THE SANTA CLARA V01.59, N0.15 Serving the University Community Since 1922 February 19,1981 Convocation on Racism Slated Monday

ByROBERTA FURGER The motion to support the convoca- tion was made by Dr. Peter D'Eliscu of After a 9-1 vote of the Faculty Senate Biology and seconded by Dr. Helen Council, administrators have lent their Moritz. M the Classics Departments. A support to an educational convocation discussion of the convocation followed, and the cancellation of all 11 and 12 during which several faculty members o'clock classes on Monday, February gave the reasons for their support of the 23. The issue of racism will be the focus event Dr. Larry Wolfe of the Education of the convocation which will run from Department said "the University must H: 15-3:30. take any step it can. If we miss a step, The convocation is in response to the then we fall behind." Wolfe, along with recent overt acts of racism when 10 Dr. Moritz, mentioned that the con- black women received threatening vocation represents the goals of this phone calls. Fr. Paul Locatelli, University. Academic Vice-President, called the After some concern was voiced that convocation an important part of the the convocation not be viewed as a cure education process and stated that its im- to the problem, and the importance of portance justified the cancellation of additional programs following classes. Monday's event, Dairy! Page, President The dissenting vote on the senate of the Black Students Union, explained council came from Joseph Fedock of the that when approximately 200 students Engineering Department. He stated that met last Monday night, the decision was after having talked with 16 of the 18 made to organize the group under the engineering professors, the consensus name of the Santa Clara Coalition was that if the convocation would mean Against Racism (SCCAR). This group 200 •tudMrts mat Monday to organize tha Santa Clara CoaHMoo Agabul tuetam Thfci group palltton lorABUBC funding toaponaor aducaMonal proatawa. • a cancellation of classes, it could not be will petition for ASUSC funding to wIH supported by the Engineering Faculty. sponsor educational programs dealing Additional argument against the con- with racism throughout the year. vocation came from Fr. Paul Goda, Locatelli emphasized that despite the to President of the Faculty Senate, who opposition of some faculty to the Few Women Willing felt that the convocation shouldbe held cancellation of classes, the convocation on Wednesday. Contending that pro- should be seen as an extension of the Discuss Sexual Assaults grams such as this are the reason free educational process, not as an impedi- Wednesdays were established, Goda ment to it. By MARK DAVIS discuss the incident with The Santa stated that "in all good conscience" he Since the Tuesday after the women Clara, nor with SDS. not were called, could support the convocation. concerned members of the . "I have heard staff members, faculty This is a common response of many Goda has no vote on the Senate council SCU community have met to discuss the members, and students saying that a lot women who have been sexually (continued on page 3) except in the case ofa tie. of rapes are being covered up," Mary assaulted, Cahill Phillips said. They Beth Cahill Phillips, Assistant Dean for may be afraid of what people might say, Resident Life said yesterday. "But if like 'you have been asking for it,' or Author Olsen Discusses thereare assaults, studentsaren'ttalking 'what were you doing out walking about them." aloner" Women And Literature In an interview with The Santd Clara, According to CahiU-Phillips, Student Cahill-PliiUips emphasized the fact that Development Services wants to provide By MICHELLE MURPHY busy working to support her four manywomen may be afraid to speak up rape prevention services, as well as In a special appearance, Tilhe Olsen, daughters. Because of her duties as about sexual assaults that occur on com counseling to women who have been at- noted author of fiction and non-fiction, mother, she wrote only bits and pieces pus. tacked. She noted the "Self Defense spoke to a group of students in the of works for twenty years. She was con- "I wont say that rapes haven't hap- With Tear Gas" sessions to be held Williman Room on Tuesday afternoon. stantly bound to "the tasks that so far pened on this campus,'' Cahill-Phillips February 23 and 24 in O'Connor 108, Olsen began by reading from "I Stand my sex has been responsible f0r..." said. "But if we don't know about them, and the new Escort Service as examples Here Ironing," a selection from her book She received recognition finally when we can'tdo anything tohelp.'' ofpreventative measures. of short stories titled Tell Me A Riddle. Tell Me A Riddle was published in She cited the sexual assault that oc- Students may sign up for the tear gas She referred to the story as her "one 1962. Following this, she published cured January 26 at 9 pm behind Ben- sessions in the Grants and Fellowships mostautobiographical piece." She added Silences, a non-fiction work, in 1965. In son Center as an example of an event Office at the rear of Varsi Hall. The that, "It is very doseto my experience." this book, Olsen tried to explain the that was not directly reported to anyone telephone numbers for the Escort Ser- This particular work took two years needs of creative people and the cir- in Student Development Services. Ac- vice are 984-4172 and 9844173, Sun- for her to complete. She composed it cumstances that silence them temporari- cording to a source close to the woman day through Thursday, 8 pm to 12:30 during "stolen times'' when she was not [Continued on page 3J who was attacked, she prefers not to (continued on page 3) NEWS staff Edltor-ln-ChM Program Remembers War Camp Victims Marti Davia A program to remember the Studies Program Director. and share personal reflections concern- Ntwt Editor " Robarta Furger Japanese-Americans interned in reloca- The program begins at noon today ing his experience. SCU law student tion camps during World War II will be with an NBC film titled "Guilty by Lester Leu will close out the progrm with SportaEditor held today from 12 to 4 in the DeSaisset Reason of Race.'' Discussion of the film a panel discussion featuring the Rich Bartoluccl Museum Auditorium will take place afterwards until I:3U pm, members of the Redress Reparations On this day in 1942, President when two NCRR representatives will Subcommittee of the California Bar Photography Editors Mlchaal Ban bam, Slava Plaraccl Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive speak on their efforts to gain Congres- Association speaking on legal options through Order No. 9066 setting into motion the sional acknowledgement and repara- for,-galling reparations the Entartalnmant Editor internment process for the Nisei popula- tions for the injustices committed judicial system as opposed to Congress. Qlaala Lucl tion of the West Coast. against their community members. Santa Clara's program is part of a na- They will also speak on their work to Kwame Tore Paatura Editor tionwide effort by the National Coali- gather support in the San Jose area from Mlchalla Murphy tion on Redress and Reparations a Congressional subcommittee in- Forum Editor (NCRR) to raise community awareness vestigating the matter. The subcommit- To Speak On Naal Jimenez of the event and to mobilize support for tee plans to visit San Francisco, but not its efforts to gain some sort of justice for San Jose, despite its large Japanese- Production Manager the racial and economic wrongs commit American population. Pan-Africanism Tarry Murphy

> _ .v« in n ir, i .et -V , . ted the name of national security, ~. rc,F'ki»iS^ys,»fanrar At i? in* TypasattlngCoordinator against the Japanese-American communi- ternee, will show illegally made and Stokely Carmichael, will be speaking on “Rapid” Raybuck ty, noted Dr. Gary Okihiro, Ethnic- distributed home movies of the camps Fan-Africanism tonight at 7:00 pm in the Williman room. The event is spon- Adrartlalng Uanagar sored by theBlack Alumni Chapter and MarkSur Schedule of Events for the Black Student Union and is one ofa Buslnaaa Uanagar series of events commemorating Black Qoorga Dias the Educational Convocation History Month. Admission is free. Tore considers Pan-Africanism the Circulation Uanagar total liberation and unification of Africa' Pal Stewart under scientific socialism." He is cur- Spatial Sactlona Editor (0:50 Students are dismissed from their rently working as an organizer for the Kevin Kally classes to attend the convocation All-African Peoples Revolutionary par- Raportara , ty. in the Mission , Gardens. Tore was a major civil rights leader in Neal Jiminez, Robert Freeman, Roberta Furger. the 19Ws Tore is credited with having Dave Sorem, Johnathan Hart, Dave Mello, Paul 11:15-Convocation begins with talks by popularized the term "black power" and Croaelti, Michelle Murphy, Mark Davit was a memoer of both the Black Pan- 12:30 four speakers on "Racism: thers and SNCC, the Student Non- Different Perspectives." violent Coordinating Committee. Phntographars Born in Trinidad in 1941,Tore came Mlchaal Bonham Slava Plaraccl Lunch in the Mission to the United States when he was ten. Dava Higgins 12:30- Gardens to He graduated from Howard University e Production | 00 provided by Saga. in 1964 and while attending, he par- ticipated in the student sit-in movements Stephanie Hottetler, "Greg Galati, Evan Elliot. as well as the Freedom Rides and the Rich Newton,Terry Murphy, Anne Moore, Neal "Memphis to Montgomery March." He Jimenez, Rich Bertolucci, Rapid Raybuck, Rober- 1:00-Workshops lasting 45 minutes ta Furger, RibMea King, Michelle Murphy, Dave eacn begin. The also actively supported the American In- Sorem, Mark Davit 3:00 topics wilfbe: dian and Chictno movement in its strug- * link gle lo reclaim land from European set- The between sexism and TIM tle! colonialism Santa Ctata la Iha official tludant nawtpapar . in the Western racism • of the University of Santa Clara The Santa Clara la written Hemisphere. and adltad by Iha atudanta ones weakly except on * holldaya, examination patloda. and aeadatnlc racaaaaa ol Race relations in a heterogeneous Tore has traveled extensively in lha Unlvaralty. society. Africa, the Middle East, North Viet Tht Santa Ctata la puhUahad by ffia Ptaaldant and Board .nam, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Europe, and of Trualaaaor Santa Clara Cottage. Racism and education. Entered aa saeondolass matter February 21, t«22at the Canada, meeting and working with top Mat Office of SantaCtata, California SSOSO under the act * Racism and assimilation. officials in these areas. He is the author of March 3.1557. SubecrtpUona are Si par year. Sand check or money of Stokely Speaks: From Black Power enter loOrcuMlon Manager,Boa ISO, Unlvaralty of Santa 3*. 00-An ecumenical service will be 'Back to Pan-Africanism, and along with Ctata, SantaClara, Ca.8M63. Telephone Newt: (tot) SS4 0444; Advertising: (400) held in the Mission Church. Charles Hamilton co-authored the book 0644646 3:30 Black Power. Member National Educational Advertising Semces. 300 Uslngton Avenue. NewYork, New York, IDOOI. T*a Santa Ctatahas a minimumcirculationof 4000 Sand ohangsa ofaddraaa to The Santa Ctars, Box ttgo. INSIDE University of Santa Clara, MOSS, (UPS 4*t-MO) fomm POLICY Friend in Need tatters should bs brief corrections, questions or axprss- Forum ..7 slons of points of view. Thsy should be typed and should not exceed 2SO words. Columns, not to exceed 1200 An anonymous writer discusses words, should express a corrals lent point of new on What's Happening 13 impact assault lasuss of general public or community Interact. All con- the of the sexual Wbuiione must Include thsk slgnaturae and lalsphona of a friend. See page 10. numbste (letters may have name withheld upon request), Arts and Entertainment t , tatters and columns should be submitted to the Forum editor. The Sants Oats, before noon on Mondays before Thursday publication dates. TheSanta Ctata reserves lire tlghl to edit an material submitted to the Forum lor libel, htevlfy, and grammar, and tophotocopy all articles loran 2 February 19.1941T5C I .office Ida. . MlMivi Convocation Supported By Faculty Senate Council (continuedfrompage I) 'Teachers of the women were notified and administrators. Brian to problem and to make suggestions on Robinson, the benefits of the events. The con- of the situation and asked to take into Associate Dean for Student Develop- vocation be how to alleviate it. There will comprised of an hour have been consideration the students' special cir- ment, expressed the willingness ofhis of- and a nan* opening numerous meetings between ceremony in which faculty, cumstances. fice to help with the organization of the four speakers and wiO address the SCU com- students, administrators in which *The administration is currently in- events. "We have people in our office on students munity the'subject of "Racism in have voiced their requests " vestigating the phone calls, and is offer- who are experienced in organizing, and Perspective After the initial speakers, both concerning long range goals and ing a reward and complete anonymity to who would liketo help out," he said. there will be two hours of workshops the immediate needs of the women who anyone can who provide information An organizing committee with which studentsare encouraged to attend received calk. which apprehension would lead to the representatives from BSU, El Frente, in order to have an to In addition to the organization of SC opportunity of thoseresponsible. Whites Against Racism, The Santa discuss with, as well as listen to, CAR and the Educational Convocation other *A program within the dorm has been Clara, SED, Residential Life, speakers. Although classes by the students the following steps ASUSC, will be have organized by Student Services in which and the Political Science Students resumed at 1 pm, been taken in response to students wil not be students' re- faculty, staff and students would hold Association, has been formulated penalized for quests: and is attending the workshops. workshops onracism, on a floor by floor in the process of obtaining speakers for At 3 pm, an Ecumenical Worship *The phone numbersof the women Ser- call basis. Ideally, according to Giacomini, Monday's convocation, from both on vice will be held in the Mission clhave been changed. Church. the workshops will take place after the and Saga Foods has agreed 'Additional off-campus. security officers have been convocation as part of the on-going In a letter of support 4 to provide students with bag lunches in for the Educa- arfdc34» * « > 1 tfic -"kiV"fravtnui~ 'Jic * fcsjfc 'Programs on self-protection have been •Support organized groups have been regular cafeteria lunch. Rewak, Locatelli, and endorsed by the scheduled: A Tear Gas Certification by students within the dorms for the According to Page, in order for the Faculty Senate Council, the Values Course will be held on Monday and women called. Resident Assistants have Educational Convocation to be a suc- Committee, and SCCAR (the complete Tuesday, February 23, from 24 been notified of the incident and have cess, it must receive the support of the text of which can be found on page % 6:30-lfcoo pm in O'Connor 108. The contacted any women on their floors entire SCU community. In agreement Monday's events are described as "a cost of the course is Sl2, purchase of whohave received calk. with this position, members of the beginning If they are to be meaningful, tear gas is extra. There will also be a 'Future meetings between members of Faculty Senate Council have urged that they must be succeeded by the speaker from the in- Rape Crisis Center El Frente, BSU, and either Rewak or faculty as well as students be educated dividual efortsofall of us." discussing Rape Prevention on Thurs- Locatelli are planned. day, February 26 in O'Connor 108, During a meeting called by SCCAR from 7-10 pm. This program replaces last night, students were organized into the one previously scheduled for Mon- groups to help plan the Educational Santa Clara Awarded day, February 23. Convocation. At previous meetings, 'Letters were written to the parents of students were kept abreast of new the women who were called. Vice- developments and the problem of racism Humanities Endowment President for Student Services George on this campus. The planning of the One of the largest grants ever made deemphasize one program for the Giacomini is now sending a revision of convocation is largely in the hands of sake by the National Endowment for the of another. Rather, he this letter to the parents of all black the students with advise and encourages involved, Humanities (NEH) has been awarded to students to take a variety students. organizational help coming from faculty ofcourses in a the University ofSanta Clara. variety of academic disciplines. The Challenge Grant of $750,000 is A recent report out of Washington, the third largest offered by NEH this however, states that the NEH may be in Author Olsen Speaks year. Under the terms of the NEH danger of losing funds, as the Reagan Challenge Grant Program, SCU must administration considers budget cuts in grant " match the funds on a three toone the areas of higher education funding. (continuedfrompage 1) olsen's overall message seemed to ex- basis over the next four years. Thus, the Gerwe said that "it is simply too early to ly or publish- permanently. In 1974, she press the desire for everyone to be able University must raise an additional tell whether this grant will be involved ed a novel called Yonnondh: From the to express themselves in some form. $2,250,000 for projects in the in the cut or not" He noted that the which tells the Thirties, story of a fami- "When we care about people, we want humanitiesby June 1984. grant is subject to Congressional ap- ly's struggles during the Depression. them to use all the aspects of their According to Eugene Gerwe, Vice proval each year, following a report by When asked what inspired her to being," she said. She then quoted a line President for University Relations, the University confirming the matching write, Olsen said "Everything I have from a hymn she once read: "And every "we were planning for a major fund-raising gifts. written came out ofneeding to say what life shall be a song..." Tillie Olsen has drive, and this Challenge Grant will en- Santa Clara has already received its was not being said enough in my time or something important to say, and her courage alumniand friends to donate, or first installment on theChallenge Grant, hardly saidat all." works are her song. to increase the value of their gifts to the as well as several pledges from friends She described the world as a place "in and alumni. For instance Harold J. which your University." race, economic classand sex Toso, namesake of Toso Pavilhon and Gerwe also said that the grant will can be the most determining things in active University donor, has pledged life." More "dramatize our needs and opportunities your specifically, she said Assaults $400,000 to establish a chair in Italian in the humanities." He pointed out that that the structure of society is such that Languages and Culture. NEH will add I) while it may be easy to raise money for women are in certain positions and that (continuedfrompage SI 33,000 -o this donation. professional and technical programs there is only so much they can do in this am. According to the Development Of- given SCU's location in the heart of the male-dominatedsociety. "It's harderfor Hall Coordinator Cathy Semans said fice, fundsfrom the challenge will be us- Silicon Valley, "the NEH Challenge our sex still in 1981 to speak up and give yesterday that the response by the male ed to support three new endowed pro- Grant will provide the leverage we need our testimony," she added. volunteers for the Escort Service has fessorships in the humanities, at $l.B to assure that the humanities at Santa When Olsen read to her audience on been very good. She regrets, however, million; for general operating support, Clara remain strong in the 1980s." Tuesday, she said that she writes with that more women are not yet taking ad- which ranges from salaries and benefits identification rather than with compas- vantage of the Service. "Women tend to The value of the liberal arts educa- to utilities and supplies, $660,000; for sion. In this way, she said, she is not be a little proud," she said. tion, President William Rewak, SJ. library endowment, $190,000; for speaking with pity, but from actual ex- Cahill Phillips said that should a said, has not changed at SantaClara. He library acquisitions, $250,000; and for perience. When she writes about a woman be sexually assaulted, "the best hopes that "we will always provide interdisciplinary institutes, $100,000; character, she says that she imagines thing she could do would be to contact students with the kind ofeducation they for a total of $3,000,000. that It might havebeen me." an area coordinator through her R.A." want and need." He sees no reason to TSCFebruary 19,19813 'XvHv jtf MfcHt tk^t^Otk Santa Clara To Consider All Gifts mine for itself who may teach, what contracts, a procedure for assessment of way to achieve these ends than through Acceptability of Gifts may be taught, how it shall be taught their appropriateness relative to the suitable gifts, grants and contracts? and who may be admitted to study University's purposes is established (See I he policy of the University is initial- cannot be accepted. Gifts limited to PROCEDURES). NO RESTRICTIONS ON SOURCE ly to consider any gift, grant or contract specific purposes or fields of study will The supporting argument for this ele- EXCEPT LEGALITY at acceptable. However, gifts, grants or be accepted gladly, providin they do not ment of policy is evident. The Universi- contracts which attach conditions direc- abridge the fouracademic freedoms. No ty is a self-supporting institution that Recognizing that acceptance of a gift tly or indirectly to the conduct of gift, grant or contract will be approved needs financial assistance beyond tui- does not represent a judgment of the University affairs must be thoughtfully which interferes with accepted prin- tion to offer the quality education and donor's character or activities, the considered. For example, any condition ciples of free intellectual investigation, research environment. It also needs in- Universitydoes not place restrictions on which would invade the four essential criticism and scholarship. In cases where teractions with concerned individuals the sources of gifts, grants, etc. freedoms of any University to deter- questions aise about gifts, grants and and segments of society. What better However, if the source of funds is found to be clearly illegal as determined by the laws of California or the United States, the University will not accept the funds.

NO GIFTS FOR CLASSIFIED OR

The University will not accept gifts, grants or contracts for classified or pro prietary research since to do so would contravene one of the bask purposes of the University to provide a source of knowledge for members of the Universi- ty and the community at large, in an at- mosphere of free and open inquiry.

Procedures .** In sensitive cases there will be some question regarding the appropriateness of the gift, grant or contract. In such cases the University Development Com mi ttee will constitute itselfas a review ing body. Those in the University com- munity who perceive a sensitive issue may bring such an issue to the attent- ion of the Vice-President for University Relations who will initiate the review procedure. The Committee will examine the proposal Where does science fiction end and energy lasers, communications systems, for conformity to the stan reality begin? It's all in the mind's eye. plus other future projects still consider- dards espoused by this policy statement Be it the creative imagination used to ed science fiction. and will make recommendations to the produce Star Wars, The Black Hole, and President of the University. The Empire Strikes Back, or the more A company called TRW will be on scientific approach of hypothesis test- campus... ing and experimentation, the distant STUDENT TRAVEL galaxies of science fiction coalesce into MARCH 3 Domnbc and international ~t I reality with the advanced technology ■ flight! int.lin. at discount a now being developed at a company to faraa. Wa alae rapratant all interview graduates in scien- chatter oparationa (including | called TRW. tific and technical disciplines. Lakai)... Hawaii ... M.a.co ...

Europa ...... Aaia Africa ... Itwas the Defense Space Systems and the placement Australia USA. Group of TRW who made possible the Contact office to sche- your appointment Services Available: Viking. Lander biological experiment dule If unable to meet with us, send your resume International Studant Idanhty which looked for life on Mars and the to: Card iaauanoa Eurail, Studant High Energy Astronomical Observatory Rail and Bhrrail paaaaa. 0»« which looks for quasars, pulsars College Relations and ■fadoo IWal. Youth black holes in deep space. Profession- Bldg. R5/8196 U of SC 3/81 Ko*l Cafda.Sbadant 2*. A als at TRW-DSSG are now involved in One Space Park traina.lneuranoa Wida Map such impressive technologies as high Redondo Beach, CA 90278 Hard to find trawd book. Vohaoa connrton Camping tour. Club Mad

,Wj

_,— Oppo.tun.tyf mploytf M/'/H CAMPUS DEFENSE AND SPACE SYSTEMS GROUP ENERGY SYSTEMS GROUP TRAVEL

Lobby of Swig H3II Mon.—Thurs. 4February 19,1981 TSC •--- —— J social presentations

«*£ ￿ f elsom eldridge o THE GREAT p AMERICAN * & SHOW OF WONDERS •O0 V steve la veile •Ax ,*> \ N? v ob v

Maver I lieatei For the first time ever Feb. 24. 1981 on the SCI campus. at 8:00 Pin these two magi< ians S 5 50 (ien Admission will perform theii ■■■ S 4 50 S< I Students of magic.

MOWO

" BLUB. COLLAR " 20 FEBRUARY, 1981 AT 7:00 r: WITH RICHARD PRYOR Will perform In Mayer BLACK HISTORY: LOVr t Theater on Friday, STOLE** OR F&AYB-O. Feb. 27, 1981 atB:oopnv{ 20 FEBRUARY, 1981 AT 9:00 Tickets $7.50 WITH BILL COSBY One Show Only! THBGRXNBTVBE ANP THE KBnm fus> movie 21 FEBRUARY, 1981 AT 7:00 and 9:30 All movies wiill be shown in DS 207. Tkkets available at the Info Booth. $l.OO in advance $1.50 at the door. Chinese Language and Cultural Studies CLCS OFFERS:

* Reasonable expenses * Travel CMSS3FJEDS * Concentrated study in Taiwan * Extensive course listing * Full university credit ENTRY DATES: 4/16/12: 6/15 9/4 QnuiVlt ; Parttlme Mmpua rep for local Ineurance agancy Flexible SAVt! THIS AOOIII First Tuition $2OO Before you purchaaa hlfl, Quarter: $780; Housing 1 houreetrong marketing program • high commlealon. Call any car etarao. TV, recorder or racordlng tap*, Accepting applications quarters ! Mr Slanlorrj. at 257-2707. char* with ua for WO discounts on t>»„ for all 280 major bnnda of equipment Good pncaa available on For Free Pamphlet and Information: Reeumoa. raporta, ate. Cynthia 2470430 |IBM SC 11/Santa Ml ooout evBRYTHINO. Corraet. honaat Intormaiion on performance, Chinese Language and Cultural Studies Clara); Mary HMH) |wrd Proc/Mt. Vlewl Orven quality.etc Wa manufacturea com Plata Una ol quality loodapaakara and Ml. wholesale P.O. Long * " ' «*> Box 15563, Beach, CA 90815 0 °u •***»'* "* tarn, EASYTYPE TYPINO SERVICE. Raporta, tlwala, legal Fail ,h P"6 - component, thai Telephone: (213| 597 lmoai0 ol the highly popular and 3361. and accural. Santa Clara. 2490412 advartlaadayatama ma but at Vt to Vt macoat. Full manufacturer,warranty with local eeretca. and Typing experienced Barbara, 204-1796. Showroom manufacturing lacllltlae in San Joae Sounda Unique, 202-0783 Opan Tuaa-Frl., 14J, Sat TYRING THAT'S TOPS noons. TRY TONY TYPINO. Fa.t. accurate and profeeelonal SVSO/page DayfEva Call KEWVACKERSO47 1433 or 272 4525

Female roommate Chuckle aanda hla loire for valentine > day ma, too. Hap- MOUSING: nonemoker needed to altar. py February 19. townhouee 15 mlnutae to SCU Waaharrdryar. S2Sormonth Love Mol ￿ w ullllllea Call 277-20.7 or 203 4000 proles.lonal Faat raaumaa Day/Eve/Sal aervlce Dealgn «. Nerd truck and driver approx. 2 hour. 525 depMinuit on how Phototype 295-9992 n rraaaep, _ lone Mam Can Cady 752-4540 uk rre twenty to alght-but dwi't panic. XOX ZakJa

a & computer science Graduates

DISCX)YER THE RINGS. Today, in San Diego, m

0

If you welcome the stimula- ' . YELLOW lion Inherent In creat- ' ing-a new generation / of medium and large- U scale mainframe / LUSTRIUM computer systems, / consider NCR Engi- neering & Manufactur- I ing/San Diego. I We are an organization \ New, space-age that's generated two new 1 alloy NCRfacilities and pro- > duced an engineering staff \ that looks as good as gold, that's showing the way in systems architecture. Virtual wears as good as gold, costs about half as much. systems. Multiprocessing. Data SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER: $W base management.Firmware Save emulation. PASCAL-based OS off the regular price. (Offer And, valid through February' 27 language. VLSI technology. you'll be working within a few ONLY.) Upward path engineering. In miles of the ocean and minutes Yellow Lustrium rings short, everything that creates from downtown San Diego. To learn by Josten's available daily Total System capabilities for more about the career opportuni- at your bookstore. business needs of the 80s and ties available, send a resume or 90's. letter describing your educational Something else you'll like. background to: Mr. Hal Ostrander, Although our products NCR Corporation, Dept.CN, and Cali- 16550 fornia hilltop facilities are large- W. Bernardo Drive, scale, you'll work in small, San Diego, CA 92127. highly visible project teams that offer uncommonprogram diver- sity. There is easy multidisci- pline communication, move- ment between projects, and wide career path options. In a word, you will find Campus Store exposure. And a uniqueteaming Complete Computer Systems Alameda & Santa Clara St. environment. Santa Clara, CA 9SOS3 An Equal OpportunityEmployer ATT' Debra McCill 6February 19.1981T5C FORUM After the Storm Friday evening I was driving north on Highway i, with a dark be spent on "classified or propriety research." Again, we can and rocky coastline to my left, a rolling mountain range to my respond to this policy in a couple of ways. right, and a particularly brutal rainstorm whipping itself into a Our initial reaction to this news is one of anger and scorn. frenzy around the car. As I navigated over bumps and twists m That the University will accept gifts from corporations like the road, I was too concerned about where I was to worry about Lockheed, (which makes first-strike missies), contradicts our where I was going. Catholic principles. Since the "news" about racism at Santa Clara first hit the But we can also respond in another, opposite way. Since Santa campus last week, everyone has been looking to the left and to Clara is opposed to "narrow indoctrination or proselytizing" the right in order to appreciate the significance of this revelation. (Statement of Purpose, 1975), it has the freedom to accept We have also been caught up in the storm of controversy that money from sources that represent less than humanistic interests. the Bay Area media claims surrounds us. Many have begun to Too many people have been saying that the University of Santa ask questions. What can we do about it? is a common response. Clara is a fantasy land; an island far from the Real World. But There has been a great deal of energy and concentration spent to the truth is that the University accepts support from large make the educational convocation work on Monday, which corporations, which have supported higher education for years. indicates that Santa Clara students and faculty want immediate By accepting Lockheed money, for example, Santa Clara proves action to confront an immediate concern. We hope that when that it is very much part of the Real World. Monday rolls around everyone will agree to participate in the The verse from scripture haunts us here: Those without sin workshops and community activities. But we must remember may cast the first stone." We may scream loud and long about that we are still going somewhere forward and that our the "immorality" of accepting money from companies involved problems will not be solved on Monday when we discuss them, in the production of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy, of and that life at the University of Santa Clara will always be corporations contributing to apartheid in South Africa, yet all of filled with bumps and turns. our moralizing is contradictory when we accent Guaranteed Student Loads from Bank of America, which has'Snterests in President Rewak discusses some other important campus South Africa. If we wish for these corporations that fund our concerns in his newsletter on page 8. He announces that a Task educations to consider human rights, we ought to go straight to Force on the Alcohol Policy will begin work next week. There the source with protest, instead of asking the University to do are several ways we can interpret this news. First, we could the protesting for us. conclude that the President is making a token effort to address a controversial issue; that the findings of the Committee will be As Tillie Olsen often said Tuesday, I am rambling. But the put to paper in June and forgotten in the fall. Or, second, we issue of "acceptability of gifts" leads us to another observation: could judge that this is a valuable response to a touchy subject, that lately students have been talking about "the and support the President's decision by contributing to the Task Administration" as if this word embodies some kind .of shadowy Force our own opinions about drinking. Or third, we could creature that resides in the inaccessible reaches of Walsh -. simply wait until the Policy is enacted before we make a decision Administration Building. I am certainly the first one to admit to support or condemn it, and meanwhile live with the present our leaders are sometimes less than responsive to urgent student Policy. concerns. But if there is a prevailing lack of concern about the As Rewak says in his letter, "We don't like to be told we can issue of racism, if the alcohol policy does not represent student's or cannot drink." Since students will always be sensitive to a interests, if there is a lack of discussion about sexual assaults, Policy that touches this area of our lives, fear that the first "the Administration'' is to blame, some students say. Buf "the and third responses will prevail. We should not ignore the Administration" exists as a unit only in the word itself. The importance of this Task Force, nor should we wait until individuals who are our administrators run the business of this September to protest its Policy. Instead, we can contact our school, and are certainly responsible for providing the kind of student representatives who belong to this Task Force education we want and need. But we, students in charge of our ASUSC President Dan Ryan, Resident Assistant Francis Basich, own educations, must take control from time to time. We have John McCarthy and Joe Gonyea and tell them what we want done that by organizing this educational convocation, which is a from an Alcohol Policy, while our opinions can still be counted. step on the way to a deeper understanding of where we are headed. The administrators must now follow us. The good news that the University will employ the new , grading system is also announced in Rewak's newsletter. Faculty On Sunday afternoon the storm had cleared. Wild flowers and and students seem to favor plan "C" which includes pluses and green pastures proved that Spring, amazingly enough, is on its minuses in the system of evaluation. way. When I returned to the Mission Campus from my journey north, I noticed that there is still much to be proud of here. On page four we print the "policy guidelines" for the Something about all this talk of addressing the issue of racism, acceptability of gifts, grants and contracts which Rewak also rape, alcohol and a mismanaged student government with an mentions in his letter. This policy says that the University will attitude of change, of renewal, gives us the feeling that life is accept money from any source, provided there are no legal worthwhile after all, and that after the storm ... well, you know restrictions and that the source does not require that the money what happens. MID TSC February 19,19817 LETTERS A Message from the President

Dear Members of the University Community, was presented to the .President's Council last wee*k, and passed. Anyone who would like a copy of that policy can get it either from the ASUSC office or from You have by now heard thatBob Parden has resigned as Dean of the School Gene Gerwe, Vice President for University Relations. A copy has been given to of Engineering. I want to take this opportunity to thank Bob for the extraor- The Santa Clara. [See box on page 3) dinary service he has given to Santa Clara for the last 27 years, 26 of them as One Final and Important nota: Last week's incidents have caused Dean. Few Deans can equal thatrecord. As an administrator, he hasbeen totally many to sit up and take notice of theracism that exists on campus. We're putting dedicated to the improvement of Santa Clara's programming quality. He together some long range programs that will, I hope, deal with the issue honestly deserves, in a special way, the gratitude of countless graduates and a host of for our students, certainly, but also for all of us who remain here year after faculty members. Bob will remain in office until a new Dean is hired; we are for- year. But unlesswe are aware of two possible problems, our expectations will not tunate that we will continue to be able to use Bob's talents, evenafter he leaves be met, and there will only be continuing frustration: 1) some will think racism office. does not exist, some will be ignorant of it, some will simply turn away in anger A committee has been established to begin the search for a replacement: Jerry many of these will object to the University's efforts to handle the issue effective Markle (Chair), Michel Saad, Gene Fisher, Ron Danielson, Ray Yarbrough, Joe ry. Much patience will be required. And 2) some will think the incidents are Fedock and Bill Duffy. Other faculty, and our industry contacts, will be used as isolated, endemic to Santa Clara alone, so that if this particular evil is eradicated aggressive sources for generating applications. and if all suggestions for ridding the campus of racism are carried through ON OTHER FRONTS: the problem will be solved. Alcohol Policy: There has been some concern among the students recently The problem will not so easilybe solved. Racism occurs at Santa Clara because about the Alcohol Policy that was instituted at the start of the Winter Quarter Santa Clara is a part of American society. And racism is the American tragedy for the dormitories. I discussed this at El Retire a few weeksago with a group of There are at least two types of idealists: those who think a problam does not faculty members and all agreed that the University should, first, obey the law exist, and those who think that if a solution is found, the problem will cease to ex and, second, establish a University-wide policy that would take into account the Kt With regard to the issue of racism, neither is comet. And Ido not say this as various groups underage and overage that sponsor campusparties. Several an excuse for inaction. I say it because unless we confront racism, as it exists faculty members volunteered to work on a special task force to establish that as part of a larger context we will forever be fighting shadows. policy: Paul Goda has contacted them. A few students have also shown interest. Yes, there will be programs academic and non-academic.But thereal loag The Task Force on Alcohol Policy, then, beginning its work next week, is com- range approach, and the most effective one, is that voiced by the young black posed of the following members: Faculty: Barry Posner (Chair), Hans Boepple, woman who stood in front of an old, weary Ike McCaslin at the end of William Dinah Shelton, Kichi Iwamoto and Phil Mccormick; Staff: Garland White and Faulkner's "Delta Autumn": "Old man,'' she said, "have you lived so long and Don Dodson; Students: Dan Ryan, John McCarthy, Prances Baftch and Joe forgotten so much that you don't remember anything you ever knew or felt or Gonyea. even heard about love?" For some reason, the issue of alcohol is a touchy one. We don't like to be told we can or cannot drink. We don't like to be told we ought not to drink.But we all Sincerely, know that if alcohol is used in moderation, there is little problem; ifit is abused, Rewak, S.J. there can be a devastating problem. And today, alcohol in one form or William J. President another is more widely abused by teen-agers than marijuana or cocaine, than any other drug. The omnipresence of wine and liquor and beer at all social gatherings necessitates, certainly, a personal evaluation of how we use it; but such a practice also demands that the University carefully consider how, in this regard, it fulfills its educational responsibility. The Task Force will begin work Awareness Causes Racism immediately and will finish by June. Editor, Grading Policy: Last May, the Faculty Seriate passed, unanimously, the and the other a professor He was verhalh physically and racially abused for the questionable following resolution: That the report of the Senate Ad-Hoc Committee on the 1-ast week saw the deplorable harassment of act of wearing a pigmy mask. Their hostility was Reporting of Gradesof February 4,1980, be Official black women on our campus. Admirably, (he considered Faculty Opinion unjustifiedand yetgeneral cowardice dictated thai on the subject of thereport of undergraduate newspaper and the entire student body was grades, and that the Faculty Senate rallied John shouldlose his well-deserved job as an K A to the support of these not in action at specifically recommends adoption of the grading system described as *C' on page students! if It is a plain fact that white hostility towards least in spirit. Typical of SCU, committees 1 of thereport." have biacks on campus is matched by an opposite and been formed and made, speeches generally of the least equal "System - at hostility of blacks to whites. Neither C calls for letter grades with+and symbols having the following need to educate students about the problem of can be more justified than the other, nor can they numerical significance: Ais 4.0; A- is 3.7; B -H53.3; Bis 3.0; B- is 1.7,C racism. Mark Davis has called toour attention the -fis2.3; Cis be separated from each other. For instance, all too 2.0; C- is 1.7; D+isl.3; D is 1.0; D- is 0.7; grade C, deeper problem from which this "isolated" inci- and F is 0.0. A of or 2.0, will often 1 have heard the complaint about graffiti in remain the grade dent arises. National television cameras on cam- needed for graduation; in other words, C- is a "No Pass." the bathrooms, yet I find the "Joey Bronco pus underscore the fear that a backlash against Last fall, a questionnaire was distributed to stereotype perpetrated by the newspaper the faculty, asking for their further minorities is piningmomentum. student adivice: about half equally insulting We mutt deal with both sides responded, and of these, 119 chose "System C as their first Countering, minority leaders are redoubling openly if this campus issue the choice, 108 chose the current system as their first choice. Since their efforts along the same isto be resoved at there were lines they have march- core. several possibilities, Paul Locatelli then asked the Senate ed since the civil rights era, hoping not to lose Faculty Council if it If a moratorium must be called, call it on them poundgained since then 1 see a danger in this ar> would be useful to canvas the faculty regarding those two systems alone; the forcement of equality proach. It occurs to that this between ethnic groups Council responded by saying not me looming backlash Equality the issue need be studied any further. He then » of individuals must be stressed It is the a result of their programs and not an absence of asked the Student Body Officers and Mark Davis, very foundation of this country. The fact that the editor of The Santa Clara, them. Affirmative action programs are fatally to elicit opinion. Mack women were harassed last week should student He asked the Deans toreview the redommendation and flawed by inherent racial prejudice. They only make the crime no more not all they approved it. deepen existingprejudices and legitimize minority heinous Let's hostility become emotional reactionaries calling for the col This topic was on theagenda for last week's toward society. This is true of all quota President's Council meeting. As a fcctjve condemnation of those responsible for last policies. Ethnic studies programs will not change result of that meeting, and as a result of all other deliberations, the week's incident because it was rather grading attitudes and if made mandatory, will only make racist, system will be changed as recommended by the Faculty because it was wrong. The causes must Senate in May of 1980 racists cling to their cloaks of prejudice of racism It become effective for even be sought out, and I suspect that(est and less they will theFall Quarter, 1981. tighter than before. In addition, liberal programs have something to do with ignorance. The current Policy on Gifts, Grants, year, such as bilingual education have not proved to be and Contracts: Last several people asked that programs tocorrect racial injustices have only ac- cost effective. While all these programs once serv- the University establish a policy for accepting gifts; the particular issue at the centuated racial lines giving rite to new injustices ed a useful purpose, it seems that today they only time was the Lockheed gift. The University on Prejudice will disappear at respect it gained, and Committee Development *x*he the few remaining feelings of guilt, but at respect must be earned even it a perceiv faculty, staffand students was*asked to compose a policy and present it to the the risk of sparkinga returnto racism. if is from ed unfair position. a President's Council. Both last year's and this year's Committees The University of Santa Clara Respect is not possible from worked on h. It has seen the position ofpity. symptoms of the "larger problem" before, two years ago when John Cottello was accosted by February 19,1981T5C two K»nn«dy 8 black leaders of this campus, one an administrator Robert M Armando A. Hlnojou COLUMNS The Bigots Have Us Riled; What Now? By JOHNA THAN HART similarly ordered several additional than I can recall all year. This is indeed (remember Dunne's elevator doors last security officers hired to patrol the cam- interesting. Clearly, hundreds of year?), and anything but patriotic. In the President's Newsletter appear- pus. And we all recall, over a year ago, students, faculty and administrators However, there were also those truly ing in last week's issue of The Santa how such military presence, while were outraged, shocked, and moved to committed to the long, monotonous, Gara, the President outlined a relation- representative of American military activity... activity centering around ver- confusing, and endlessly uncertain ship between Americans being held strength, achieved nothing again bal protests and editorial objections. We negotiations that soonbecame necessary hostage to Iranians and black women on similarly, whilerepresentative of Father all protectively announced our horror at for release. They were the ones that campus being held hostage to fear. It Rewak's authority over the hiring of this blatantly racist attack on our "com spent hours and days on end studying escapes me why the President should wish to de-emphasize the severity of Santa Clara's racist condition by com- "It escapes me why (Rewak) should wish to deemphasize...Santa Clara's paring it to a complicated diplomatic "incident" taking place 6,000 miles from racist condition by comparing it to a complicated diplomatic incident..." Santa Clara. It would sadly appear that the President chooses to deal with our personnel, have we achieved anything? munity." the press and diplomatic reports, the "hostages'' in much the same way as Just as such token responses did not Remember 16 months ago our ver- ones who organized educational former President Carter: initial outrage, guarantee the safety of our hostages bal and editorial outrage were unsur- meetings, the ones who prayed, and followed by substantive inactivity. How from abuse a year ago, so today we are passed; we all became 'comrnunitively' above all, the ones whodid not call for unfortunate. >; no closer to guaranteeing the safety for 'American in our 'patriotic' rallying "nuking the bastards". our "hostages to fear." behind the hostages in Iran. Few would Isn't it interesting to see the same fac- immediately As I recall, after the Ira- In another similarity, not stemming argue that the actions of Americans dur- tions emerge right here before us?There nian uprising against the American Em- from the President's Newsletter, but ing those 444 days, despiteall the yellow are those who are violently upset and bassy, President Carter ordered several from the flood ofletters received by The ribbons, represented true patriotism. struggling to educate our "community", Navy warships patrol U.S. to the Per- Santa' Clara, I found the word "com- Rather, more would argue that our ac- there are those who want to "get the sian Gulf area President Rewak munity" used more often in one issue tions were malicious, child-like bastards" and hang them, and there is another, more pervasive and dangerous group: those that don't care. These are the ones who don't understand "com- Thoughts on Racism Issue munity" except as it revolves around their individualist passions. My com- Editor, these issues because I have not been up to the they don't want to face what they're actually Walsh Ivory Tower tohear the other side. Yet this doing. And I doubt that the sight of extra secuity parison has wandered; I'm sorry. is appears and many to Like everyoneelse, I wu upset tnd hurt by Hie how the administration tome guards n going change their attitudes. The Many have said that the Iranian ab- The of the problem lies a stop events of last week concerning the phone calk to other students. root in University needs to educateall students, and duction, while certainly not a good and that solution is various black women on campus. Unlike many, lack of communication a generalfeeling the problem at its source. One possible thing, did bring us to remember how the students, would however, I was not surprised. How can we expect the administration is here to rule yet, to provide a course on Human Values that the some curriculum. great it is to be American, and provided somethingas predominant as racism in our society my friends, we support administration, be part of every student's required some without of our parents, the for us something we all rally not tosurface here at Santa Clara?This is especial- with and the help Such a course would explain basis bigotry, with that could ly true when we see how the administration and it is timethey start answering to us instead of and what respect for other persons means. Many behind and support as apatriot-filled na- get doing fosters such feelings by its action or lack ofaction. our answering to them. Let's together and people don't fully realize what they're when tion/community. So, now the hostages us. I am glad that the members of the BSU and El make them hear they call a black person "nigger", or a woman are home; what now? Are we still acorn because a subconscious attempt to (rente have pierced the administration's hand in "bitch", it is muhfty? Or are we only a community thismatter and I feel that this is a greatchance for PavMMans dehumanize others by representing them as ob- we to Can we now go all students to take the necessary steps toward jects or animals. Such words are created out of when have be? making our administration more answerable to us. Editor, fearand ignorance. back to'business as usuaT? Can we now The administration is failing to meet our needs A university education must do more than give return to the policies of state that in many areas. The most obvious at the present I find it encouraging that the University ad- a person marketable skills. The students of today brought about the assault in the first ministration has so and time is in helping the students here at Santa Clara responded quickly are seen by many as the leaders of tomorrow, so place? Or do we have the responsibility to of their racist attitudes. Not positively to the problems of racism and sexism able do so of fear and rid themselves we must be to free ig- to look at ourselves, to re-examine our everyonehere is a racist, but bigots are present, as that we have encountered at Santa Clara. Lectures norance. It is the responsibility of every one of us proven by the phone calls and other threatening and seminars will make many of us more aware of to learn about the basis of our beliefs, especially priorities, to be careful, to be judicious, actions. Yet how can we expect anything else in the problems, and extra security could prevent when they are displayed on campus in the form of and to be fair to those in our 'world an institutition that is so grossly segregated possible violence. racism and sexism. community'? because of its racist admission policies? Last year Nevertheless,students with racist and sexist at- the administration also took steps toward titudes will very likely not attend these seminars JackltTaylor And whataboutSanta Clara? Are we eliminating the Ethnic Studies program here at all claiming the same kind of empty Santa Clara. It's only because of a few enlightened TO THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY Hon on the problem of racism, to be held patriotism to our 'university communi- students that the program is as strong as it is to- What we catch the attackers? the Monday, February 23, 1981, from ty'? if day. We can't expect racism to decline until The initial immediate response we to administration deals with its own racist policies. and of 11:15 until 1:00 in the Mission Gardens, What next? Can return 'business several hundred students to the racial in place of classes scheduled as usual? Or do we have the respon- Another area where student needs are not being in ordinarily cidents of last week has been the forma- sibility to look at ourselves, tostudy our met is inherent in the new alcohol policy. The for that time. The convocation will be poHcy deals almost solely with liability. In other tion of a Santa Clara Coalition Against followed by a series of afternoon university climate, to keep in mind those words, the administration doesn't care ifwe drink Racism this is providing a focus for workshops on specific topics, each of concerns that we all share in and and get injured as long as they are not responsible the widespread determination to con- which will be repeated several times to amongst ourselves together? Well like it or not, they are responsible for for it front the problem. many possible to Please, my friends, let us ask, not de- gets killed by driving off cam- enable as students as us and if someone mand or order, but intimately request pus to drink, who will be to blame? Legally the attend, as their class schedules permit student. Morally, the administration. To support their efforts and to give ef- At 3:00, an ecumenical prayer service the Rewak administration, as well as the to outrage Reagan administration, to examine our The most startling area of neglect is in the area fective expression the and will be held in the Mission Church. of student security There were at least two rape* concern of the university community, direction and concerns... racially, inter- on Campus this year that were not made public. Father Locatelli and I, with the par- Monday's events are a beginning. If nationally, communitively...and create, It's anight if women get raped on campus, just so ticipation and endorsement of the Santa they are to be meaningful, they must be direct, and preserve the climate of nobody hears about it. We wouldn't want the Clara Coalition Against Racism, the human sharing that we all, individually community image of Santa Clara to be harmed succeeded by the individual efforts ofall and socially, seek most. Together. now would we?Image seems to be more important Faculty Senate Council, and other in- of us. J. to the administration than students'safety. terested groups, are announcing a William Rewak. S.J. I realize that I may be uninformed bout some of university-wide Educational Convoca- Paul L.Locatelli. S.J. TSC February 19,19819 S. ■' aY.iaVaS! l»B»i^^

In Maniacal TOOTHTT TE

Defiance of by Neal Jimenez

Properly Squeezed He never broke the law. He never and brush his teeth up and down, one the last concrete thought he had before even considered breaking the law. He hundred times for each tooth, and descent into unconsciousness was that, never sped, he never spit on the always, FOR BEST RESULTS, he damnit, he would only see his dentist Toothpaste Tubes sidewalk, he never committed sodomy would make sure to SQUEEZE TUBE once this year. where it was restricted by local statutes, FROM THE BOTTOM... and he never jaywalked. He didused to, And now, as he stood with his pupils think that DONT WALK smoking, the damn tube jeered him, I have received a response to my "Si! at however, He stared the tube of toothpaste signs implied he should RUN instead, taunted him, provoked him with its cor- ly, Time Wasting Initial Contest." Mary for one long moment, and it seemed to and he would dash out into the middle rectness. The defiance that had sim- Fitzpatrick has come up with 55 names taunt him with its neatness, its correct- of busy intersections, cars zipping and mered in him for so long was now boil- that have the initials J.B. I'm afraid I ness, its meticulously squeezed and honking past and around him, and one ing, burning, and he knew what he must have to challenge some of the names for rolled up-from-the-bottom-proprkty. He tune a Falcon van clipped him as he was do. DARE TO DEFY THE UNSEEN being a little obscure. At the risk of ex fch a burning hatred for the tube,and ir- dodging a Porsche and sent him flying AUTHORITY! posing my ignorance, I ask you: who the rational but very real against resentment thirty feet the lap of a Moonie He snatched the tube from the hell's Josephine Beauharnais? and James all that it stood for. The feeling had been into/ waiting for the bus. The Moonie medicine cabinet and squeezed from the Bowie, and John Burgoyne, and James in the making for a long timeand now it straightened out as to the true top with a maniacal ferocity, giving no Burbage? These are not names had taken bold of him the way a hawk him simply meaning of the DONT WALK sign. thought to the results. Toothpaste that areknown around the world. takes bold of a small rodent: violently, That was his only sin,and it was com- spurted in all directions in twirling, Honestly, Mary, I assuredly. He caught a glimpse of his wouldpay you the pletely inadvertant. Other than that, his broken ribbons of mint, and Charlie $3.00 grand prize, regardless of your own eyes in the bathroom mirror and he record was spotless. He always shook more J.B.'s but swore he saw smoke curling out of the began laughing hysterically. A glob desperate I also received well before using, he did not remove tag, landed on his toothbrush. He shoved the a letter from a group of guys who kind PUP*. he clipped and saved, he waited four to misinterpreted Later, after the strange event, his brush in his mouth and started scrubb- of the contest and six weeks for he washed only in side to side and wanted SO close relatives would express shock and reply, ing violently, diagonally, thought I more names with cold water, he always checked his any way but up and down, dismay at his action. How could he do "and trie the initials J.C., and now I have 70 listings to keep phone costs down, and foaming, toothpaste pouring such a thing? his mother would cry, bubbling names (some of them, yes, desperate). he brushed often and saw his dentist jammingher head again and again into out of his mouth made him look like a Namely: June Cleaver, John Connally, twice a year. In the morning be dog. the edge of her hand-carved Norwegian would rabid He snarled and growled and Jimmy Cagney, Jim Carroll, James wake up after a mahogany coffee table. Father would, full eight hours of sleep god did it feel good. IN- Clark, JohnCabot, Jack Cassady, James and make sure be lifted the lid and fold DEPENDENCE!!! The claw helplessly at his own bald head, intensity of the Cook, John Calvin, Joannie Cunn up the liner after pouring searching vainly for a tuft of hair to pull STA-FRESH experience made him hyperventilate and ingham, Jacques Clouseau, Jesse Colter, his cereal and certainly would never use dizzy out in grief, screaming, Have we not soon hefelt and hisknees began to Joe Charboneau, and Jim Cook (plus a the milk after the date shown on the car buckle. The raised him correctly? Did we not tell him world was fast fading away. few more ifI have topush it.) ton. He would move to the bathroom Within tocheweveiy bite of his food 32 times' seconds he passed out, and So, Mary, wanna* tryagain? Did we not teach him toread and follow all labeled directions? Did we not give him the proper rules to live by? When Sexual Harrassment withoutknowing it, they wouldright Hits Close therepinpoint the very thing that stood A few weeks ago around 9 p.m., a The confusion, inner struggle, and per- ing helpless in yohr attempts to Charlie face to face against that tube of console female student on campus was on her sonal anxiety that my friend has gone her or sympathize with her tears. toothpaste one day earner, his pupils way to the library when, behind Benson through continuously are things that no There is something that can be done smoking, his hand trembling, his mouth along Market a man grabbed person Street, her snould ever be forced to endure. to prevent this abuse from taking place quivering and strange, gutters! sounds sexually and molested her. Place these unbelieveable weights on again at Santa Clara. Women students coming fromt the back of his throat I'm sure a number of studentson this top of the hectic Santa Clara life-style can use the new Escort Service or if they You see, it was rules that made campus have already heard of this par ever-present and the academic pressures, feel their schedule is too confined by the Charlie do what he did. ticular attack, either through their and the result is unbearable. He alwaysfollowed times that the Service is in operation, them. Always. As R.A.'s or from last week's newspaper. It's a waste of paper for me to go on his had instructed they can look for a friend or companion parents him, he chew- And I'm also sure that I know bow the about what ray friend is going through ed his food thirty-two times, one chew to walk home with from Bannan or Da majority of you reacted to the news: "I no one can understand. Rather, let's for each and it would ly Science at midnight. Guys can look tooth, take him don't believe it", "What a bummer", consider something else for a minute. hours to finish a hamburger. Very often around as they leave the library or That's a shame", and soforth. The odd Each one of us, male or female, has at in high school he would be late for class Leavey for a girl they might know who thing is that, although a woman was least one woman in our lives some as he sat in the cafeteria patiently chew- b walking back to her dorm alone and sexually abused and badly injured, not girl we know, with whom we ing away at his jcllo chomp chomp attend offer to walk with her. Or a student can many students will give the incident classes, party on weekends, or with chomp 32 times so hewouldn'tchoke simply call up a friend who might be in much more thought simply because it whom we occasionally eat in on it. He never questioned the rule. He Benson. terested in going to the same place and didn't hit close enough to home. My Now, let us say that this girl, this friend never stopped to think thatyoucouldn't arrange to walk together. Afterall, what viewpoint is a little different, though. that each of us has and cares is choke on jcllo anyway, even if you in- about, are friends for? The woman who was attacked is a good sexually molested or raped on way haled it He just chewed and counted, her The key to eliminating sexual harass friend of mine. to the library some night. Try chewed and counted, chomp chomp, and im- ment on our campus is awareness. The The majority of people, not just agine how you might react one through thirty-two, and if someone when you more that each of usis aware of violence students or just Santa Clara students, find oqt about what your friend has interrupted Ins deep concentration he can't relate to such an at Santa Clara, the more well do to help incident. I have been put through by some sick in- would have to spit out his mouthful and able to protect each other from it. And the been experience how a crime of dividual, who may even be a student at start all over. this sort affects a person, individually as Santa fewer the number ofwomen who will be Clara. Think about how she forced en well as in her relationships with others. might to endure what my friend is 10February 19,1981T5C feel, and how you might feel, be- during now. COLUMNS The Myth of a Truly Free Economy ByROBERT FREEMAN that the government first gained a and extravagance which could and by means of realistic models: Wc need to semblance of control over economic should be eliminated. Perhaps transfer begin to reassess this myth of competi A curious breed of "born-again fluctuations. payments food stamps, social securi- tion. Capitalism'' seems to have gripped the Then the boom of the twenties gave ty, bail-outs to failing corporations Of all of our collective and willful way to the country in the past few months. It is bust of the thirties. For ten should be reduced. Just as surely there cultural delusions this is surely one of years manifest in a cry for "Hands Off by business demonstrated that it are regulations that have gone beyond the most widespread and dangerous We government, a call for "deregulation'* of could not on its own generate a suffi- their intent and now stifle productivity. don't live in a perfectly competitive the economy. cient level of economic activity to world, or even anything Still, this cannot be a rationalization resembling one. The movement is the latest response employ all of the nation'sresources. On- It's doubtful we ever will. The only for accepting the massively un- to a growing suspicion of burgeoning ly by intervention of the government in place it exists is in economics texts competitive structures which typify so and bureaucracy in the federal government WorldWar II did the economy ever pull in the minds of the most much of our economy. For nowhere in pathologically and of government in general. out of the Depression. naive. In the hands of those An arm- the diverse lexicons of political seeking long array of alphabetical agencies that But not only is that trouble-free theory, power it is simply ideology. economic theory, and common sense, oversee virtually every aspect dreamland exactly that, a fantasy, the more realistic of are the conclusions on this so A conception of our American life have sired modern day U.S. economy could no point some bad resoundingly unanimous: that left unfet- economy is called for one which publicity lately more return to the form of its historical and a lot of people are tered, concentrated power, whether acknowledges the existence of sure they beginnings than could a frog, by some could do with a lot less super- political or economicwill ultimately pro preponderant economic power and pro- vision. magical process of legislative wand- ve ppdaCallnf our. . videsthe means to control it. This power the freedoms.. ' waving, become tadpole'; J Proponents of "deregulation'' paint a That is just rUS" aWty ib whfiu ImcesT'ng way every federal regulation as just another not the it works. markets, to operate in a bath of waste Ours is not flake in the growing institutional the small, fragmented ". and inefficiency withouT meaningful ac- cluster cap- ..deregulation call snowball of governmental interference of individual workshops that for countability, to monopolize access to and meddling. Amid dire prophecies of tured Adam Smith's imagination. resources and capital and thereby it is the most straws and camels' backs, Rather, technologically ad- a return to a free market wealth. Worst, it is the power to buy call for a return to a free market vanced, materially prolific, and finan- and sell legislatures the ultimate economy, a way of life when things cially concentrated economy in the economy, a way forfeiture of our right to self- were easier, less complicated. history of the world. This last attribute of life determination. bears closer inspection. This is not simply a challenge to far the outstanding characteristic By when thing? were easier..." economists to give us newer and better of today's economy is "...oligopoly in America's that the vast bulk ideas. A quick look at their track record of production is carried out by a very on this matter is enough to warrant ge- * producers. small number of very large The net of this should be obvious. nuine despair. Rather, it is a call for a industrial structure makes giants truly Several- of these industrial have Those free-marketeers who are new consciousness on the part of all assets greater than many of the world's concerned with creating a more com- thinking people interested in political a 'return to competition' nations. No fewer than twenty have petitive economy need to find a dif- and economic freedom. Such a new con- sales measured in the tens of billions of ferent tree up which to bark. Far better sciousness will not be developed quickly, all but impossible." dollars. fare than unleashing Corporate nor easily, nor without considerable Exxon's 1979 sales alone were more Capitalism would be a demand for resistance. Still, we must begin. than three times greater than the total stricterenforcement andpenalties under Back "then" (so the assumption goes) In the meantime, meaningful control federal outlays 1979for com- already existing antitrust statues which inflations, recessions, devaluations, in Justice, of monopoly and oligopoly must not be munity and regional development, seem to go largely ignored. credit-crunches, and energy crises were abandoned. Detractors have made all primary, secondary, and higher educa- simply ogres out of fairy tales, conjured government regulation a scapegoat of tion all combined! Triple. Its 1979 sales Many of these laws have been on the up to scare children and demonstrate sorts, a red herring designed to throw were 88 times greater than the total books since 1890 and are designed to the of immoderate behavior. the hounds off the scent Government hazards federal outlays for consumer and oc- preserve competition. They can't turn They easily by simply has become a whipping-boy for a weary could be retired cupational health and safety. One com- back the clock a generation or even a closing the book, and drifting back off to public who want no more than to pany. decade, but they can help retard or pre- sleep, whereupon birds would sing, the empires believe that things will be ailright From another perspective, less than vent the spread of the corporate air would again pure, and life would Competition is not born of industrial be one percent of all financial corporations "which long ago heralded the deathknell continue carefree and unabated. So, at competition industry. might and consumer impotence, nor own more than 60 percent of all finan- for in American least goes the myth. enlightened government ofhysteria. It is cial assets. Similarly dramatic patterns The reality, of course, is quite dif- An alternative, both more difficult high time that the "deregulation" carpet- exist in manufacturing, transportation, ferent Most of our economic woes are and unlikely, is possible. It recommends baggers be exposed for what they are communication, energy and public as old as economies themselves. Ancient itself according to realism and the and the public discussion be brought utilities. Economists call this oligopoly. Roman governments repeatedly enhanced benefits of dealing withreality back to facts. It is the fact of pervasive oligopoly in devalued their monies, even going so far industrial structure which as making coins with holes in them, and America's makes a "return to competition" all but it was the discovery of gold in the "New Violence Worse Than Threats 1 impossible. Oligopoly is achieved by kill- World' that wreaked such inflationary ing off competition, not by fostering it. havoc on Europe's mercantilist Editor, Editors note. We regret that a more thorough In Its intent is to restrict the numbers of economies. During the American I cannot understand why The Santa'Clan instigation Into the recent sexual assault of the competitors and divide up bet- would devote onJy one shortparagraph to the mat not possible. But it has Revolution the Continental Congress in- profits Simla' Clam woman is ween a wealthier few. It reduces total ter of a sexual assault that happened on campus been the case, as it is now. thatpeople just flated the currency by 120 times until it often output, lessens the number of alter- January 26, and then spendnearly four full pages dont like to talk about incidents that have ter was literally "not worth a continental." on the matter of verbal and written racist attacks natives for buyers, artificially raises rifled them. / The country struggled through its that began to occur on February 8. Racism is a prices, and creates insurmountable bar- serious matter, no doubt... But feel that an ac- first century under a constantly faltering I The woman who was recently assaulted has riers toprohibit new firms from entering tual violent sexual assault on campus is a bimetallic standard and finan- this rightfully requested that she not be questioned repeated much serious than threats of physical the market. It is the most potent anti- more matter about the Incident, and we believe that we must cial panics were the dominant economic violence that were never carried out competitive force in America today. respect her wishes. event throughout the 19th century. It What are the reasons behind such dispropor- And as to government? Doubtless was not until 1914 with the establish- tionate coverage of these two issues? there is much fraud, waste, inefficiency, ment of the Federal Reserve System Nam* wltrnld by requoat TSC February 19.1981 11 Get the edge! Prepare to take the ■ '■

WIWTW Ml Graduate Record Exam PIZZA Saturdays. March 14,21, 28, April 4,11,1981 9a.m.-12:30 p.m., Business Classroom 110, 241-2850 SJSU campus Bellomy including materials 700 Orders here Total cost is S7O at Park Ave. for or to go For further information: *$ Office of Continuing Education Journalism Classroom Bldg. 1368 LUNCH SPECIAL San Jose State University San Jose, CA 95192 i (408)277-2182 I

* s**j >A 4 \*~i w-3 M- San Jose University One oven baked sandwich with the purchase of a State salad at the regular price of $1.50, from our salad bar.

Offer good between 11:00am-2:00pm any day of the week. Expires Feb. 26,1981 Chemists& Lab Technicians A CAREER Are you seeking a challenging position in the medical diagnostics industry? If so, Syva offers career growth in a stimulating environ- ment in our rapidly expanding Cupertino facility. We are currently IN THE CHIPS seeking chemists and part time and full time lab technicians with a degree in Chemistry, Biochemistry or a related science for the If you're planning a career In Engineering, Finance. Marketing, following areas: Immuno Production, Quality Control and Quality or Data Processing, we know you're seriously considering the Assurance. Opportunities are also available in Chemical Production semiconductor industry. We'd like to offer a little piece of advice: for individuals with a degree in Organic Chemistry and preferably Choose the company that will give you the best opportunitiesright experience in Organic Synthesis and Protein Chemistry. away. Choose AMD. Advanced Micro Devices started out a little over a decade ago with eight of the best people in the industry and a dream. Today, we're at the top of the integrated circuit field with 9,000 of the On Campus Interviews best—and friendliest—people, $225 million in sales, and over 800 products. We'restill growing fast, with thebest career opportunities Friday, February 20 toput you right in the chips with us. Meet our employment representative for an on campus inter- view on Friday, February 20. Contact your Career Planning and Placement Office for more information. On-Campus Syva offers a generous benefits package, tuition reimbursement and scholarship programs. If you qualify and won't be able to meet with Interviews us on Friday, please send your resume to Sharon Matiunway Syva, 20400 Mariani Avenue, Cupertino, CA 95014. We are committed Friday, February 27 to an equal opportunity employment hiring policy m/f /h.

Make an appointment today with your Career Planning & Place- ment Center. Or, for more information on AMD, call Salty Hazard TOLL FREE at (800) 538-8450. (In California, can (408) 732-2400, extension 2799.) Advanced Micro Devices, 901 ThompsonPlace, M/t 57, Sunnyvale, CatHornla 94099. An equal opportunity employer.

a Advanced Mkro Devices A Syntax Company

12February 19,1981 TSC WHAT'S HAPPENING Thursday 8:30 pm -1 am at the Holiday Inn. Bids tig Egg. Breaking Egg. Whatever Hap 19 are $lO and are available at the Info Monday 23 pened to Space Food Sticks?, and Bind Booth. (f Paradise. No charge. Kwame Tore (Stokely Carmichael) will speak on Pan-Africanism at 7 pm in the The Men's Varsity Basketball Team Self with Tear Gas, a pro- Room. Admission is free. Defense There will a Prohibitionparty Williman All plays at Saint Mary's tonight at 7:30 gram sponsored by the Santa Clara be are invited to attend. sponsored by the Junior students pm. Tickets are available at the Info Chapter of California Women in Higher Class today 4 6 30 Booth. Anyone who can't attend can Education will be held tonight from from pm in Pipcstagc. Admission workshop on the and con- is $2. Pizza and rootbeer be served. A problems here the play by play on KSCU 89. 6:30 to 10:30 pm in O'Connor 108. The will your FM cerns ofbecoming an adult in fami- cost is $l2 for the course plus certifica- ly of origin entitled: Am I my Parents' The Women's Varsity an charge of $9 Tennis Team tion. There is additional KSCU in conjunction with the ASUSC keeper? will be held tonight from 7-8:30 plays San Francisco San Jose or $lO if Staeaat home today for tear gas bought in will sponsor the sixth video concert in Benson 205. Understandwhat's going at 2 pm. it is bought on campus the night of the on next time you visit your home! The tonight at 7:30 pm and 9 pm in Club 66. class. Sign ups and $l2 pre payment fee Featured entertainers will be Fleetwood program is offered by Lyn Wyman in at the Grants and are required Mac. Admission is free. the Student Development Services Of- Saturday 21 Fellowships Office at the rear of Varsi. fice. Everyone is invited to a Fashion Show The course will be repeated tomorrow at sponsored the same time and place. tonight There will be a Red'Cross Blood by the HSU. and the Black The film La Perk will be shown Alumni Chapter this afternoon at 2 pm at 7:30 pm in Daly Science 207. It is bas Drive in the Benson Parlors today from Varsity team in Benson Center. Admission is $5 per The Women's Softball ed on John Steinbeck's The Pearl, and is 9am- 3 pm. Give the gift of life. Give will play at Mission College today at person. For more information, contact in Spanish. There is no admission Blood. 3:30 pm. All students are invited to sup- the Office of Black Affairs at 9844300. charge. port the team. sponsoring a The BAA is champagne ■it ■ * r Mens Varjty Rqsp>tball »~ * "i n i *?&11 —a :.-zcjt£- Mwgfrj* --**" TTqp f, miJk OK ?!b>fcSsr i wlu USF at 8 Sari Club. Students will have the opportuni- face tonight pm in Francisco. Tickets are available at the Tuesday ty to mingle with faculty and executives 24 as well as with each other. There will be info Booth. The game will be aired on Everyone is invited to a Soul Food Din- representatives from many companies KSCU beginning at 7:40. ner tonight at 5 pm in the Benson The Self Defense with Tear Gas Class Parlors. Admission is $5. For more in- including Macy's, Arthur Anderson, will be repeated tonight at 6:30 pm in formation, contact the Office of Black and IBM. O'Connor 108. For more information, Sunday 22 Affairs at 9844300. see Monday's announcement. There is a meeting of The Food Action The second talk in the Tally series on Auditions for Vanities a play to be Task Force tonight at 7 pm in Campus A Magic Show, sponsored by the Love and Sex Meaningful Sex or performed in the Fess Parker Studio Ministry. Clean, ASUSC will be given tonight at 8 pm in Keeping the Communication will Theatre will be heldtonight. Sign ups - Theatre. for be held tonight from 6:30 8 pm in the Mayer Admission students are being taken in the Theatre Arts Williman Room. If you missed Dr. is $4.50, general admission is $5.50. Department Office. All students are Fridau 20 (or not) Talley last Wednesday, don't welcome to try out. There are scripts presentation. always miss this There's Student films to be shown in Dunne available at the reserve desk or Orradre the first annual "Screw your off- romantic relation- more to know about Basement at 8:30. Such Classics as Fall Library. campus mate" will be heldtonight from ships. WIN $lOO Enter The Santa data'sfirst(that weknow of) annual non-fiction writing contest. There are five categories for university undergraduates only:

NEWS FEATURE FORUM ARTS SPORTS $25 first prize. Any campus or $25 first prize. Human interest $25 first prize. Columns or $25 first prize. Culture, arts or $25 first prize. Biographies, community item presented in or in-depth study of student in- essays of social or political entertainment criticisms or features or anything not standard news form. lerest. New Journalism is significance. Humor, with a which are thoughtful, presently covered by our welcome point, is o-kay. No concert or record reviews, reporters, please. RULES 1.) Articles must be typed, double spaced, and sent to Box 1190 by February 20. 1981 . Must be 500-1500 words. Include name and return address.

2.)You may enter more than one article, but only one per category.

3.) Editors and staff writers are not eligible.

4.) Articles will be judged on style and content by the editors. All decisions are final.

5.) Winners in each category will appear in The Santa Clara in February, and will be eligible for the grand prize of $75. writing makes better reading Better TSC February 19. 1981 13 DANCE/EXERCISE CLASSES also: Ballet * Jazz * Tap * Tumbling * Belly Dancing

Adults UL Is Interviewing PA*€IAFFARI (2 blocks from SCU) BSEE Candidates Feb. 25, 8:30-4:00 Underwriters Laboratories, the oldest and most respected testing company, is interviewing BSEE SANTA CLARA AUTOMOTIVE majors and graduates for several challenging El Camlno Real and rewarding opportunities. These 'positions 3229 Clara - 244-3533 are located in beautiful Santa Clara Valley. Santa (open Saturdays) Please sign up in the placement office immedi- ately. An equal opportunity employer, m f h v. Auto body and paint ' Foreign and domestic Tune-up Overhaul engine Transmissions All mechanical work An mdrprndntl. not-for-profit organisation tf.stnig for publu vi/r/y.

STUDENT - 10 PERCENT DISCOUNT

FOR FOSS m GENTLEMEN BUSINESS SERVICES ONLY I'heses Reports STUDIO & Student Priced 496-6933 Haircuts and Blower Styles Just for You. en en mastercharge >IZ.SU AND VISA 20% DISCOUNT Featuring 244-7500 for students the Finest of Products. Open Mon.-Sat. 9-5, & Thurs. Eve 2086 Walsh Avenue, suite B 67 Washington Street Santa Clara a Santa Clara, CA 95050 14February 19,1991 TSC ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT De Saisset To Display Multi- Media Arts "Models and Miniatures", an exhibit of models of proposed pieces and small works of art by Northern California ar- tists, will be on display in Gallery IV of the De Saisset Museum from February 24 through March 22. An opening reception for the exhibit will be held on Sunday, March 1,from 3 to 5 p.m. in the museum. Artists included in the exhibit will be Michael Bishop, Michael Carey, David Harvey, Sam Hernandez, Bob Jones, Ron Nelson, Randy Ottenberg, Kim Scott, Art Sordillo, Marc Thorpe, and Tom Witt. Their works incorporate various pro- cesses such as bronze-casting and mold- making, and include the use of media such as bronze, wood, paper, and ceramics. Many multi-media pieces will be featured in the exhibit. All of the artists have shown their work previously in Northern California. Hernandez is Chairman of the Art Elsom Eldridge and Stow LaVelle will perform theirfeats of magic In "The Great American Show of Wonder."! Department at Santa Clara, while | at 8:00 pm Fabruary 24th In Mayer Theatre. Nelson is a visiting professor of art from Arizona who is at 'Outstanding Women In teaching SCU. Art' Series Opens Monday THE ORIGINALS: Women in sionist from Philadelphia" the per- Art," a series of films featuring outstan- sonal story of the woman recognized as ding women artists will be presented on one of the five great American artists of four evenings in February and March the 19th century. O’ beginning this Monday, February 23, at S p.m. at the De Saisset Museum. Wednesday, February 25, 5 p.m.: The first series of films on art produc- "Georgia OTCeeffe" a candid inter- ed by American public television, "THE view with the artist about her life and ORIGINALS: Women in Art," is also work and her marriage to legendary the first series concentrating solely on photographer Alfred Stieglitz, recoun- women artists. The films are ting their involvement in the formative biographical documentaries focusing on years of the modern art movement in the integration of the artist's life with America. ￿ K 6'" her work, and on some of the issues ’j S *»* women have faced in becoming and be- Friday, February 27, 5 p.m.: "Louise ing recognized as artists. Nevelson in Process" one of ,*>“ All films will be shown without Americas foremost sculptors is * discussion after the final program on Monday, March 2. Monday, March 2, 5 p.m.: "Helen The schedule of film showings is as Frankenthaler "Toward a New follows: Climate" a film tracing the background and evolution of one of the Monday, February 23, S p.m.: most durableand consistently inventive "Anonymous Was A Woman" an contemporary American artists exploration of the origins ofcurrent folk and "Spirit Catcher - The Art of Betye H 5 art traditions in the everyday creative Saar" a film probing the art, the spirit of the 18th and 19th centuries spirit, the symbols, and the revelations and "Mary Cassatt Impres- of this assemblage artist. TSC February 19, 1981 15 SPORTS Bulldogs Out-foul Broncos Portland Falls Again, 72-65 ByDAVESOREM Garry Mendenhall and Bowers again paced the Broncos' scoring with 20 and The Broncos return to California for 18 respectively. Duffy added 17. the most crucial put of their WCAC The victory in Portland two nights schedule after spotting a pair of games in later was due to a complete reversal of the northwest last week. roles by theBroncos. This time the host After having its five-game win streak Pilots found themselves deep in foul broken at Gonzaga a week ago 74-73, trouble with four starters, among them Sana Clara bounced back to defeat high scorer Jose Slaughter (22 points), Portland 72-65Saturday night A league fouling out. record of 6-3 puts the Broncos in a While Portland hit four more field second-place tit with Gonzaga. Pepper- goals than Santa Clara, the Pilots were dine bested USF 102-99 in overtime last bested 24-9 at the line to miserable 45 week to attain a first-place tie with the percent foul shooting. Dons at 7-2. Duffy's two free throwsbroke a 53-53 Against Gonzaga, theBroncos started tie midway through the second half and cold and struggled to a 33-23 halftime gave theBroncos a lead they never relin- deficit The Bulldogs dominated the quished. Bowers posted 17 points to top boards 18-5 and held their guests to a 30 Bronco scorers, with Derryl Williams percent field goal success. Despite the (16) and Garry MendenhaD (13) not far early trouble, the Broncos fought back behind. to take a 73-72 lead on Bill Duffy's basket with 24 seconds remaining. Santa Clara will complete its longest That lead, which was only the second road trip of the 1981 season this one of the game for the visitors, was weekend, traveling toSt. Mary's College short-lived. After drawing a foul from Friday, Feb. 20and USFSaturday, Feb. Hlgglro Ted W hittington with nine seconds left. 21. Bulldog forward Ken Anderson sank The St. Mary's game will begin at On* two freethrows to rescue Gonzaga. 7:30 pm (1500 KXRX, 7:15 pm) while by Irony was not hard to find in the the Broncos - Dons tilt starts at 8 pm photo Bronco's first loss since January 17th. (7:45 pm, KXRX). Gaels, a TBC Santa Clara set another school foul For the it has been Ktlvta Bawars wm is torit Iram Mm tout Him last wMhand. frustrating league season. Picked by shooting mark, hitting 29 of 31 from the which notched its second league win Thibeaux at 11.7. Thibeaux also paces most Bay Area writers to finish second line for a 93. S percentage. Free throws, over the weekend edging Portland the Geal rebounders with his 6.0 rpg or third the West Coast Athletic Con however, are precisely what killed the in 5049. figure. St Mary's has divebombed into Broncos. Whittington, Mike Norman, ference, Offensively, stellar guard David Vann Defensively, the Gaels are allowing the league pit with its 1-8 conference Kelvin Browers and Gary Hopkins all leads the Gaels in scoring with a 17.1 opponents 77.5 ppg, and being fouled out Gonzaga Santa mark. The Gaels only league victory as topped average, followed by forward Peter (continued topage 18) Clara by hitting 36 of 43 from the stripe. came against cellar partner San Diego, Gaels Swipe Twinbill; Cards' Grame Fires 2-Hitter

ByPAULCROSETTI A potentially successful weekend evolved into disaster, as Santa Clara's varsity baseball team followed a series opening win with a doubfcbeader loss to St Mary's and a 7-2 trouncing at the hands of Stanford on Monday. Rain pushed the St Mary's series back a day, with Santa Clara coming from behind to defeat the Gaels 5-4 Saturday afternoon at Buck Shaw. The Broncos trailed 44) entering the bottom of the sixth. Four consecutive singles cut the Gaels' lead to 4-2. George Gon zalez and David Oliva led off the inning with consecutivesingles and fatter scored on RBI singles by Gary Clarke and Kevin Walters. Mlggkw Santa Clara tied the game in the eighth, when sophomore Mike Beuder Dm* stole second and third, scoring on cat- by cher Mark Drazba's throwing error. pNMo Pinch-hitter Cliff Judd scored the T»C . t.. vJWtto&tomkLQrv*r . .«., . ...,.,..,,.....,.-. ~,,-»... Ttw■WW—SC Htf Suwdbwjnaa*■W*don Into ptoyrt ttwptrtoagrtiwtSUnford. 16l «^»;i«i.i ßt WllKl^mMmK^Km Shooting Woes Plague Women Cagers ByDAVEMELLO Ten of those points came during a 24-9 Santa Clara's women's basketball string that turned a close game into a team played two road games last week, rout in that half. She finished the game but the team might have left its shooting with eight rebounds and an 80 percent touch at home shooting performance (12 of 15) from Shooting a combined total of 31 per- the floor. cent from the floor, the Broncos were Liz Bruno led the Broncos with 20 mauled by Cal 76-58 at Berkeley last points and 15 rebounds, nearly hah* of Saturday, and San Jose State 81-58 at the team total, despite being in -foul San Jose last Tuesday. It dropped the trouble for the last fourteen minutes of Broncos' conference record to 4 6 and the game. Camille Peterson came off the overall total to 14-12. bench to score 14 points, her highest At Spartan Gym, the Broncos were total this year, and Karen Ulmer netted outshot, outrebounded and outplayed. ten points. State made 14 more free throws, shot S 3 Against the Bears, Santa Clara shot a percent to the Broncos 38'percent from horrible 26 percent from the floor while the floor, collected 46 rebounds to their Cal made twice as many field goals on 31, and used a tough zone defense to only IS more shots. The Broncos sank force 22 Bronco turnovers, (most of 26 free throws to theBears' 10 but that them coming from steals and in- only kept the final result from looking tercepted passes). more one-sided. "We made far too many mistakes Lu Ann Gores led the Broncs with 16 against State," said coach Ken Thomp- while Terrißeade scored 11. Bruno had son. "I didn't think we played passively her worst rebounding effort this year as we did against Cal. We tried to attack when* she grabbed only three boards.Cal them but we didn't play smart'' had three players in double figures: Karen Mason and Elinor Banks led Karen Smith with 16, Coieen Galloway the Spartans with 24 points each. with IS and Sandi Satre with 12. "Racin" Mason lived up to her With the road season over, the Bron- nickname in the first halfby netting 14 cos will bid for its first winning season in points and four steals. Banks, mean- history tomorrow night when they play while, recovered from a four-point per- the University of the Pacific at Toso formance to net 20 in the second half. Pavilion. Tip-off is at 7:30 pm. Shooting has baan a problam for the womanhoopatars lataty. The "Toe" Kicks Ruggers to Revenge, 34-11 Last Saturday, the SCUTS traveled to The Gael forwards were unable to more often." win a game (but are undefeated at the Rheem Valley to take on the St. Mary's keep stride with the swifter and more The lis fell to a stronger Gael force, traditional post gamer), were blanked, Gaels in a rematch of an early season conditioned SCUTS' forwards, who 11-6. The only score came late in the 17-0. The only scoring opportunity loss. This time around the SCUTS were scored four of the five tries; the others game when Oregon State transfer, Tom came early in the game when Mike "JB" ready to play and trounced the Gaels, were scored by Dennis "White Shoes'' Haley, scampered in for a try. Don Benham failed toconvert a penaltykick. 34-11, boosting their overall record to Cahill and Mike "I Don't Have A "FG" Bertuccio kicked the conversion This weekend, the SCUTS host 4-2. Nickname'* Barrett. and it looked like the SCUTS had a Bergin Hall. Action begins on Ryan The SCUTS were led by Dennis Head coach Mickey Ording, who was chance. Unfortunately, time ran out on Field at 11:00am. Toe" Potts who drilled four penalty in attendance, was extremely pleased the SCUTS. Ben Tung-e-ay" Fuata had SCUTS NOTES: to all SCUTS: St kicks, one conversion and also scored a with the SCUTS performance. Later at the SCUTS psyched after a pre game Mary's security did find Ed Reidy try. Jeff "Podo" Podesto, excited about the post-gamer, The Mick was quoted as chant, but the Us failed to maintain that hiding behind a camouflaged area after the upcoming weekend, also helped the saying, These guys are great, and they spirit he had mysteriously disappeared from SCUTS by scoring two tries. play good rugby, too; I should attend The pathetic Ills, who have yet to theparty last Saturday. Gaels, Cards Drop Baseballßroncs to 2-8 Overall (continuedfrompage 16) and 5 3 infalling to I 5 in NCBA action. game. game's winning run with two out and The first game was particularly Monday, Santa Claa dropped a 7-2 the bases empty in the ninth. Judd singl- discouraging as Santa Clara squandered decision to Stanford which is ranked ed, stole second and advanced to third a 7-5 lead entering the ninth. With one fourth nationally. Stanford hurler Paul ROMANS on yet another Drazba throwing error. out and two on designated hitter Pat Grame improved his season mark to 4-0 LIQUOR STORE Juddcrossed homeon Ben Snyder's wild Fox lofted a 2-1 fastball off reliever Pat by allowing just two hits, back to back I pitch the right field fence to give doublesby Beuder and Jeff Moscaret to give Santa Claa its second win Larkin over Fine Wines & Liquors of the season. St. Mary's the win. Highlights of the weekend, included Senior Joe Balderston recorded his second baseman Gary Davenport's 4 x 7 Domestic & Imported Disheartened, Santa Clara followed ■■ • first win of the season improving his performance in the St Mary's twinbill - up the loss with a 5 3 defeat in the record to 1-3 with a complete game. and improving his batting average to nightcap. The second game was shorten- Washington St., The Broncos then traveled to Moraga .342. Beuder collected a hit in each of 59 ed to just s'/2 innings due to darkness. for a four games three of which were doubleheader against the Gaels Digaralamo's run-scoring double the and a chance to-even their league mark. Jim proved to be the winning run in that doubles, Instead, Santa Claradropped a pair 8-7 ri! no b«pjj»! avw j-i»-./jtj3 it'xtl*o3iioiB »iT.' wHnW%HWBW 17 SPORTS Miroglio, Drummond Highlight Football Recruit List Suite Clara head football coach Pat back from Napa's Justin-Siena High dred and a 48.5 400 meters. In addition at Santa Clara, along with brothers Jon MaOey announced Wednesday the sign School. He was the MVP of his league he is an outstanding basketball player, and Larry. ing of eleven players to a national letter in both basketball last year, and football and carries a 3.S GPA. STEVE WROBLICKY, 6-6 250 OG, of intent with the Broncos. this past season, placed in the triple The other signees include the follow- Pierce JC All league choice. "At this time we are very pleased with jump in the junior Olympics, and carries ing: MARK WILCOX, 64 230 OT, our progress," said Malley, this year's a 3.3 GPA. This season he hit 73 of 132 TERRY OWARA, 6-3 255 DT, Crespi Capuchino HS, San Bruno All North Northern California Coach of the Year. passes for 1,263 yards and 10 tds. Carmelite HS, Encino All CIF, MVP Peninsula League selection. 3.3 GPA.

"I fed we have signed some of the best From Robert Louis Stevenson High - Del Rey League. First team all league JIM CRANSTON, 6-1 220 LB AU-CCS young talent that we have ever been comes 64 190 pound wide-receiver choice both ways. choke from Leland High in San Jose. associated with." DAVID DRUMMOND. He played ERIC LOBERG, 6 3 215 LB, Terra Lin LEON WORTHY, 6-1 218 NG, An- Heading the list is DAVE quarterback and receiver there and was da HS, All Northern California choice. drew Hill HS, San Jose All MHAL MIROGLIO, a 6-4 205 pound quarter- an AIICCS selection, he runt a 9.8 hun- The third member of his family to play choice. CHRIS BAKER, 6-4 230 OT Aptos HS, All Monterey Bay League choice, 3.7 OPA. KEVIN DUNTON, 6-2 190 LB Menlc- Atberton 2 year All SPAL choice. Will play baseball as well. STACY DAVIS, 6-4 225 OG, Buchser HS - AU-SCVAL choice, 2nd team All SNEAK PREVIEW ccs. Malley said the Broncos will sign several other players in the next few February 23 days.

StarrinK An Intel Recruiting learn Basketball (continuedfrompage 16) outscored by seven points. Part of the reason for those figures is the .466 St. "ALL ABOUT INTEL" Mary's floor shooting percentage and its opponents' .508 field goal ratio.

Twice during die ku decide, technological in nova If you're about to receive a degree in the following The Broncos will be gunning for their iiom at Intel Corponlion have revolutionised the world disciplines Electrical Engineering, Computer Science fourth consecutive victory over the first with the semiconductor mem- Engineering. Solid Stale Physics. Chemical Engineering. ory, then with the nucroproccttor computer-on-a-chip or Materials Science—and are interested in careen in Dons on Saturday, but it won't be easy Our biuirmi it biah on this ability to introduce new the design, manufacturing, marketing, or technical against the partisan crowd at War irrhnnlngMi and products To th» end. weVe been sales of Intel products, sign up now in your peactmtm Memorial Gym. The Dons are 195 reipoatsbtr for more than * doren highly innovative office to talk with one of our representatives on campus products that are now industry standards, and at least Or tend your resume to Intel College Relations at one overall and atop the WCAC with a 7-2 sewn major semiconductor fabrication ptoctsju. of our locations in the area of your geographic preference. mark. Today, we arc the indisputable leader in four sig- nificant product areas: semiconductor memory, memory All-America guard candidate Quintin systems, microcomputer components, and micro- CALIFORNIA: 3065Bowers Avenue, Dairy, who scored 26 points at Santa And from computer systems tales of just S 4 million in Santa Clara, C A 9505 L Clara last month, is the USF gunner 1970. we Ve grown to over J660 million in revenues in 1979 top How did we do that in such a short period of time? OREGON: 5200 N.E. Elan Young averaging 21.5 ppg. Center Wallace Bryant follows at 17.2 and forward every level from management to staff support. Parkway, HUkboro, OR 97123. We'd like you to he in on the excitement and the John Hegwood is next at 15.6. Bryant challenge At any of our five Intel locations Santa Clam. ARIZONA/TEXAS/NEW MEXICO: leads the rebounders at 8.7 with help Cakfomia. Portland. Oregon; Phoenix. Arizona; Austin. 6401 W. WilUams Field Road, from 6-8 muscle man Bart Bowers. 7.3 Texas, and Albuquerque. New Mexico. riandler, C AZ 85224. rpg, and Hegwood, 7.6 rpg. Sipi Up for Campus Interviews. The Dons are one of the highest scor- Our recruiting team win be on campus loon to give An equal opportunity employer m/f/h. you a preview about careen at Intel. ing teams in the country with an 82.9 average. They are allowing their op- ponents 74.9 ppg. Santa Clara leads the series with St Mary's 38-27 including an 83-66 victory last month, but the Dons have a 74-66

advantage in games. »

BRONCO NOTES.. .Kelvin Bowers tied a career high with his 18 point! versus Gonzaga before fouling out. He went into the weekend shooting only 46 percent from the foul line, but hit 15 of II in the two games, plus ten in a row against Gon- zaga. . .Garry Mendenhall wis held scoreless in the first half against the Bulldogs, but erupted for 20 second half points, including 14 in the final four minutes and 10seconds.. .57 fouls were call' ed in the Gonzaga game and 48 against Portiaml II men fouled out of the two games and Carroll Williams was whistled for two technicals, his first two in two years... The Broncos raised their team nee throw percentage to .749 and should be na- 18r ll.m*JßfrzT tionally ranked for the second consecutive week.. SPORTS Tally One for SCU Tally one for the University of Santa Clara. Since the embarrassing "Al Endriss Affair," the University had secretly vowed to become increasingly wary in its appointment of persons' unassociated with significant Santa Clara to positions. But, with some heavy support from the Athletic Department and those close to the soccer program, Fr. Rewak Tuesday approved the selection of Ralph Perez as head soccer coach. The "Al Endriss Affair", ypu may recall, occurred last year when Santa Clara hire* the aforementioned as head baseball coach to replace the late Sal Taor- irriiiß. But, by season's end, theBroncos were mired in their first losing season in 18 years and Endriss had virtually erased the possibility of any future successful baseball seasons. On paper, Endriss had all the requirements: a phenomenal coaching record at Redwood High, experience as a player, administrator and teacher, and enough awardsand honorsto fill the average family room. And dur- ing with the selection committee, he greatly impressed the Athletic Board of Governance. But the Board had been fore warned by at least one high ranking alumnus that Endriss would be its "best interview," and that, among his peers, Endriss was as well respected as one may be led to believe. One "minus," given Endriss' qualifications, was, justifiably, overlooked, he had "no ties" with the University, whiofi most likely meant that no one at San H Clara knew him well enough to highly recommend him for the job. But, on the basis ofhis astoun- ding resume, impressive interview and some references who strongly supported him, he was hired. Endriss preached that those players with hard-working attitudes would play regularly, regardless of skill, but his own failure to relate to his players' baseball knowledge and treat them as responsible young adults, and his refusal to accept theresponsibility that he had to work to improve his own program proved to be his downfall. The ensuing result, by May of 1980, was the total destruction of the team's morale and unanimous absense of the players' respect for their coach. Seniors were elated to graduate because they wouldn't have to return to endure another season of "Dirty AC and returning veterans prayed they would get drafted by

anybody . But everybody breathed a collective sigh of relief when Endriss an- nounced he was resigning "for personal reasons.'' So, until now, the score stood: Endriss (and any other job applicants unassociated with the University) 1, The University, 0. But the previously mentioned vow proved short-lived as of Tuesday after- noon. With more than SO applicants, including former assistant; coach Laurie Calloway who dropped out of the running 10 days ago, hungry for the job vacated by Dave Chaplik in November, Athletic Director Pat Malley had to scour the country in search of a qualified candidate. And Malley found one in IOQIn« Perez. Not only i* Perez a member of the ISAA national and regional raters' M board, an accredited member of the U.S. Soccer Federation, a member of the D«VO U.S. National Team coaching staff and 1980 Coach of the Year in the tough by California Collegiate Athletic AssociationJbut his contemporaries speak highly of photo him as bothcoach and teacher. "His primary asset (as coach)," Malleyaffirmed, TSC "is that heis an excellent teacher with a great knowledge of the game."These are qualifications which most of the other SO applicants lacked. And Perez, himself, Tlth Murray dribbtes for tha Top Notch Trtppora In woman's Intramural basketball ac Hon. IM softball achedulas ara avallabl* In LAC now. said Tuesday, after learning of his new position, "All coaches must be good teachers to be successful. I try to convey my knowledge of the game to my players from a teacher's standpoint." I doubtPerez will go so far as to grade his players' knowledge of soccer, but look for some smarter tactics by Santa Clara booters in the future. Though most of the returning players admit that Chaplik was a "great organizer and ad- ministrator," they all agree that he didn't teach them anything they hadn't is! already known about soccer. In 1981, the Broncos will be able to "read" a game, much in the way alinebacker is taught to anticipate the direction ofaplay by for- Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity mations and alligrirnents of an opponent. They should learn to build an attack from the back and counter-attack with more force and success. Perez will inherit a team without a potent scorer, but a good coach will take adantage of his strengths and make it win games. Next year's squad returns the RUSH WEEK mainstay of a defense which limited opponents to just 1.1 goals per game. And though the Broncos will lose their top two scorers, Dev Rendlerand Mark Abele, thereturning front linoof Jim Douglas, Mark Hunter, Chris Mahowald and Mar- Informational meeting this Tuesday Feb. 24th ty Naftel are potentially good scorers.. .given the coaching. in Dunne Basement at 7pm Pat Malley has made the right choice Ralph Pcre? is a qualified soccer coach, who isn't afraid to hustle for the benefit of his program. Though the University More events throughout the week may keep a wary eye on trie performance of Perez and the reaction from the Additional information at Info Booth Players, I feel Endrlss' ghost is long gone and the deficit mentioned above has been squarely evened. Rfi TSC February It, 1981 19 :. iv>'" COMPLETE

<* CHARCOAL-BROILED IfcWYORK

K California Flno*t Submarine tondwlchn Tq Go, or OthirWkß. »f

■inoUidWCho»N*« Y 9V . ir^ ,*.-•.'. The Sandwich King ( "S 7 I ranklin Sired Santa l.tr.i \ ~ Phone: 245-5916 O Mondnv f S.lluiil.iv 10 DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED BEER, QUALITY WINES

LEARN TO FLY AND GET YOUR CAREER OFF THE GROUND

* Wf"'' * J.

AVIATION CAREER OPPORTUNITIES SHANNON AVIATION OFFERS ARE UNLIMITED! 1 Private Pilot Courses • Flight Instructor Courses • Airline Transport Pilot • Aircraft Sales • Commercial Courses • Airline Transport Rating • Corporate Pilot • Flight Instructor • Instrument Course • Helicopter Training • Charter Pilot • Agricultural Pilot • Helicopter Pilot • Aviation Management CAREER COUNSELING

Ask About Our Special $305.00Solo Package & $15.00 Introductory Flight Lesson

nnon CjDrpOratlOn 1144 Coleman Avenue San Jose,California 95110 (408) 292-7800 20 February 19, 1981 TSC