8 1 Whittier 4, UC Santa Cruz 7 67.71 800Meters:3. Angie Lovell 2:41,4. Heather 400 Meters: 6. Mario Soto 66.58 Nabours 2:44 MTennis: vs. Colorado College (Home) D'Annible, Silverblatt (7) and Keller; Game 2 110 Meter Hurdle: 2. Tim Browder 16.10 1500 Meters: 3. Heather Nabours 5:29.64, 2 p.m. 3/12; vs. Westmont (Away) 1 p.m. Fimbres and Carty. HR - Fimbres (W). 3B Whittier 5, Santa Clara 4 Shot Put: 8. Clayton Lau 9.50 (31"2), 10. 6. Shana Stanley 5:39.39 3/14; vs Cal Baptist (Away) 2 p.m. 3/16 - Fimbres (W). 2B-Hrey(W). SO-Fimbres Jeff Laiblin 6.76 (22"2 1/2) 3000 Meters: 2. Tare Barnhart 11:15.3,3. (W)7. W-Fimbres. L-D'Annible. GaneS Javelin: 8. Jeff Laiblin 21.69 (7F2 1/2) AAngie Lovell 11:52.1 W Tennis: vs. Mills College (Home) 11 Records (overall, conference): Whittier 6, UC Davis 6 4 x 100 Relay: 4. (Lau, Valentine, Grant, Long Jump: Leslie Louie 4.49(14'8 3/4) a.m. 3/15 Triple Jump: 2. Leslie Louie 9.32 (307) Pomona 4-11,4-1; Whittier 5-10-1,4-4 Blanchard) 48.66 Game 4 4 x 400 Relay: 4. (Blanchard, Salazar, Shot Put: 5. Leticia Zavala 6.02 (19*9), 6. Track 9 Cal Poly Bronco Invitational Whittier 6, UC Berkley 3 McGrath, Grant) Shauna Stanley 4.38 (14'4 1/2) (Pomona) TBA 3/14 Softball Discus: 8. Lau26.80(8711), 9. Steve Saban Javelin: 4. Peggie McKinnie 26.90 (88'3) Goals: Adams 14, Orosz 4, Lovell 2, (24.14 (79"2 2/3), 10. Jeff Laiblin 17.70(58'1) High Jump: 1. Peggie McKinnie 4'4 Golf. vs. La Verne (Home) 1 p.m. 3/17 4 x 100 Relay: 2. (Allen, Zavala, Louie, SCIAC Vosbeck 1. Saves: Kemp averaged 10. 5000 Meters: 1. Yuh 16:26.6,3. PhilRoybal 17.11.8 McKinnie) 65.06 Men's Lacrosse: vs. Lake Forest (111.) Whittier 9-4, Pomona 6-3 Other Results Team Scores: 4x400 Relay: 1. (Allen, Zavala, Nabours, (Home) 7 p.m. 3/13; vs. UC San Diego (First Game) Lovell) 4:36.0 (Away) 1 p.m. 3/14 Pomona 020 202 0-83 3 Saturday, March 7 Whittier 90.5 Team Scores: Whittier 301212 K -9103 Whittier 6, Arizona 11 La Verne 28.5 Women's Lacrosse: vs. University of Gonzalez and Vanderploeg; Ross, Chavez (6) California, San Diego (Home) 10 a.m. 3/ Whittier 71 and Mitchell. HR-Scott(W). 3B-Curry(W). Saturday, March 7 Cal Tech 127.5 14 Cal Tech 66 W - Rosa (1-2). L - Gonzales (1-2). Whittier 5, Ciaremont B 5 Whittier 32.5 THE SPORTS PAGES Covering Whittier College Athletics Since 1914 March 12,1992 Poets Go 3-0 on Arizona Road Trip Despite Distractions By Jeff Walter the Poets, as they played a man- Sports Editor down for about 12 minutes of the game. After experiencing "The defense did an practically every type of off field excellent job. It was one of the distraction possible, the best jobs they've done so far," Whittier College men's lacrosse Locker said. team had a relatively easy time The Poets started the on the field as it went 3-0 on its weekend against the University Arizona road trip last weekend, of Arizona Laxcats with a 16-11 including a 13-9 victory over win. Manhattanvile (N.Y.). The Laxcats jumped out to a Fighting adverse weather quick 3-0 lead, in what Arizona conditions, schedule and field headcoachMickey-MylesFelton changes, and an eight-hour bus referred to as a "wakeup call" for ride, the easiest part of the Whittier. weekend for the Poets may have The Poets regrouped after been playing the games. Arizona's run, and put on a "This weekend really scoring display of their own, showed us that if we can scoring 10 goals to Arizona's four overcome the mental before half, putting them up 10- distractions, we have the talent 7. physically to get the job done," "They jumped on us early, head coach Doug Locker said. but we kept our composure and The Poets' final game ofthe regrouped," Locker said. "No Arizona road trip, which Locker one panicked, which allowed us ^described as "the strangest game to get the job done." I've ever been a part of," was a Sarah G«mm«ll/Photo Editor Arizona, which had a very fitting climax to a bizarre Byron Collins takes a shot on goal in the Poets 13-9 win over Manhattanville. number of injured players, was weekend. forced to start their team captain Whittier, playing started to get weird. As the California playing a team from and take advantage of our and starting midfielder Steve Manhattanville, was forced to Poets were trying to tie up the New York in Arizona," Locker greater number of players," Del Carlo at goalie. play on an alternative field due score, the Tempe Police said. Locker said. "The delay gave "I think that the fact that to "monsoon type conditions," Department pulled up to It took almost three hours them alotof opportunity to rest." their goalie was out hurt our that lasted throughout most of respond to complaints about to straighten out the mess, and However, it turned out that play subconsciously," Locker the weekend. The team was unauthorized use ofthe field. It the Poets returned to play at 4 the delay may have worked to said. originally scheduled to play on turned out that Arizona State p.m. the Poets' advantage, as they "We thought in the back of the Arizona State campus. had not made the proper After returning to play, the were able to regroup and our heads that we were going to After Manhattanville arrangements to use the Poets were able to tie the score outscore Manhattanville 7-3 in be able to go out and score at jumped out to a quick 3-0 lead, alternative site, and the game 6-6 at the half. the second half. will." the Poets fought their way back was postponed until everything "The delay was really a Strong play by junior Del Carlo had 30 saves in until they were down 6-5, five was cleared up. disadvantage for us. They were defender Kevin Chisman, and the game, a feat which Locker minutes into the second quarter. "We were really in a bad a small team (in numbers), and senior defenders Mark Re vol sky This is when everything position. It was a team from our game plan was to run them and Berto Cerasi was the key for Please see LAX, page 15.

Poet Sluggers Softball Sweeps Pomona; Squeaks by inSecond Game 4-3 Beat Pomona 5-1

By Jeff Walter winning run as she drove a pitch Osborne. Whittier had scored and a hit batter. By Josh du Lac Sports Editor to left field. twice in the third with RBIs by In the first game, freshman Editor-in-Chief The Whittier comeback Lorraine Davidson and Scott. Katie Ross got the win. The Lady Poet softball team came after the Sagehens had Rachel Chavez went the Ross, who pitched her Tony Fimbres pitched and swept Pomona in a double- taken a 3-2 lead in the fourth distance for the Lady Poets, second consecutive three-hitter, hit his way to victory on header on Saturday, 9-3 and 4- with a double by Shannon allowing only six hits, a walk struggled with her control Tuesday, as he threw a 3. through most ofthe game as she complete game six-hitter and After crushing Pomona in walked six, threw five wild went two-for-three with a solo the first game, it looked as pitches and bounced several home run in the Poets' 5-1 though the Lady Poets were other pitches. win over Pomona-Pitzer at going to get a split with the However, Whittier was able Whittier. Sagehens. to come away with the win due The Poets scored all the But in the seventh inning, to some fine hitting. runs they would need in the with two outs, the number eight After taking a 3-0 lead in bottom of the second inning and nine hitters for Whittier the first, the closest the when Danny Hrey hit a two- sparked a rally to overcome the Sagehens came was when a run double which scored 3-2 deficit. wild pitch by Ross led to two Fimbres, who had tripled, and Crystal Curry, batting Sagehen runs, bringing the Mark Barden, who was hit by eighth, sparked the rally after Sagehens within one, 7-6. a pitch. the catcher dropped the third Chavez then relieved Ross, Pomona scored its lone strike. Sylvia Hidaglo Jrapt the finishing the inning before run in the top ofthe fifth, but Lady Poets alive as she drove a retiring the side in order in the Whittier answered by scoring single past left fielder Ali third. two more in the bottom half of Vanderploeg. Leadoff hitter Pomona also made a number the inning. Fimbres, leading Isaura Campos squeezed home of mistakes in the game as they off the eighth, ended the Curry with the tying run before had three errors and gave up scoring with a 400-foot home Lisa Scott took the plate. Scott _ _ ... " Eric Btrt/Aml. K040 Ediu* " two unearned runs. Please see BASEBALL, then preceded to drive in the Susan Turner slides home in the first of two Poet page 15. victories over Pomona last Saturday.

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