Football Parallel with a twist policies Campus club plays strange sport - rugby Vietnam and Central America compared L SPORTS EXTRA PAGE 48 PAGE 4A TI \ Volume 85, No. 61 Serving The San Jose State University Community Since 1934 Tuesday. November 26. 1985 T-shirt company says A.S. owes $2,200

By David Wenstrom around: Neither contract o as signed by the A.S. The Karen Silcox, co-chairwoman of the Homecoming com- signed by "Karen L. Silcox" and "Carole A. Gumbin," an Daily staff writer A.S. didn't see the first contract until two weeks after mittee. Silcox said the Homecoming committee will be owner of G. West Creations. A T-shirt company is trying to collect $2,200 it says Homecoming and still hasn't seen the second one, said liable for the T-shirts if the outstanding contract is valid. The contract was originally for 250 T-shirts at $2,500 the Associated Students owes it for Homecoming T-shirts. A.S. Controller Gabriel Miramontes. Another committee member, Steve Falb, said, "The with $1,000 as down payment. But those figures were But members of the A.S. said they are not liable for the T- "It's a problem that's going to have to be resolved A.S., as far as G. West Creations is concerned, owes them crossed out and 450 T-shirts at $3,200 was written in. Sil- shirts because they never signed a contract with G. West once we see that (other) contract," said A.S. business ad- $2,200." Falb, the "Homecoming T-shirt chairman before cox's signature is dated Nov. 11 and Gumbin's is dated Creations. ministrator Jean Lenart. Karen (Silcox) threw me out of it," said he acts as an un- Oct. 11. The Homecoming The T-shirts were ordered in October by the Home- committee asked for and received paid "independent agent" for G. West Creations. The contract is not valid because "it's been changed $1,003 from its budget to buy coming committee, an AS.-budgeted group. The commit- 250 Homecoming T-shirts, "I think they have the idea that we're going to take without people initialing the changes," Lenart said. Lenart said. But the committee ended up with 500 Miramontes said. tee ordered twice as many T-shirts as the AS. had agreed T-shirts care of it," "When I signed the contract two weeks ago, Kevin and a bill for $3,200, Miramontes said. G. to be binding to the A.S. to, at a cost of more than three times its $1,000 allocation West Creations "A contract is not supposed Rice told me the A.S. had approved the contract for was paid $1,000 and is trying to to purchase T-shirts. collect the balance of until Gabriel and I sign it." Lenart said. $3,200," Silcox said. $2,200. Both Lenart and Miramontes said they never signed a Rice, treasurer of the Homecoming committee, said Two contracts were signed with G. West Creations, "As far as the A.S. is concerned, they paid out $1,000 contract with G. West Creations and did not see any con- he did not give a contract to Silcox to sign. nut one of them is "invalid" and the other is "floating and they're not going to have to pay any more," said tract until Nov.15. The contract they saw that day was continued hack of section Soapy sitting Courtney family still has hope Search for student continues By David Leland to 4,000 feet," Burt Starr, U.S. ranger Daily staff writer said. The four brothers of the missing The Courtney's have also posted SJSU student are hoping for some- fliers around the Big Sur area and thing to be thankful for this weekend plan to post fliers around SJSU. They as they continue their search. give a description of Ann Marie and After trudging in the rain over continued ba'k of section the weekend with volunteers from Air Force Detachment Five, sta- tioned at Fort Ord, the Courtneys have not lost their determination. De- CalPIRG spite coming up empty-handed one more time, the brothers are still clinging to hope. organizer "We are optimistic something will pop up." Dave Courtney said "We are going to search at least through next Sunday." missing Ann Marie Courtney, 28, was last seen Oct. 25 as she began her hike in By David Wenstrom Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, about 30 Daily staff writer miles south of Monterey. The Monterey County Sheriffs A private investigator is asking Department was called Nov. 11 and for help in his search for a missing began searching the area, using CalPIRG employee at SJSU who was ground crews, helicopters and last seen more than a week ago. trained dogs. They abandoned their Michael O'Kelly, hired by Norris efforts last week. Edson to look for his son, Robert, said A private investigator called in he plans to search William Street by the family has also come up with Park this morning "to rule out any no leads. possibility" of foul play. Twelve volunteers scoured the "No help is going to Ix turned rough terrain beginning last Friday down," O'Kelley said. "If I had 100 with the help of the four Courtney people, it would be great." brothers, Dave, Dan, Brian, Hugh and Ann Marie's brother-in-law, Jeff O'Kelley said he was hired by Smith. All are on leave from their Norris Edson on Saturday to look for jobs in Michigan. Edson's son, who has been missing "We camped out in the rain over from his East St. James Street home the weekend," Dave Courtney said. since Nov. 17. Edson is the SJSU rep- "We did not find a thing. We have run resentative for the California Public into a dead end." Interest Research Group, part of a Courtney said that the Air Force national student organization that has volunteered to come back and lobbies for various public interest is- Mie Schneider Daily staff photographer search next weekend. sues. Not an SJSU student, Edson, 22. searched has is 5'11" tall, 135 pounds, has blue eyes Nursing student Lynn Lavond discovers that babysitting Tower fountain with soap bubbles. Her 3-year-old nephew, The area being been described as very steep and and blond hair. can turn into 'soapy sitting' when someone has filled Derek Smith, initiates a soap fight yesterday. the rugged. Edson's father reported his son's "In a mile it can go from 500 feet continued back of section Green enters plea of Victim deals with life after AIDS not guilty in assault Speaker talks Psychological effects discussed By Denver Lewellen about 50 percent of the people have Professor resigns his posit ion about disease Daily staff writer been told of their diagnosis on the The effects of the AIDS epide- telephone

By David I.eland lice. By Dens er Lewellen mic are spreading beyond the bi- "The sensitivity to the diagno- in the area Daily staff writer The assault occurred Daily staff writer ological to the psychological. sis has not always been present accused of Gym in front of The SJSU instructor north of the Women's "If a killing type of virus strain As part of AIDS Awareness within the medical community. pleaded assaulting a student Oct. 24 the Central Classroom Building at should suddenly arise by mutes, ing around and a regular patron at Week, Steve Morin, Chairman of We're dedicated to do something in Santa by not guilty Monday morning about 6:30 p.m. and was witnessed n . it could, because of the rapid the bath houses, then you were a the California Council on Mental about the training of health officials Court to two Clara County Municipal two women, Julie Nelson and Jill transportation in which we indulge regular candidate for AIDS. But Health, spoke Thursday to a group to be more sensitive to the psycho- resignation, charges of assault. His Gustlin, according to court records. nowadays, be carried to the far cor- when I found out I had AIDS, my of 30 people about the psychological logical issues associated with this effec- handed in a week ago, became "I'm really surprised he didn't ners of the earth and cause the deaths friends and I were both very effects of AIDS. disease."

tive yesterday. plead guilty," said Nelson, a junior of millions of people." startled. I never thought that I par- Morin listed five different Morin listed several issues that Jerry Duane Green, 44, an in- liberal studies major. "If he turned Wendell Stanley, ticipated in high risk behavior. I groups of people who are psycholo- people with AIDS face at the time of not structor in Studies in American Lan- himself in, how could he plead Dec. 12, 1947 didn't consider myself to be that gically affected by AIDS: those who diagnosis aside from the physical guage, did not appear in court but guilty" Nobel prize-winning scientist kind of homosexual." have the disease; those who have effects of deteriorating health: fi- was represented by his San Jose at- Green's attorney said that the Lorenzini said that he was at AIDS Related Complex ( ARC); nancial loss and problems with the torney, Patrick Valencia, who en- plea might be changed to guilty at a John Lorenzini is dying of once confronted with several psy- those who have tested positive for people in their lives, such as family, tered the pleas. later date. AIDS. exposure to the AIDS virus, but friends and lovers. talk to the district at- chological issues to deal with. A pretrial conference was sched- "I have to Last Thursday he spoke to a don't have any symptoms; those "Aside from all of these sec "Now, all of a sudden I was con- uled for Jan. 29 at 1:30 p.m. in Munic- torney and the presiding judge to group of nursing students about the who are 'significant others' of AIDS fronted with a disease that was not things," Morin said, "perhaps one ipal Court. what they have to say about the case. physical and psychological effects patients and those who do not be- only going to take away my life, but of the hardest things for people with "We have our investigators try- Especially about what kind of sen- of the disease. long to high risk groups, but de- it was going to do it in a very slow AIDS to deal with is that the disease ing to find out what happened," Va- tences they hand out in these circum- Lorenzini began by recounting velop psychological 'symptoms' of and painful manner. I knew that the is degenerative. There are socially lencia said. "We have to talk to the stances." Valencia said. his struggle to accept his homosex- the disease unpleasant disease was going to immobilize consequences that witnesses before we decide what our Both counts of assault are misde- uality, his departure from the Mor- The largest group of people suf- arise, such as lesions that appear on and mutilate my body and that I defense will be." meanors and carry a maximum pen- mon Church and the shock he felt fering psychological damage are their faces They must face the fear was going to reach a point where I Green is accused of assaulting alty of one year in county jail and a when he was told he had AIDS. who have the disease of this." would no longer be able to take care those graduate student Susan Lynn Power, fine. "In the fall of 1983," he said, Morin said that a lot of harm The second most likely group lo He had been suspended from of myself. 23, as the result of a "traffic alterca- "when I was diagnosed with AIDS, can come about simply by the way suffer psychologically are those his arrest. tion" earlier in the day. SJSU since the current idea was that most of "It's very difficult for me, even the diagnosis of AIDS is told to the with ARC syndrome, AIDS Related resignation any uni- Powers said in her witness "Due to his the people that had been diagnosed to this day, to conceive or accept patient. Complex ARC patients are those or pro- statement that she was struck across versity disciplinary action were people in the 'fast lane ' the reality that one of these days "People with AIDS obviously that have been infected with the are termi- her chest, had her hair grabbed and ceedings against Green "They figured that if you were soon I may no longer be able to get have a major dilemma to adjust to AIDS virus and can he quite ill. hut was thrown to the ground Green nated," said Dick Staley, SJSU on drugs and if you were out party- continued on page 3A at the time of diagnosis. However, continued on page 3A turned himself in to the campus po- public information director. Page 2A TMETEFED. Tuesday, November 26, 1985/Spartan Daily

Mariann Hansa, Editor Marcos Breton, Coy Editor 32PARIAN J G Griswold, News Editor C Martin Clint Forum Editor Scan VIDA& Sports Editor

EAmy Franklin EWA, Manager Jett ey Metz, Retail Manager Nick Alaga, National Sales Manager Lena Stevens, 'Special Sections Manager Published lot the University and the University Community CSITI10, Productron Manager by the Department of Journalism Scott, Cu op Advertising Manager and Mass Communications. Since (934

News was held hostage to space It is an unavoidable fact of newspaper journalism that what is reported is not always printed. Space dictates what is news. An important story can be held until the news is no longer timely and often, pertinent news never makes it into print. Such is the case with a recent debate at SJSU con- cerning the Strategic Defense Initiative. Circumstances afforded spectators the opportunity to become partici- pants in a spirited dialogue on "Star Wars." Yet, the larger audience never had the chance to read Patricia about it. The story was held hostage to space. What made this event particularly interesting is that Pane it was a debate that never came off Proponents of SDI didn't arrive in time to debate - in fact, one proponent never arrived at all. That left SDI opponents Benoit Morel of the Center for tabilizing," he said, because the opposition simply would International Security and Arms Control and Stanford increase its military strength to counter any defense. and SJSU history Prof. Michael Boll open to questions Arriving too late to debate, SDI proponent retired 114E MAN Wr11411-IE tRoNI-reen4. "NE MAN Jr11.1 114E IRON HAIR. from the audience, which sparked a surprising diver- Navy Capt. John Morse of the High Frontier Organization gence of views between the two opponents. said that the Soviets are not about to undertake a nuclear Morel opposed SDI on a technological basis, but ag- war because their strategy is to work on the human mind. reed that is better to have a defense system with some Morse said the Soviets use the strategy of working on percentage of protection than no defense at all. the human mind through misinformation, by confusing Letter Policy Hooping it Up He said that if SDI were feasible, he would be in favor their enemies and by trying to separate a Soviet enemy of it. However, he said technological breakthroughs from the support of his people. The Spartan Daily encourages readers to would be necessary before SDI is feasible. The United States, Morse said, is the Soviet Union's write letters. Bring them to the Daily office in They have employed "psychological "The system," he said, "must be able to cope with an number one enemy. Dwight Bente! Hall or to the Student Union Infor- warfare" successfully with SDI and "have scared the 'be- attack of 1,400 ICBMs carrying 10,000 warheads and be mation Desk. able to distinguish between decoys and the real missiles." jeezus' out of the real world." This is, of course, the skeleton of what transpired that Boll opposed SDI unequivocally, saying that to pur- All letters must bear the writer's name, sig- day and once again space for this column overrides the chase such a system would be at the price of increasing nature, major, phone number and class standing. instability between the United States and the Soviet importance of the issue. But let it be said that the importance of SDI goes be- Union, and escalating the arms race. The Spartan Daily reserves the right to edit President Ronald Reagan's proposal to make SDI yond the immediacy of day-to-day journalism. All points Leonard technology available to other countries, including the of view should be heard because the effects of SDI are far- letters for libel and length. U.S.S.R., is not realizable, Boll said, "because the Rus- reaching. The editorials and opinions expressed are Hoops sians clearly do not take Reagan seriously." Issues such as SDI should transcend the tyranny of "Anything short of 100 percent success would he des - space with which every journalist is confronted each day. the those of the Daily staff and the authors.

Kennedy's assassin brought an end to innocent era Reason for thanks Twenty-two years ago life seemed simpler, Mickey ment then as there is now; this is not the portrait of the Mantle walloped baseballs out of Yankee Stadium with United States as Utopia. STILL HARD TO believe that I invited Brian IT'S amazing frequency, beef was less than 50 cents a pound Attitude. That is what was different in the Kennedy to my eighth-grade birthday party. At the time, and gas wasn't even 20 cents a gallon. years. we got along really well, and I had no reason to People seemed friendlier. There was a feeling of pros- If a person believes something long enough it can be- believe it would ever be otherwise. perity, and folks even talked of putting a man in space. come true, at least in their minds. The people of the Brian lived down the street from me in one of This was the beginning of the "new frontier." United States believed that our young president was those big one-story houses that wound itself from This era ended Nov. 22, 1963; life ended for one man strong, courageous and would lead our nation into the fu- one corner of the street to the other. It didn't look big and was never the same for the rest of us. ture fearlessly. until you went inside, and then it seemed like rooms The world still does not know why the assassin fired David At about 11 a.m. on Nov. 22, 1963, the principal of my would pop out of the woodwork. his bullet from a window high above the streets of Dallas. junior high school came into my music appreciation In that way. I guess, Brian was a little like his John F. Kennedy was dead, bleeding in the arms of Leland class. She was holding a crumpled tissue in her clenched house. He seemed OK from the outside, but on the his widow, and the world hung its head in shame. fist; her eyes were misty. The class quieted down. We inside he was complex, and you could never get a Kennedy was not a saint. His humanness, revealed in gave her our complete attention and she told us the presi- complete tour of his personality. recent news articles, is all too apparent. dent had been shot and it was not known how severe his At my party it was the big 13 Brian gave me But in order to appreciate the times, one has to re injuries were. one of those felt dartboards that came with a couple that the people of the United States were member I remember being confident that the president would of Velcro-striped balls. Those were the rage back younger then; hope was still a word which could be ap- first third of the 60s ended and we were ushered into an be OK. I had nothing to base that on except blind faith. Of then, and I think we must have spent a good five plied to government, era from which we cannot escape. course, I was wrong. minutes trying it out. We'd fling the plastic spheres Watergate did not exist, Vietnam was still in its "ad- It is like waking from a wonderful dream and trying With sadness and astonishment I spent the weekend toward their destination just to get that feeling of vising" stage and students went to school to attend to go back to sleep to continue the bliss. The dream is in front of the television with my family: the droning of euphoria when the balls stuck to the board (what do not lobe fired at by National Guardsmen. over. classes, the newscasts, the funeral and finally the execution of the you expect from junior high kids?). Lee Harvey Oswald, the peaceful With the shots of I suppose there was as much corruntion in govern - suspected assassin. But at the party. Brian began acting a little funny. He was sort of sitting off in a corner by himself, not even joining us when we played with his Letters to the Editor gift. Everybody began to ask about him. "What's Brian's problem?" they wondered out It's all in the name 'for America' misleading. Mr. Cressy's response is that "In no way has meaning of "America" for me by quoting from the Decla- loud. "Why isn't he having fun like the rest of us?" Students for America made the implication that those ration of Independence: "Life, liberty and the pursuit of Even I started to wonder. Editor, who do not agree with this group's philosophy are not for happiness." It was then that I realized that !didn't know Cressy's letter to This letter is in response to Steve 'America' and thus unpatriotic." The Declaration of Independence transcends any sup- Brian that well that no one knew Brian that well. the editor printed in the Nov. 22 Spartan Daily. Mr. Cres- Consider the flaw in Mr. Cressy's statement by using port of or opposition to any policy of Ronald Reagan, suc- He was a last minute addition to the party's guest sy's letter was in response to Denver Lewellen's opinion my belief as an example: "I am a student for America, cess or defeat of any campus political group and favor or list. You know the type, a nice guy that wouldn't piece in the edition of Nov. 19. but I am not a member of Students for America." In an- disfavor of for Judeo-Christian values cause any problems, and besides it meant an Mr. Lewellen's main theme is that the name "Stu- other context, how many people could make the subtle lathe name "Students for America" misleading? Mr. extra gift. dents for America" is misleading, given the three goals of distinction upon which Mr. Cressy relies? Lewellen concludes that members of the group should So here's the scene: 20 kids are digging into cake that organization: "think about who you really are and what you really rep- and ice cream, there's a lot of talking and laughing, Alternately, try substiting Support of the policies of President Reagan another abstraction such resent," and suggests that the group should "change the and everybody's having a good time. Everybody, as "Motherhood" or "Apple Pie" for "America" in ..- Defeat of the organized left on campus the name." Mr Cressy concludes that "Mr. Lewellen's at- that is, except Brian. Finally.! had to ask him if Returning America to the Judeo-Christian values name of the group. The name and the goals are separate, tack was totally unwarranted and also absurd," and sug- something was the matter. though possibly related. Positive aspects of an abstrac- upon which it is founded. gests that Mr. Lewellen "owes Students for America an "Oh, I'm having a good time," he said, but in a tion like "America" are projected onto the group's goals. I fail to find any evidence in the theme or in the text of apology." I conclude that Students for America should semi-feminine tone! had never heard him use This is not a matter of mere semantics "America" the column to support Mr. Cressy's claim that "We again keep its name if it chooses to do so, but members should before. "It's just that. . well, never mind." has special and unique meaning for the people in see Mr. Lewellen's lashing out and verbally attacking the not deny that the name is misleading I wasn't exactly the same search-for-truth North America, Central America, South America and -at- the conservative tide in America." Mr. Lewellen simply Paul Sonneman all-costs type of guy back then that elsewhere in the world. I can best describe the special lam now ( ? ), so constructs a case that the title "Students for America" is senior I didn't press him for an answer. I let Brian nibble his cake and swirl his ice cream by himself while! my other friends ( 1 joined in a deep discussion about how Tami Roberts and Mary Jo Fletcher were built voN't for eighthgraders. They really were, too. 1)04t 14INK YOU IA 14110110W - THE PARTY I F AFTER didn't see much of ag DOWN ON t,arMVti4L Brian. Oh, occasionally !said hi to him in the lunchroom, but he was beginning to hang -rot 9+40KING3W19 ir R around with girls more often than guys. And they T;c- lONG weren't girlfriends or anything like that, they were WJE Org friend-friends, and they would all get together and WM .40w decorate the school gym for dances and rallies. Right before my very eyes, Brian was turning into one of those high-level estrogen guys. He wasn't exactly a homosexual, but he was like a girl hiding in a guy's body. And every year, around Thanksgiving, I think about that birthday party. I think about how Brian colored his hair in high school, and how his tio girlfriends reminded me of lumberjacks. I think about how Brian was "into fashion,"and how he did well in home economics but lousy in P.E. class. And when Dad starts slicing into the turkey with his electric knife, I give thanks for the life! live.! look at the fine meal placed before me, with the mashed potatoes, bread stuffing, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie, and think about how lucky lam. I give thanks for my home, my friends, and the food I never lack. And! give thanks that I didn't turn out like Brian. Leonard Hoops is the assistant forum editor, and Witier he hopes to reinforce more male stereotypes in the t'htf4 monk rata ,ess future. His columns appear Tuesdays and Thursdays

4 ily Spartan Daily/Tuesday, November 26, 1985 ma7-17,5 Page 3A AIDS diagnosis sends psychological shock waves Victim did not live in 'fast lane' AIDS effects go beyond physical continued from page IA continued from page IA up to provide live is that they are fearful of touch for myself or even to they do not have any of the diseases shower myself. ing anybody, they feel contaminated that have been defined as AIDS by This The fourth group is the friends. is terrifying in many ways. the Centers for Disease Control in My family, relatives and loved ones of family is not there for me. I have Atlanta. had the first three groups. Morin said that to resort to the gay and lesbian Many ARC patients are very fa- 'family' support services are often needed for for the kinds of resources tigued and unable to work. They de- that these people as well, as they suffer many people rely on their blood velop all kinds of physical conditions. relatives for." from extreme depression and worry. we're looking to see a return to It has been well documented that The last group to suffer psycho, Shortly after the diagnosis, Lo- 'moral' values, I think that what we many people have died of ARC. logical effects of AIDS are those who renzini's lover of two years left him. will do is push AIDS into an under- "The problem for ARC patients," have developed depression, anxiety Soon after that, his employer asked ground position. Morin said, "is that they must live in or other purely psychological symp- him why he was "We missing so much would not allow anyone, in- the gray zone. There are enormous toms that mimic the symptoms work and of why he had so many doc- cluding myself, to be willing to work psychological consequences of not AIDS. tor's appointments. or cooperate with medical research- knowing what's going to happen in "These people are often outside Lorenzini told his boss that ers. Many will not he go for medical the future. of risk groups. We're getting a lot of had AIDS. He was fired. care, they'll either go underground or "These people don't know if their reports that school children are hav- Joining the ranks of the continue to go undiagnosed unem- or un- health will continue to deteriorate, or ing 'panic attacks' related to the fear ployed, Lorenzini then lost his treated. We already insur- do have cases if they will actually come down with of AIDS." ranee benefits, all sources like that in parts of income of the United States, AIDS. There are fewer social serv- Morin urged support by everyone and his ability to take care of where people in less himself. fortunate areas ices for ARC patients, fewer support toward people with AIDS, noting that Eventually, he was forced to of the country find that their move families groups, and less general understand- "fag bashings," physical violence di- into a SHANTI housing project, are ashamed of their a so- sexuality and ing in the medical community." rected towards gay people, are on the cial service organization for their diagnosis, lock themselves or AIDS According to Morin, there are increase, and homophobia is leading victims. get locked into bedrooms and left un- about about ten times as many people to discriminitation and ostracism. "I think that the treated most insulting until they die. This is a real- with ARC as there are with AIDS. "Churches could really help a lot and degrading experience," he said, ity. It happens a lot." Morin listed the third largest more than they are," he said. "But so "was standing in line with a bunch of Lorenzini speculated on the posi- group susceptible to the psychologi- many of them are stuck in their 'mor- alcoholics and welfare recipients and tive things that could come from the cal effects of AIDS as the people who ality.' AIDS is going lobe with us for waiting to collect food stamps. I had disease. test positive to the AIDS virus but are a very long time. In the second de- worked so hard to get my college de- "I think that in the Vs and '705 not sick. A recent report by the New cade of the disease, it will be a rare gree and there I was. we were a very sex directed society. England Journal of Medicine reports person retchen Heber Daily staff photographer who has not been affected by "I can remember I would go to We were trying to liberate ourselves that 1.7 million people have tested it. stores way out of my way to use those as far as our sexuality, we wanted Steve Morin, left, introduces AIDS victim positive for the virus. "What we're targeting for," he food John Lorenzini stamps. It was very hard. It's people to accept a variety of life- "These people," Morin said, said, "is that the public policy in Cali- still a very bitter and difficult thing to styles. He concluded by saying that value you can get from life. The issue "must live the rest of their life based fornia will provide direct services for confront that I'm no longer capable "Hopefully, we will begin to treat AIDS has made him get whatever he is not how lam going to deal with my on the assumption that they are capa- people in all of the affected groups. of getting a job or being able to pro- our partners as equals, no matter if can out of life because his time left is death, but what I'm doing with my ble of transmitting the virus to other We have a rather large agenda. The vide for myself." it's a heterosexual relationship, or a so short. life today. It's a lesson that I wish I people A lot of times what we psychological implications of AIDS - Lorenzini warned against a legis- gay or lesbian one, or with ourselves. "There are some values that can had learned before." find in people who have tested posi- are becoming clearer and clearer." lative "return to morality." I hope that we will learn to negotiate be gained from AIDS." he said. "I've "I look at AIDS not as a punish- "One of the most important and honor our partner's limits and gotten a new perspective about life it- ment, but ass challenge. It is a chal- things that we need to be aware of," that we will learn the skills of mating self. I realize that the object of life is lenge that I am meeting, and a chal- he said, "is the legislation of morality and relationships that we've ne- not to survive, not to live forever, but lenge of which I am proud of my that people are looking to see. If glected." to gain knowledge and get whatever response to." Six speakers discuss AIDS public policy FOREIGN STUDENTS! By Michelle King makers, so they don't write legis- percent would refuse to socialize cas- Daily staff writer lotion that ends up hurting the vic- ually with AIDS victims, and 60 per- 'Joking (about AIDS) Public policy-makers in the Val- Urns," Siversten said. cent would never accept transfused TUITION WAIVERS ley are lacking the proper informa- This AIDS panel discussion on blood, Keith said. is a pretty tion on AIDS, said Wiggsy Sivertsen "Public Policy Issues" was held in "As health educators," said Rob- tragic of SJSU Counseling Services at an conjunction with "AIDS Awareness ert Latta, associate director of SJSU statement. . .this AIDS panel Friday. Week" in Morris Dailey Auditorium, Student Health Services, "we must ARE AVAILABLE "People feel that if the public is and it involved six speakers from the identify the problem, prioritize, take isn't something to ignorant, they won't try to experi- SJSU campus who spoke on their per- action, and follow up." ment," she said. spective of the problem and also an- Robert Ingraham. SJSU proles- laugh at.' A few Spring semester "We need to educate the policy swered anonymous written questions sor of biological science, feels that Wiggsy Siversten, from the 30-member audience, people need to be much more aware tuition waivers are counselor More questions were asked at of the graveness of the disease. available for: this event than at others last week. "It's generally considered lobe a accident do gays make up most of the "And joking (about AIDS) is a death warrant," said Ingraham, who AIDS victims in the United States be- Spartan Daily pretty tragic statement," Siversten had a student two years ago at SJSU cause in other places where AIDS ex- Serving the San Jose State said. "We need to take an aggressive who died of AIDS. ists (such as in Africa), it's equal FULL TIME University Community position and tell them that this isn't Ingraham said that one-fourth of among heterosexual men and Since 1934 something to laugh at." all families will have someone who's women. CONTINUING (11CPS 509480) In an AIDS Awareness student gay, so the disease should be under- responded to a question survey given recently by the Student stood. Siversten of why gay people are so defensive. HIGH GRADE POINT Second class postage paid at San Jose Health Advisory Committee, many Father Robert Leger of the Cam - California Member of California Nrms students paper Publishers Association and the As indicated they knew little pus Christian Ministry stressed that "As a member of the gay corn- VISA STUDENTS somated Press Published daily by Soh about AIDS but feared that they AIDS victims should be treated with munity, I've felt the discrimination," Jose Stale University. during the milk*, could get it easily. The year The opinions committee as much loving care as Jesus did will Siversten said. "If this disease had expressed in the paper chairman, are not necessarily those of the Depart Kevin Keith, cited the sur- all kinds of ill people. "To treat them happened to the white heterosexual Applications & ment of Journalism and Mass C001011/ vey results any different would be inappro- information are nicationa the University Administratior community, believe me, thousands or any student or faculty organizatior. Twenty percent felt that AIDS priate," he said, and millions of dollars would have available in Adm. Bldg. 201 Mail subscriptions accepted on a remain victims should be quarantined, 20 Siversten stressed that only by been laid out immediately." der of semester basis Full acadernh PHONE: 277-2261 year, EIS Each semester. $750. Off-cam pus price per copy. 15 cents On -camps - delivery paid for through Associated Stir dents at $ 50 per participating enrolled VD hot line is source of college credit student Phone- Editorial 277-3181 Ad Last day to apply is Dec, 3, 1985 vertising 277-3171 Printed by Fricke l'arks Press By Denver Lewellen "We have volunteers from all my age, who just want to confirm Postmaster. Please send all addre, .. what they've got isn't the worst rections to Spartan Daily, San Jo, . Daily staff writer walks of life," said Dyason-Wood. that University. One Washington Squar. "Social diseases" are worth call- "We start taking them at 16 years of thing in the world and that every. Jose. CA 95192 ing up about. age. It's really a very satisfying job thing will be okay. I can usually tell An estimated 400 people call the because you know you're helping peo- them that." STAFF VD National Hotline in Palo Alto ple." "To be a volunteer," said Dya- daily. One SJSU health science student, Solidarity Week Editor Mariann Hansen son-Wood,"we require a genuine in- With the ever-increasing threats Rob Santos, stayed on at the hot line terest in learning about STD's, sensi- Advertising Manager Franklin Ellen of venereal disease, herpes, AIDS, as a volunteer after his internship Breton tivity, good judgment, maturity, and Crty (Oho, Memos and strains of asymptomatic gonor- was finished. Palestine Day Assistiant City Editor Aaron Crowe a sense of responsibility." rhea, people from all parts of the "I think it's important to do this News Editor J G Griswold After the 15 hour training period, hot kind of work," Santos said. "because Assimant News Editor J M Anderrnat United States are turning to the it is desirable that the volunteers Tues., Nov. 26 Forum Editor C Martin Carrot, line for current information and sup- most health organizations look for work at least four hours a week. Anietant Forum Editor Leonard Hoop, port, said Gwen Dyason-Wood, assis- volunteer work on a person's resume. 11:30 2:30 Feature Editor Tracey Pfeifle' tant director of the VD National "Some days are better than 0th- "I have seen a lot of growth. Sporn Editor Scott Vigallor Hotline. ers," he added, "but it's always good Dyason-Wood added. "in our volun- Umunhum Room Assietant Sports Editor Eric Suety,. "Basically, we're funded to pro- to know you're helping people. I get a leers as they sense what they are Entertainer Editor Christine Frankendir vide information and to refer callers lot of calls from people who are kind doing to help stop the spread of these Special Assignment Beth Johns., to public clinics and private prac- of like rue: students who are around diseases " owesmosewl Steyr. Ai, Photo Editor tices," said the SJSU alumnus. "We 69th AmIstant Photo Editor Julie T., Ammo( Chief Photographer Patrick Fred', v.... - have addresses of qualified clinics and doctors all over the country." Retell Stem Menage; . .Jeffray Mn,, L National Sales Menage, Nick Alagy In California, persons with ques- LI HOLIDAY SALE Mediating Spaced Section. Manager tions about venereal diseases can call 1.1 WhAT do it t friss Steven. toll free 1-800-227-8922. The out of Production Manegsr Liss Carom state number is 1-800-982-5883. -LI Co op Advertising Manager Matthew Scull "It's very different out there," Tunics ANd GREEkS 11. 25% off Rsponers said Dyason-Wood. "In a lot of areas a Lao,, Damn Edward Baker Eugene Castillo. of the United States, sexually trans- I .1 Cronin Gloria J Debowski. Antotnatir 1.1 mitted diseases (STD's) are simply HAVE IN COMMON? Fleishman. Anne Gelhaus. Rob Gibber, P. EVERYTHING David L not discussed. Besides that, in Nancy Kammer, Michelle King. IIi.. land. Mom Lmeallen, Fevl Loomis, Her t. smaller communities, everybody 11 Mukterien. Patrice. Pane. Stave Pipc JO, knows everyone else, and people are DI ( 8 1:00 p . Ni . Musk Hall LI CONCERT il , Ramos. Shen..., Rasmussen, Anne SW too embarrassed to have their symp- Holiday Gift de, Julie Titans. Jack Tordimen, Scott V. toms checked out by their own doc- ===,A Sets too? Camp. Tyrone van Hooydonk. David Wens tors." tram. Dgenti Because it is federally funded, Phologroplun the hotline relies heavily on volun- Ron COcItedlle. V Richard Hero. Gratcher- Dr. !hinter S. Thompson teers to keep itself going. Heber Ken P Ruinard. Mi. Schneider, Sri. rit SJSU health science Prof. Jack StenTen.on appearing at Artists Smolenski has been the coordinator will Pe 0 - Jim Rocker. Nancy Chen Enc awning., of the health science internship pro- But of course! Sheila Neal. Msnusi Rya. Peter Stein gram with the hot line for the past SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY Account Esocollvala five years. Morris Dailey Auditorium Lori BertoluCci. Elizabeth Bulger Eva Ceti "The hot line provides an inval- nes, Emily Chung. Deborah Cook. Diane uable experience for our students," Cris Ow MONDAY DECEMBER 2 Hears Elizabeth Leo. Kay Miller Smolenski said. "It is an excellent Deborah Swisher. Lir Ter Tan background to have. Gwen puts them 9 PM Martnatina Dapatimont Nov 29 &' 30 Rhone romm Cl',. Erickson Robin Johntioii through an extensive training pro- Them...Laws. Lisa fret’. Shsron Taniguchi gram which teaches them commu- Tickets available at BASS & An Doponmont nicaton skills, counseling skills and Friday- Sat ttrclay stuclents $6 general door $8 Both Allendorl Brien BertolLicco Karer everything they need to know about _ Boettcher Supe Fr.borg Sheryl Gault STDs. Cie& Stiovp Chnstin Lundin Sus Mrotk volun- 15.10 10 0110,11105 DCVO'c uur control 0. Thommor, SAN JOSE ART Before going on the lines. Oil' S BASCOM AVE SAN JOSE Notional Account Exocuthma 01 teers go through IS hours of prepara- Atmore kno uel;en at roe COnCALISiori flr Ate Elms. SuRis Maw Keith Semis manuar Pegs' Fooitall tory workshops in which they learn W.01-11111BITIii 408-298-8422 Ke ewe recometwin .401917, 327, 27,7er 4 000501,05 OA r 0 5 557 10 about STD's, role play, and observe 5 30 SUN i2 s other fully trained volunteers. -..---------

Page 4A maapanz 1985/Spartan Daily Tuesday, November 26, _ Spartaguide

To include your information in will hold a brown bag lunch workshop Career Planning and Placement Spartaguide visit the Daily office in on "Stupid Disease" between noon will have a Resume II workshop be- Room 208, second floor of Dwight Ben and 1 p.m today in the Student Union tween 1:30 and 3:30 p.m today in tel Hall Guadalupe Room. For more informa- Business Classroom, Room 4. For Cheryl Flying Twenty will hold a gen- tion contact Virginia O'Reilly at 277- further information contact eral meeting at 7:30 2005 Allmen at 277-2272 p.m today in Aeronautics Building, Room 107. For further information contact Stephen Campus Crusade for Christ will AIESEC, the International Busi- Heesacker at ( 415 ) 989-8323 hold its weekly meeting at 7:15 p.m. ness Association, will hold a greneral today in the Student Union Student meeting at 7 p.m. today at Suzi HILLEL Jewish Student Associa- Council Chambers For further infor- Bauer's house. For more information tion will have a Tuesday lunch and mation contact Don Wilcox at 448- contact the AIESEC office at 277- learn with the Rabbis program 1620. 3458 at noon today at the HILLEL office, 300 The Asian Business League will S. 10th St For more infomation con- The Asian American Christian hold a general meeting on marketing tact Marlene Burak at 294-8311. Fellowhip will hold a general meet- and fund-raising procedures at 7 p.m. ing at 7 p.m. today in the Student today in the Student Union Costanoan The Community Committee for Union Almaden Room. For further Room. For further information con- International Students will have con- information contact Christian Sue at 370-9128. tact Mirasol at 238-5521 versational English tutoring between 10 a.m and noon, and betweem 1 and The Chemistry Department will 3 p.m today and tomorrow in the Ad- Career Planning and Placement hold a seminar on "Dissolution Kinet- ministration Building, Room 222. For will hold a workshop on summer job ics Study on Electron Beam Negative further information contact hunting techniques at 12:30 p.m. Muriel Resist" at 1:30 p.m. today in Duncan Andrew at 279-4575. today in the Student Union Costanoan Hall, Room 505. For more informa- Room. For further information con- tion contact lrena Fairman at 277- tact Cheryl Allmen at 277-2272. HILLEL Jewish Student Associa- 2366 tion will hold an open board and a Continuing planning meeting at 6:30 p.m. today Education will have applications available The Hispanic Business Associa- at Squeezer's (Stevens Creek and Sa- for interna- tional programs all tion will have a general meeting at 5 ratoga) For further information con- this week in Dwight Bente! Hall, p.m. tomorrow in Business Class- tact Marlene Burak at 294-8311. Room 216. For more information contact Lisa Ca- rooms, Room 001. For further infor- pano at 277-3284. mation contact Robert Garcia at 264- The Re-Entry Advisory Program 1196.

Gretchen Heber D,i15 staff photograph. Planning for the summer Debby Tarnopol spoke on behalf of TECNICA, which sends skilled volunteers to Nicaragua Career center offering job-hunting workshop today By Jack Tordjman in the Student Union Costanoan ness card will introduce the candi- Central American policy Daily stall writer Room, will include self employment date to the employer, said June Lim, Christmas is right around the opportunities for students, Flannery Career Planning and Placement ad- corner, but the Career Planning and said. She said students should lock at viser. Therefore it should be written Placement Center has summer their abilities or skills and search for in a clear, precise and comprehen- similar to Vietnam sive manner, Lim said. called plans. a job they could apply those to. "Students need to To help students plan ahead for For instance, a student who understand that a well written and marketable By Patricia Pane afraid to face the tanks of the Somoza Hynds said. their summer jobs, the Career Plan- speaks several foreign la ngages could find a job as a tutor, Flannery resume will sometimes allow them to Daily staff writer regime six years ago. She discussed the Reagan Ad- ning and Placement Center has Central said. A summer job should be a way get an interview," she said. Similarities between "People don't feel it is an unjust ministration's charge that Nicaragua scheduled a workshop on summer Vietnam are sometimes the to match their interests with a means Carolynn Gunn, career adviser, America and state of emergency," Hynds said, is training terrorists from all over job-hunting techniques today. they do exist, said to earn money. said as far as the interview is con- exaggerated, but "and I really believe that if the peo- world. is one of the best an opponent of the Reagan Adminis- "Christmastime Planning the search is one of the cerned students must realize they ple of Nicaragua thought this govern- "Besides running a country that year to plan and orga- tration's foreign policy. periods of the most important steps to get a job. project an image. ment was more repressive than the has been devastated by an earth- coming summer job hunt, "Once again Americans are nize the Flannery said. One of the first steps She said the interviewer will previous one, they'd be out demon- quake, a war and now a counterrevo- Flannery, job developer being lied to and I think that is the said Diane is to do research about the company, usually make assumptions about the strating to show their displeasure. lution . . . and fighting the contras at and Placement danger we're facing here," said Pat- at Career Planning she said. As for applicants, the way the candidate looks within the And that's not happening." the same time, Nicaragua is training workshop. ricia Hynds, a Roman Catholic Mary and coordinator of the "know yourself" concept is essential. first 15 seconds. Hynds also talked about the Rea- every guerrilla, every terrorist in the Knoll lay missionary who spent the She said certain companies or Flannery said. The summer job fair, to be held gan Administration's "White Pa- whole wide world. I don't know how past five years in Nicaragua. "We're agencies have early deadlines for hir- "Students have to learn how to Feb. 12 and 13, was scheduled for ear- pers," which she said purport to sub- they have time to get anything else not getting accurate information ing. For instance, applications for present themselves effectively," she lier this year because employers stantiate arms flow from Nicaragua done if they're running a terrorist from our administration. We're being some national park or federal gov- said. make hiring decisions by March, she to El Salvador and to further justify country club." ernment jobs have to be turned in be- There are few steps students said. The fair will give students an told things that are distortions and U.S. covert activities there. Where Reagan said training ex- sometimes outright lies." fore mid-January. should be aware of, Flannery said. occasion to meet with more than 120 "That charge has never been ists, groups of reporters have fousid 50 people at The workshop, held at 12:30 p.m The resume - the student's busi- employers. Hynds spoke to about able to be substantiated," Hynds nothing. Hynds said. Where Reagan a Central America teach-in in the said. She added that the latest White talked about large shipments of upper pad of the Student Union on arms, people found field hospitals, Friday. She was one of several speak- and where a report of a large Stole( ers who participated in the event 'What is happening to base was to have been built, people English prof masterminds sponsored by five campus organiza- found a sugar refinery, she said. tions: the Central America Solidarity accountability? "What is happening to accounta- Association, the General Union for bility?" Hynds said. "What is hap- Palestinian Students, the All African What is happening to pening to the right for the American fictional campus whodunit People's Revolutionary Party, the the right for the people to decide what kind of policies Pan-Africans and the Intercultural American people are going to sup- Steering Committee. American people to port? What's happening to the sight By Nancy Kawanami Finding the time to write her this summer. And then I will The state of emergency imposed of Congress to oversee our foreign Daily staff writer book has to wait until school send it off places and then we'll by the Nicaraguan government was decide what kind of policy?" &NC English Prof. Marian breaks. see," she said. one example Hynds gave to illustrate The covert operations against Ni- Robinson is writing a murder mys- "I did it when I was in Ireland "I was told that for a full book how the present administration uses policies American caragua have been moved out of the tery book based on a fictional local when the load was a lot easier. you really need an agent. The first misinformation. to CIA because "it was getting too diffi- state university. drafted it, and then I came back thing to do is send it to a good She said the Reagan Administra- people are going cult for people to be able to do what "Actually, it's la second mur- from Ireland last year and didn't agent, and if a good agent accepts tion "screamed" about the restric- support?' they want without accountability and der mystery," Robinson said. "A do anything until over Christmas. it, it's tantamount to having it pub- tions imposed by the Sandinistas and now has been moved to the National couple of years ago I decided to try And then over Christmas, I finished lished because they're very picky, I "suddenly become concerned" that Patricia ilynds, Security Council, which has, in ef- my hand at it, and I wrote one, and the first real draft of it," she said. understand," she said. civil liberties were being restricted. lay missionary fect, very, very little accountabil- let it sit. I got it's done, and I just "It's set at a state university "The name of the (first manu- "I found that kind of funny," ity," she said. the idea for the second one about a called San Pedro State University, script was 'The Zola Papers' and Hynds said, "since the Reagan Ad- Paper, "Revolution Beyond Our Bor- "We also need to realize that in I was in Ireland for six year ago. which is about 80 miles south of San it too had kind of a literary base It ministration has been saying there ders," cites the Reader's Digest as a spite of what the Rambo mentally months and I was doing this thing Francisco in Silicon Valley," she was about a mystery that was have been no civil liberties for the source. seems to be advocating these dais, on literary ( ) said. about the death of Zola, the French past several years." "When you base a document democracy cannot be imposed,ijust and I was reading about this very writer. And, again I just updated it Hynd said she lived in Nicaragua that's supposed to be a government Robinson hopes to finish writ- like revolution cannot be started interesting forgery in the 19th cen- and set it in this general area. It when the first state of emergency document and the sources are . . . from ing her book soon and she has set without," Hynds said. "I think tury and I just took that and up- was sort of a learning process be- took effect in March 1982. It was im- articles from Reader's Digest of her sights on getting it published. it's about time that we recognize that dated it to the 20th century and that cause I've never tried to write a posed, she said, to deal with terrorist other kinds of press releases and these people have a right to decide was the plot." "I foresee finishing it I hope whole book before," she said. activities conducted by the U.S. gov- that's your substantiation for a for- for themselves what system they ernment against the Nicaraguan gov- eign policy to wage a war against an- want, even if it's not made in the ernment. other country, it gets pretty scary," image of the United States." "The (Nicaraguan) government Art Department auction a success is trying to deal with people who are very much trying to undermine the By Tyrone van llooydrink "That's line I would have liked back to the artist. process that the people have chosen Daily staff writer two hundred. There has been in the "Without them, we would have a and are trying to carry out," Hynds Despite some dreary weather past a larger attendance. There was tough time getting by," he said. said. and a low turnout, organizers called a big football game today," she said. Buyer David O'Mara said he She reminded the audience that the fifth annual Art Department Ben- "I was pleased with a lot of student spent about $1,000 at the auction and on May I Reagan announced a state efit Exhibition and Auction on Satur- work, as to how high that went. I was there for the quality of the work. of emergency, which she said was days financial success. think people recognized the quality "We're more interested in the imposed because Nicaragua posed a Out of 89 items up for bid, seven even though the reputation might not art," he said. "It makes it much less security threat to the United States went unsold and the auction collected have been up to the faculty.** painful when it goes to a good cause It also provided Reagan with the about 814,000. said Gallery Director "I think the people we had here simultaneously when we collect the "legal mechanism" to impose a Andy Ostheimer, exhibition and spe- were bidding pretty lively and I think art. It will sit in the collection at trade embargo against the Nicara- cial projects coordinator we did pretty well," said Fred Spratt, home)." guan government, she said CARLOS The items for sale included grad- Art Departent chairman. "We SAN Art Prof. Tony May bought Prof. Though Reagan would say Nica- E loin s itm) uate student and faculty artwork usually get anywhere between $12,000 Geoffrey Bowman's "Diverse," a raguans are afraid to demonstrate 4811; such as paintings, sculptures, and and $16,000 and I expected some- mixed media painting he intendes to against the state of emergency, prints The proceeds of the auction go where in that range this time. hang in his house Hynds said, Nicaraguans weren't 295-5511 to student aid, scholarships, publica- "This helps us to do the things we HOURS tions and special progams in the Art can't do on a regular budget. It al- OPEN 24 Department. lows us to increase the quality of the "I had done an initial tally on ( Art Department) publications, pays what I thought the pieces might go for visiting artists to come in to lec- PRICES for and a lot of them went higher," ture It gives us the opportunity to Term Paper Worries SPECIAL Ostheimer said. "I think there were add to the scholarship fund.** THESE FROM OFFERED some good collectors here." Spratt said that all of the art to be ARE She estimated the number of buy- auctioned is a direct gift to the de- TO 7AM ers at about ISO. partment and no percentage goes Let A-1 Secretarial OM A WEEK and Wordprocessing Services 7 DAIS Attention Foreign Students take the burden off your shoulders so JOSE Deadline for Tuition Waiver is Dec. 3, 1985 Applications & Information are Available in Administration Bldg.,Room 201 10% discount to Pruneyard Towers II all students who 1999 S. Bascom Ave. Ste. 743 Call: 277-2262 show current 1.1). 559-14973 Spartan Daily/Tuesday, November 26, 1985 Cmnanfpunz Page SA ily

Bloom County Berke Breathed The Real World Manuel Ruiz -;v7 *MT AfftWravilY 549 REAM. WWI- iS SC SENS177VE /?i'7 MV NIT 4,i) Avist A ."1 'kE0 far l'ERSONAL ORMAN. REASONAIN4 NOVO MY 17(10( Varty 11X EEICA1/S.5/ON INC MST f6AIWI5T ANICAICA Well.? own, 'In keeping with the interests of . .10N fvW A .100 Afro( yov ktVt-Pcr COI( 7 ISN'T IT T .'4!* Mc Ná% 10 7EN KIPS a particular constituency. 1444 2 'Add nauseum add int initum.' 'Remember the folks back home 4111,i f 'I have lots of adversaries but no.enemies that I can remember.' "Deus ex machina. We must 'guard against the acq- uisition of unwarranted influence whether sought or unsought by the militar industrial comple Daley Jim Bricker

Political rhetoric

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Yesterdaily Erk Eric Kieninger WY TOR LErree you txr A WOW! bONNA BE IN . ram? Wits zissr RiDD/Nly Campus FRDIA PARAAKuir YNcnitiTz. ing about possible legislation brought the $21 million originally budgeted A Si TRE /400E1 -ohs is rHE mos,- Ir SAYS Nolte- TAAr you' vs YOU The California State University on by the spread of AIDS. for the Rec 1:44V oF ria?ME Center project, said J. am. SAL& WO TO May A I'LLber 10 sEC 8114. Pcorma, uoNvargy system has assigned a task force to McCorquodale said -/FE/ EvEg legislation Handel Evans, SJSU executive vice SAWIL POT IN 171e OEM', AND LeNNY PIV Potwar- frIV 1 Ivor rr, look at the legal, ethical and moral which would STAR quarantine AIDS pa- president. TlZeA. MOVIE ! AND I 6er 44VE me. lb gAvE YOUR responses for faculty members or tients 1 would be consistent with past scar 8E-4m ME- VP .1 TOM! wkiAr CARS 1ZIPPED OP: other individuals who may come or? in rulings that quarantined people when Relatives of Ann Marie Court- AND 6Err Twavez- k YOUR /4EARY? contact with those who have con- there were polio and tuberculosis epi- ney, missing SJSU biology student, Ar wARP sPE-E1). tracted AIDS. demics. have enlisted the services of the U.S. up_roi? Air Force. Courtney was last seen State Sen. Dan McCorquodale, Money for a $20,000 study to de- Oct. 25 when she left by herself to go D-San Jose, concluded SJSU AIDS termine how to cool the Recreation camping at Pfeiffer Big Sur State Awareness Week Friday by speculat- and Events Center will come out of Park Classified

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Page 6A Tuesday, November 26, INS/Spartan Daily : T-shirt company seeks A.S.money continued from page IA Silcox said G. West Creations is "in a lot of fi- However, "there's another contractout Mere nancial trouble. She IGumbini contacted me, say floating around," Lenart said. 'As far as the A.S. is ing her company really needed this badly." Lenart and Miramontes met with Silcox on Gumbin said her company "was on a tight Friday and Silcox told them another contract had concerned, they paid out budget" when it approached the Homecoming been signed for 500 T-shirts, Lenart said. $1,000 and they're not going committee for a contract to print the T-shirts. "i Thursday ), when I talked to the T-shirt company, Carole Gumbini said Kevin Rice to have to pay any more.' Falb was in charge of T-shirts before he signed a contract for 500T-shirts," Silcox said. "dropped out," Silcox said. Then Rice was put in Gumbin agreed to mail the contract allegedly Karen Silcox, charge, she said. signed by Rice to Silcox, and Silcox said she would ilomecoming committee Miramontes said 500 T-shirts were delivered bring the contract to Lenart when she got it in the co-chairwoman to the Sigma Chi fraternity where Rice and Falb mail. Silcox said live, but when they were taken to A.S. Business Lenart said yesterday that she had not re- information" about how much of the budget was Office for inventory, 41 T-shirts were missing. ceived the contract. written for T-shirts On Oct. 25, the day before Homecoming, 249 T- "We have to send in a signed contract," Gum- Falb said last week that Silcox made a verbal shirts were delivered to the business office, Mira- bin said. Gumbin said yesterday that she mailed agreement with G. West Creations for 500 T- montes said. The rest were delivered the following the contract for 500 T-shirts on Friday but was shirts. Silcox said she never made a verbal agree- Monday, he said, but 41 were missing. "not at liberty to say who signed it ." ment with the company for 5001-shirts. Rice said the Homecoming commute re- Rice said he did not sign any contracts with G. Falb said he worked with G. West Creations Mw Schoetoer Da ly staff photographer West Creations and was not aware that any con- during Greek Week this year and Homecoming ceived "about 450" T-shirts. tract had been signed. two years ago, and said he arranged for the com- The contract signed by Silcox for 450 T-shirts The Dunca ii Ila II fire destroyed this cabinet "I've never talked with anyone from their pany to work with this year's Homecoming com- at $3,200 works out to $7.11 a T-shirt. The missing company," Rice said. "I'm just the !Homecom- mittee. The company is owned and run by Gumbin contract for 500 T-shirts at $3,200 works out to ing! treasurer. I wrote the budget and that was and a partner, he said. $6.40 per T-shirt. The silk-screened T-shirts have "I don't get any money out of it," Falb said. "I seven colors three on the front, three on the Duncan Hall lab fire Rice said he could "not give any concrete get a free T-shirt and that's about it back and one on the sleeve. accidental, official says Ft!, Herb Muktarian said Stan Vaughn, Building Search on for missing CalPIRG organizer Daily staff writer Trades supervisor. Marshall's of- He said the room was cleaned continued from page IA looking for him, but nothing's come voice about 3 a.m , but did not recog- "Ile soundea line,- Godwin said The State Fire that the Nov. up and the walls were washed. He disappearance to the San Jose Police nize her voice. "I called his place the next night, fice has determined acci- said that the burned lab table is Department on Thursday. "I went to bed about- 4:30 Monday night, and he didn't call me 11 fire in Duncan Hall was One of Edson's four roommates, not in use. a.m. and woke up about 7:30 a.m. His back." dental. O'Kelley said today's SJSU student Curtis, is the last There was a need to get the: search of John room was open, he was gone and I A.S. President Erin O'Doherty Joan Jennings, of the Fire William Street Park for known to have seen Edson. room back in service quickly be?. Edson will person haven't seen him since," Curtis said. said she began to worry about Edson Marshall's office said that the begin at 9 a.m. cause classroom space is so at 111th and East Wil- Curtis said he saw Edson about 2:30 on Wednesday. fire, which burned the end of a lab- ham streets. Edson was seen "Before she showed up, it seemed ited, he said. by an a.m. Monday, Nov. 17. "I was thinking, I hadn't seen oratory table, resulted when a acquaintance walking like they must have been making Vaugn said that plant opera-' on 18th Street "I was studying for an exam," Rob in three days," O'Doherty said. small chemical spill ignited. the lions would rebuild the table over evening of his disappearance. Curtis said. "He was plans because she called about four The chemical apparently walking around "The next day we got a call from Cal - the semester break. and I asked times between 1 a.m, and the time spilled inside a wooden cabinet Sgt. Joe Weinreb, of the San Jose him if he was studying PIRG and they had been trying to Room 413 was unoccupied too and he said no, she showed up." under the lab table, she said. Police Department, said Edson's somebody was contact him." when the fire broke out, and the coming to meet him at the house. Edson's father said his son had One of Edson's She did not identify the chemi- name, age and description were en- roommates called remainder of the building was tered in a national network computer an appointment scheduled with the his father on Wednesday, O'Doherty cal, or what caused its ignition, "He was real anxious and kept evacuated, said Maurice Jones, on Friday. Associated Students adviser on Mon- said, and Edson's father called her but said that the fire in Room 413 staring out the living room window. day and he didn't show up. interim campus police chief. "If anybody stops him for any the next day. was not arson. He seemed real happy about it, so I Edson, a graduate of Springfield The fire also destroyed seve- The only injury in the blaze reason, it would show that he is miss- figured it was a girl." "Rob's dad and myself and a per- ing," Weinreb said "We're still College in Massachusetts, has been son from CalPIRG spent the entire ral ceiling tiles and smoke dam- was one female student that com- Curtis said he heard a woman's working at SJSU since September to day on the phone," she said. "Your aged the walls and windows, in the plained of chest pains, but de- develop a CalPIRG chapter at SJSU. initial reaction is to try and find him fourth floor chemical supply clined medical attention, Jones The Associated Students lets him yourself." room. said. work out of its office in the Student Family continues searc Edson was scheduled to attend a The tables in the laboratory car, Union. room hold glass decanters con- The building was closed for continued from page IA were found in her abandoned CalPIRG conference in Los Angeles where taining various chemicals includ- the remainder of the night, but ask that anyone with information which was parked in the area On the Sunday before Edson dis- last weekend but he didn't show up, but none of these chemi- was open for classes the following contact the Monterey County Sher- she began her hike. appeared, A.S. Secretary Patti O'Doherty said. ing acids, involved. morning. Room 413 was sealed iff's Department. Even though the spraying was McKay saw Edson "between 5 and 7 Edson's father said a possible cals were temporar- until the Fire Marshall and arson Ann Marie Courtney, who moved only to take two hours, Courtney took p.m." walking up 18th Street past her reason for his disapperaance is "due The room has been shethih held, squad had a chance to investigate. to San Jose in 1981, was described by everythingng ownedown except for the home. to pressure or whatever, he's ily repaired so classes can be her landlady, Theresa Aston, as telephone answering machine. dropped out for awhile. That's a defi- "It was semi -dark," McKay said. "honest and beautiful." "She is into natural stuff," Dave nite possibility." just happened to see him walking Aston said the last time she saw Courtney said. "She didn't like that "I Weinreb, who is investigating down the street and we greeted each Courtney was when Aston told her chemical stuff." Edson's case, said he is one of three other. He said he was going to visit a about spraying the apartment for Her brothers are now using the missing persons investigators with friend but he didn't say who. He was bugs answering machine to take calls or the S.J.P.D. The S.J.P.D. is not con- wearing one of those dark blue navy "She moved everything out one (erring information on their missing ducting a full-scale search, Weinreb pea jackets." day before going camping," Aston sister, said, but is questioning acquaint- ADVERTISE Edson called a friend, Marlene said. Assistant City Editor Aaron ances of Edson's. Godwin, at approximately 9:30 p.m., All of Courtney's belongings Crowe contributed to this report. Kathy Gallious, of S.J.P.D, po- Weinreb said. lice records, said "we have over 200 missing persons cases open." 277-3171 CFA lobbies legislators at reception 111=4--=.1Mtir=lir--11M-.Jrwr.-wr=masTrarr.--if=imn=ar;.-Jr=n=Jf==ir---; By Shannon Rasmussen apart from the legislature (control) Daily staff writer is better for the long term,- Senator In an effort to bring California Mello said. INVEST IN Faculty Association members and Mello said he is in support of the 'The board of other faculty together to lobby legis- CFA. He voted for the 1979 act that trustees want to lators informally and address educa- provides for faculty and administra- YOUR tion problems, a reception was held tion to negotiate and for the faculty to move away from a at the University Club Thursday be part of the educational process. night. "The name of the game is to quality institution Approximately ISO people min- make your voices heard up in Sacra- FUTURE gled with the legislators and their mento. You have to make your case," and take money and representatives.The reception gave Mello said. CFA members an opportunity to in- "If the educational community use it for other form policymakers about the CFA falls into the favor of the public, there items.' Come to Spartan Bookstore for a demonstration of the proposals for the 1986 contract, which will be pressure and the legislature MacintoshTM is currently being bargained for with will act," Assemblyman Areias said. Bob Gurion, Apple® and see how hundreds of thousands of the California State University Board Areias said he has been active in ('Fit lobbyist of Trustees. In turn, the legislators the quality of education for a number students around the world are using the Macintosh to improve expressed concern for public educa- of years. He was student body presi- their class performance. tion. dent at Chico State University and he said. It is important for the CFA to Senators Dan McCorqueda le, said he has been frustrated with the get organized and mobilized to rec- Word Processing Financial & Statistical Spread Sheets Ilenry Mello and Assemblyman deterioration of the system. tify this problem. Rusty Areias attended. Representa- "We have to provide insurance "The big need is that all educa- Organizing Notes for Papers Presentation Graphs, Charts, Displays tives from the offices of Senators Al- that the best potential educators will tion is in the same boat and we need Creating Class Note Data Bases Automatic Spell Checking fred Alquist and Rebecca Morgan choose education to prepare your to get adequate funding," Senator and Assemblymen Dominic Cortese, geniuses of tomorrow," Areias said. McCorquedale said. By articulating Reduce Time Studying Ease of Use, Learning Sam Farr, Alister McAlister, Byron Areias said he would support any the problems in lower educational Sher and John Vaseoncellos were reasonable proposed increase in levels, the higher educational levels also present . funds or other needs. will benefit when they get better and The "Legislators' Night" was "The ball is in your court," more prepared students, he said. sponsored by the SJSU chapter of Areias said. The student will benefit if the CFA and the California State Em- Some questions during the legis- professor knows he has a secure base 512K Macintosh, 512K Macintosh ployees Association. lator-teacher interchange concerned and is interested in the educational External "This is going to be a critical lottery funding and the general edu- quality, said English prof. George Disk Drive, $1695 cash or $78/Month* year for us," said Bob Gurion, CFA cation budget. Grant, who is also in charge of the 1A Imagewriter II Printer, lobbyist in Sacramento. "The board Mello said the lottery funds composition program. 512K of trustees want to move away from a should not supplant the current level The reception provided and illus- Carrying Case, Upgrade Kit quality institution and take money of funding and the faculty should in- trated how accessible legislators are $369 cash or $20/Month* and use it for other items." he said. sist that money should be spent on and how helpful they can be as allies $2,195 cash or $101/Montht "We believe in a quality educa things not traditionally spent from for the CFA and the education sys- lion that supports endeavors of fac- the annual budget tem, said Scott Rice, SJSU English ulty and students, and the diversifi- Concerning the annual budget. professor and CFA chapter presi- cation of faculty," Gurion said. Mello said he doesn't like to budget dent. 512K Macintosh, NEW LOWER A small question and answer pe- money for the institution to see it di- The reception was a success on riod demonstrated the legislators' verted because that is deceiving. It is the basis of the attendance and the Imagewriter II Printer support for the educational system in up to the faculty to voice their views question and answer period that took PRICES! California as a whole and not let the diversions take place. place. Rice said. $1895 cash or $87/month* "The independence of the CS. U *No down payment necessary. Offer Valid Until December 31, 1985 Hijack victim's See Spartan Bookstcre Computer / Electronics Department For Details SPECIAL RATES FOR tLimited to stuck on hand. 408/277-3043 or 408/277-3039 mother mourns orEANSIDE AP) The SJSU STUDENTS! mother of slain hijack victim Scarlet! Marie Rogenkamp said Monday she * Resumes $5.00 & Up Word Processed SPARTAN was thankful for the time she spent with her eldest daughter last summer * Term Papers/Thesis $ 1 .00 & Up per page BOOKSTORE now that she must attend to her fune SPARTAN SHOPS VP INC. ra I arrangements Those arrangements, including a 24-Hour Turn-Arounnuality Word Processing Service is our Major Roman Catholic funeral, tentatively are set for Friday after Rogenkamp's body is returned to the United States ELITE SECRETARIAL SERVICES "I was very happy to he with my daughter this past summer,- !Jetty Open Monday Thursday 7:1 5am to 7pm. Friday 7:15am to 5pm, Saturday 10am to 4pm Peterson said in a brief news confer Apple is a registered trademark of Apple Computer. Inc. enee on the lawn of her home here 971-7777 and is j Macintosh is a trademark of McIntosh Laboratory, Inc used with express permission of its owner. about 40 miles north of San New - I SPORTS Section B Spartan Daily/Tuesday, November 26, EXTRA 1985 Why Spartans' football team could not win Rob Gibbaii team, the linger ul blame has at one Daily staff writer time or another pointed at nearly every element of the team. The 1985 SJSU football season might be described as a comedy of A good example is the Fullerton errors except nobody's laughing State game on Oct. 3. The Spartans closed out their SJSU came into the game with a season Saturday night with a 1S-16 tie 1-2 record on the heels of a 35-32 de- against UNLV, giving them a final feat to Utah State, one of the most record of 2-8-1 overall and 2-4-1 in the frustrating losses of the season. PCAA. They finished next-to-last in the PCAA, ahead of only hapless New Analysis Mexico State, whom SJSU beat 32-3 the second week of the season in its After the loss to the Aggies, head only convincing victory. coach Claude Gilbert said his team was "like clay pigeons waiting to be It hasn't been a fun season for the knocked off .'' Spartans, getting blown out in all but two of their losses ( 35-32 to Utah State But going into the game with Ful- and 20-18 to Fullerton State). lerton Slate. the Spartans still had hope, with memories of their 32-3 The most miserable times, trouncing of New Mexico State a few though, came against Pac-10 oppo- weeks earlier dancing in their heads. nents Cal, Stanford, Arizona and Ore- gon, which outscored the Spartans Besides, the game was on ESPN, 165-41, including a 48-21 thrashing by with all the attendant hoopla, and the Cal to open the season and a 41-7 hu- attitude of the team was, "Every- Ken P Ruinard Daily staff photographer miliation by Stanford two weeks thing is starting to gel. We're coming later. together as a team." Freddie Payton of the 1985 Spartan foot shows the frustration ball season after saturday night's 16-16 tie with UNIX As is often the case with a 241-1 continued on page SB The Official Score SJSU whips Sonoma in opener By Rob Gibbany live career meetings. Last year's score easy hoop. Sonoma State forward Charles Taylor Daily staff writer was 84-42. Reggie Owens and Ricky Berry kept scored in the opening seconds game The SJSU basketball team overpow- the small but enthusiastic crowd inter- to SJSU took a 50-25 halftime lead. After give the Cossacks the lead. Following a ered Division III Sonoma State last night, ested, though, with several slams and forging to a 26-point lead in the first half, Spartan miss, Cossack forward beating the Cossacks 90-47. blocks. Karl Car- the second was more of the same, as the stensen hit a 15-footer from the left base- That's all that was left the icing on The Spartans are now officially 1-0, Spartans ran around and over the Cos- line to up the lead to 4-0. Scott the first-game cake. after an earlier exhibition game victory sacks. Though Sonoma State was able to Even after starters Berry, Owens, over Club Bosnia of Yugoslavia. The Cos- maintain the lead for a few minutes - the Vigallon Sonoma State's height disadvantage, Ward Farris and Lance Wyatt had sat sacks are 0-1. score was 6-2 with 17:22 left in the first half with only one player over 6-foot-5, forced a down in the last several minutes of the The question of how good the Spartans continuous stream of outside shots. The the Spartan offense finally came alive a game, the whitewashed continued.Ho- short time later. really are remains to be answered So- scene for most of the second half was of wever, it didn't start out that way early fly by in continued back of section Letting the time noma State has never beaten SJSU in their the Spartans streaking down court for an the game. OU HAVE TO WONDER how much the Spartan football team really wanted to win its season- finale Saturday night against Nevada-Las Vegas. Smart money on Rebels for No, I'm not talking about the decision to punt on PCAA hoop crown fourth down with 27 seconds left in a 16-16 tie game. What By Scott Vigallon tan fans I'm referring to is the decision to let 26 seconds tick off the as the one who sank two free Daily sports editor throws with three seconds , clock when SJSU had a second down at the UNLV 40-yard remaining, giv- When the PCAA basketball season be- ing the Rebels a 60-59 )he with 1 minute, 11 seconds remaining. win over SJSU in the gins Jan. 2, most gambling men will prob- semifinals In this situation, teams especially those that are 2-8 of the PCAA Tournament last ably put their money on Nevada-Las March. -- are usually desperate to get into field goal range and Vegas to win the conference title. either quickly run a play or call a timeout. The Spartans For SJSU, which tied for fourth place did neither. last year with a 10-8 record, the league The situation: season is full of hope. In fact, the PCAA Fresno St. (15-3) Doug Allen hits K.C. Clark for a gain of two yards, coaches, in their preseason poll, picked putting the ball at the Rebels' 40. The clock shows 1:11. the Spartans to finish second behind the For once in what seems like 10 years, Instead of calling one of its two remaining timeouts, SJSU Rebels. the Bulldogs can't rely on the clutch shoot- seems content. The entire conference, however, is ex- ing of Mitch Arnold, who graduated. After the play, the Spartans actually walk back to the pected to be stronger than last year when But don't feel sorry for them because huddle, take their sweet time, then pay for it. When they UNLV was its sole representative in the Coach Boyd Grant always puts a tough finally run the next play, Allen steps out of bounds before, NCAA Tournament. especially defensively team on the floor. throwing and loses 18 yards. Excluding SJSU, here's how the sea- Fresno State returns 6-foot-8 forward The clock shows 0:45. The game is all but over. son stacks up, in order of last year's fin- Jos Kuipers (11.6), forward Brian Salone, During the most crucial part of the game, SJSU ish: center Fred Emerson and guard Marvin wasted 26 valuable seconds. Carter. However, Grant is most high on 6-6 Of course, the obvious rationale is to wait until the freshman forward Mike Mitchell. last possible second to kick afield goal, thus not giving the UNLV (17-1) "He's probably the best freshman I've opponent an opportunity to score. ever had here ability-wise," Grant said. "Nobody has lost more players ( from Now, I know the Spartans are not a good enough "If he can hang in there this year, and last year) than we did. There are four or football team to be so confident that they can: 1) waste with the people we have, I think we can be five returning all-leaguers, but not one is a precious seconds and 2) easily move the ball 20 yards strong next year." Rebel." upfield to set up a "for sure" field goal attempt. Grant, like Tarkanian, can downplay These words, spoken by legendary By the way, SJSU did call a timeout with 29 seconds his team, but nobody else will. coach Jerry Tarkanian, were only meant left when it had the ball on a fourth down at its own 42. to downplay his team's chances of winning The big decision? To punt and settle for a tie. its fourth consecutive PCAA title. In actu- Fullerton St. (11-7) Sure, if the Spartans would have failed in their bid for 'There are so many ality, everyone knows Vegas is once again Nobody has lost a first down 27 yards away, the Rebels would have been in stacked with enough talent to make it the good enough position to attempt a field goal themselves. good coaches in this The Titans made it all the way to the favorite. more players (from last But wasn't that sole timeout used four plays too late? tournament finals last spring and just Granted, UNLV lost *two-time PCAA SWITCHING GEARS: SJSU's volleyball team just conference. I look at the could have the personnel to possibly re- year) than Player of the Year Richly,. Adams, Frank we did. wtin its second straight NorPac title with a perfect 12-0 turn. say, 'Who "Spoon" James and Ed Cafehings, but the record, but the season really hasn't been a success. If you schedule and If they do, Coach George McQuarn There are four or five Rebels do return five quality players.. haven't noticed, the No. 6-ranked (according to the NCAA knows what the key will be. can we beat?' And I'm Guards Anthony Jones (13.3 points OT returning poll) Spartans haven't beaten a team ranked above them. "Rebounding is a real big concern of all-leaguers, game) and Freddie Banks (12.6) are bock, ours," he said. SJSU, 26-6 overall, has lost to No. 1 Pacific twice, No. 2 an optimist.' along with forwards Armortd Gilliam Carl Pitts, a 6-7 junior college trans- but not one is a Rebel.' Stanford three times and No. 4 USC once. Bill Mulligan, ( 11.9), Eldridge Hudson arid Richard Rob- fer, will alleviate some of those concerns. 7 AROUND THE PCAA: Foreign influence on college Jerry Tarkanian, UC-Irvine coach inson. Pitts originally signed with UCLA but basketball is bigger than ever this season. In the PCAA was tiNt.v coach Banks is most remembered by Spar- continued on page 58 alone, there are six imports: SJSU's Manfred Winter (West Germany), Fresno State's Jos Kuipers ( Holland), i -Irvine's Sandy Cladwell ( Australia), and Pacific's lIColger Fuerst (West Germany), Roberto Modest Volleyball team looks toward playoffs Dominican Republic) and Domingo Rosario ( Dominican Q IN mc Republic). By Anne Spandau "Maybe earlier in the season we downplayed the confer- -11 inside , is a ' The PCAA's 19-foot, 9-inch 3-point shot Daily staff writer ence games, but then we realized it is important, and we did ph...a. AIL toward all sea- joke. . . . What's at stake when 10-0-1 Fresno State meets What the volleyball team has been looking have to win it to get to the playoffs again," Montgomery said. consec- 11-0 Bowling Green in the California Bowl on Dec. 14? The son finally came true this weekend as it won its second The first round of the NCAA's begins on Dec. 5 and the site winner may break into the Top Twenty utive NorPac title. will be announced Monday. On Sunday the committee, which rankings. . . . PCAA football teams have posted an 11-22-1 What this means is the Spartans, 26-6 overall and 12-0 in the will decide the places and seedings, will meet. The top four ( 3- record outside of its conference this year. Only Fresno conference, automatically attain an NCAA playoff berth and teams will receive byes for the first round and will see action 0-1 ) and Pacific ( 3-2) have winning records against will try for a repeat performance of last year's Final Four fin- during the regionals.

nonconference foes. The Pac-10, which plays much ish, perhaps even better than No. 4. Montgomery can only speculate on which team the Spar- Spartans tougher teams, is 17-14-1. All this has head coach Dick Montgomery very happy. tans will meet in the first round and hopes it will be at home. runner BACK HOME: Heavy hitter-turned shifty "We're pleased to have won this weekend," he said. "It was "My guess is it might be Long Beach State at home (Spar- in the Pros

K.C. Clark is a cinch to be named SJSU's most valuable very nice for us, especially because we played well." tan Gym), but this is only a guess," he said. "We won't know first- player. Clark may have a harder time attaining Montgomery said the Spartans may have won their confer- until Monday."

team All-PCAA status, but at least he'll have the ence games too easily up to this weekend's games at Oregon and He also said the best bet is for the regionals to be held at Kim Rokamper Page 28 of satisfaction of knowing he's the first two-time winner Oregon State. Oregon finished in second place at 10-2 University of the Pacific campus. He said SJSU put in a bid to the Spartan Daily-KSJS Athlete of the Week The Spartans needed to beat the Ducks in order to win the have the games here but financially it would be better for the award. . . . The SJSU Women's Athletic Department conference. A loss would have left them tied with Oregon, and NCAA to have it at Pacific, especially since UOP will be hosting Dublin dynamo Page 2B knows how to put on a good brunch. At the Anheuser- not guaranteed a playoff spot. the championships next year the Busch Tipoff Classic brunch, the humor was good, "Oregon played well and we had to push to win," Montgom- This year's Final Four will be held in Kalamazoo, Mich atmosphere was nice and the food was tasty. ery said. "We did some nice things out there. It was good for NOTES: SJSU's Lisa Ice was named the NorPac Player of the Sizing up basketball PREDICTIONS: The Spartans' men's us.'' Week for the second time this season She led the Spartans with 38 Page 38 but will NorPac hoops team will finish in second place with a 14-4 record, There was never much doubt that the Spartans wouldn't win kills in the two games this weekend She was named Player of the of the upset league champion UNLV ( 15-3) in the finals the conference. Week for the first week in September and went on to win NorPac for the PCAA Tournament in March. . . . No such luck Before the season began, Montgomery and the NorPac Player of the Month for September If Ice continues her current hit No pads required 48 both Page women's team and the wrestling squad, which will coaches predicted SJSU would finish in first place, The team de- ting percentage of .380. she will set a new Spartan record She finish near their respective cellars. livered. holds the current record of 34 I set in her sophomore year, 1983.

-- ...."1.- vm- Ofporrq Page 2B Tuesday, November 26, 1985/Spartan Dail Still fishing Bokamper continues quest for Super Bowl ring

By Anne Spandau game against the Washington Redskins and but hopefully they'll come back next year," staff writs Daily against the 49ers in last year's Super Bowl, he said. a football game on tele- You're watching both losing efforts Bokamper played football at Milpitas vision. Every once in a while a player's mini- "There was a lot of excitement for me High School. After graduation he went to Con- appears on the screen and, very rarely, bio being in the Bay Area again, back home," Bo- cordia College- in Moorehead, Minn., but the player's school is SJSU. kamper said "However, the loss was a big transferred to San Jose City College soon One of these players who has really made disappointment " after. a name for himself is Kim Boitamper, a de- In 1979 he was named to the Pro Bowl, fensive end for the Miami Dolphins. He came to SJSU in 1974, his junior sea Bokamper, a former All-Pro who has son when he played defensive end. In his se started since his rookie season with the Dol- nior year, the year the Spartans won the phins in 1977, is a 1975 graduate of SJSU. He Spartans in the Pros PCAA title and were sixth in the nation ii was drafted in the first round after gradua- rushing defense, Bokamper had 72 total tion but suffered a knee injury in a preseason tackles, 11 for losses. game against Philadelphia and spent the en- only the third Dolphin linebacker (his posi- "I followed SJSU as a kid, so when I got tire 1976 season on injured reserve. tion at the time) to achieve that honor. His the opportunity to play for them it didn't take "The biggest change from college to the 1978 season was his most impressive, statisti- much time to make the decision," he said. cally. He had 124 total tackles, 79 solos, eight pro's was the competition level," Bokamper Former Spartan head coach, Darryl Rog- said "Pro football is much tougher. It's kind quarterback sacks and one interception. In 1983, in a game against the New York ers, who now coaches the Detroit Lions, re- of a different atmosphere where week after cruited Bokamper from SJCC. week you have to get yourself up for the Jets, Bokamper intercepted a Richard Todd games. It's kind of a grind." pass and ran it back 24 yards for the go-ahead Bokamper said he had heard that Spar- Bokamper has had a successful career touchdown in a 32-14 win. tan Stadium was being expanded but that he with the Dolphins and what he considers his But Bokamper said he misses playing liked it better before when it held 18,000 fans. football at SJSU. biggest moments reflect that. "We'd have 20,000 people come to see "Playing in two Super Bowls, being "My most fun years were at San Jose," he said. "For pure enjoyment of the game, us," he said. "They'd be hanging over the named to the Pro Bowl once and running an bushes and the stands would be packed." interception back for a touchdown were defi- playing college ball is the greatest." nitely highlights," he said. He still keeps his eye on the team, follow- Something to remember though, is that courtesy of Miami Dolphins Bokamper, however, has yet to get that ing SJSU's games. the Spartans were 8-3-1 in 1974 and 9-2 in 1975. Photo elusive Super Bowl ring. He played in the 1983 "I'm rather disappointed in their season Then, the fans had more to cheer about. Kim Bokamper, a 1975 SJSU graduate, a "Killer Bee" for the Dolphins Gymnast adds Irish spring

By Anne Spandau 16 years old and came to California Daily staff writer to visit an uncle who lives in Menlo 'Everyone was very Ah, the world of men's gymnas- Park. tics. Being a bachelor and looking for helpful (at the World Bart Conner, Tim Daggett, a way to give Heery something to do Mitch Gaylord, Brian Heery. and knowing of Heery's interest in Championships), Wait a minute Brian Heery? gymnastics, his uncle, Declan Col- Yes, Brian Heery. lins, sent Heery to a gymnatics especially the Heery, a native of Dublin, Ire- camp put on by SJSU coach Rich Chinese. I learned land, is an SJSU freshman and re- Chew. cently returned from competing in Heery said Chew was impressed the most, though, by the World Championships in Mon- with his potential and suggested he treal. Out of 200 competitors, he try to stay in California and train. watching the placed 140th. Soon after, Heery went to a Stanford But more important than not gymnastics camp put on by Stanford Russians.' finishing high was the experience coach Sadao Hamada, and Hamada Brian Heery, Heery garnered from the competi- echoed Chew's words. gymnast tion. Heery told all this to Collins, and "It was great," he said. "It was his uncle surprised him at the end of the biggest world championships his visit by making it possible for thority of Ireland, a company that since 1983 because all the Eastern - Heery to attend high school and col- recruits large American corpora- bloc nations were there. lege here. tions to set up satellite companies in "This was the first competition He attended Bellarmine Prep Ireland to provide jobs and boost the that I went to where I asked for tips and trained with the Stanford club. economy. from other competitors. They gave He applied to Stanford last year but Through his contacts, Collin me advice on technique and on how was not accepted. So he came to has been trying to set up Irish cor- to remain injury-free. Everyone SJSU in August. porate sponsorships to help Heery fi- was very helpful, especially the Chew is excited to have Heery nancially to continue competing. Chinese. I learned the most, though, as a part of the SJSU program. Chew points out that not only by watching the Russians." "We feel fortunate that we had a was it a big sacrifice for his uncle, This was Ireland's first shot at shot to have Brian here," he said. but also for Heery. competing in the event and Heery "Everything has gone really well "He made the decision to stay was its only representative. for him since he has been here. here and give up his life in Ireland," Heery also competed in the Ju- "Brian has a lot of potential. His Chew said. nior European Championships in only disadvantage is his size ( 5-foot- Heery's interest in gymnastics 1984, the 1984 America's Cup and the 8, 155 pounds), but his determination became reality when he began train- Senior European Championships and love for the sport overcome ing at age 11 in Dublin at the Grange last June. that." Gym. He continued to train with that "The America's Cup was my Heery knows what a big sacri- club until he left for California. first experience with the interna- fice it was for his uncle to suddenly Chew said one of the positive tional competition level," he said. have a teen-ager living with him. things about having Heery at SJSU Heery said he's done all this "He has given me a great deal is his attitude. competition mainly for the experi- of support both financially and emo- "He has an infectious attitude ence. tionally," he said. "It has cost him about the team's goals and about "There are a lot of people in Ire- over 820,000 to support me here." working out," he said. "A lot of land who want to come here and Heery said Collins was able to times club athletes come into col- train to compete, but the opportu- see him in Montreal and that was a lege and are ready to burn out be- Attie Schneider - Daily staff photographer nity isn't always available," he said. big boost for him. cause they've had too much of gym- SJSU gymnast Brian Heery hopes to represent his native Ireland in the 1988 Olympics Heery's opportunity came about Collins is the regional director nastics. But Brian isn't ready for in the summer of 1983 when he was for the Industrial Development Au- burnout."

Wrestlers facing tough competition (-0" .((i’ 1 (

By Anne Spandau not in the best of circumstances. Be- Kida said. "He's going to do very

Deily staff writer cause Kida needed to fill a hole in good this year. The competition at of coach Danny AdvERTisE 277-3171 In the words that weight division, he asked Flores Cal Poly was very tough and he did a tough Kida, the wrestling team has to move up. very well (third place at the Nov. 16 season ahead. "His body style is more of a 118- meet)." "The competition will be very pounder, but we needed someone to Matt Toves will wrestle at 158. tough, maybe even tougher than I an- move up," Kida said. "All the guys Against the Wildcats, Toves kept the ticipated," he said. "The competition are bigger than he is." match close at 4-4 until the third pe- level is really excellent this year Flores lost to the Wildcats' Aaron riod when his strategy began to fall There are five teams in the Jackson 15-4. apart. He lost the match 15-4. Christmas Cards PCAA: SJSU, Fullerton State, Wrestling at 134 will be Greg "Matt made some mental errors Fresno State. Utah State and Cal Eisner. He narrowly lost to Tony Tra- that we have been working on since ...make the season merry and show Luis Obispo. Kida said all of Poly San bucces of Chico State 8-7. the meet," Kida said. "But the desire you've remembered someone special! the opposition have good teams this Kida said Eisner is a good free- to win was there." year and that's what makes it hard style wrestler. Al 167 is Jack Norton, the other for the Spartans this year "Greg needs to adjust to college winner in the Chico State meet. He The preseason began roughly for wrestling," he said. "Improvement hung on to beat Rick Merrill 6-4. Kida SJSU as it lost to Chico State 32-8 last is a slow process because you are said Norton is pretty consistent. Tuesday night. dealing with behavior patterns. The "It looks like he'll be success- After T J Kerr took a job at athletes have seen the technique but ful," Kida said. "His performance Bakersfield at the end of the 1983-84 it's hard to do it in competition." level is where it should be. He's a season, some of the heart and soul of Al 142 is Joe Zamlich. Zamlich is tough mental competitor." the wrestling program left as many another of those wrestlers who has Scott Benson, at 177, is quite a of the team members left, too. Last been displaced from his normal surprise to Kida. year's coach, Dale Kestel, found the weight division. He normally wres- "His potential wasn't observable problems too great and departed. tles at 134, but again had to fill a hole in practices, but during competition Enter Danny Kida. and moved up a division. he really rises to the occasion," Kids "I think the athletes are in the "He's tough and a very hard said. right frame of mind," Kida said worker." Kida said "He's always Benson lost to Phil Scott 6-1. "They want to prove themselves and busy " Jesse Figueroa will be at 190. they've been showing that to nu Zamlich lost to Mike Box 6-4. According to Kida, he could be better S PA RTA since the first day." Ken Brison has been wrestling at than many people think. N

In the 118-pound division. Arnold 150 so far this season although he gen- "I don't know what his potential represent the Spar- 13()()KST( )R Fit Khanababian will erally is a I42 -pounder He beat his is yet," Kids said. "I think people un- SPARTAN SHOPS bp INC. tans. Against Chico State, he lost to Chico State opponent, Don Shippel- derestimate him." Service is our Major Brett MacNamar 8-6. houte, 21-8. Kida said this was very Figueroa, however, was pinned

"Arnold looks good in practices," convincing especially since Shippel- early in his match against Chico Kida said "He needs to show his po- houte regularly wrestles at 150 and State's Anthony Beleu. Kida said at tential in his matches and he hasn't Brison doesn't that time that Figueroa worked him- done that so far There is a difference According to Kida, Brison is defi- self into a corner between practice and competition." nitely a bright spot for the Spartans An of now, Kida doesn't have Andrew Flores will he wrestling this season heavyweight and has to forfeit those AMERJCAN GREE I IN( .6 at 126-pounds and Kids said Flores is "He's an excellent wrestler," matches until he finds one. MCMI.XXXV Amorkon Greerings Corp. Spartan Daily -'Spartan Daily/Tuesday, November 26, 1985 Page 3B Thanksgiving tradition as big as the Super Bowl SHOULD EVERYONE HAVE some sort of show up is an occasional dog that happens to run across tradition to be involved that washes away our pains in, something they can be the field. proud to take part in and look forward to all year THE FIERCENESS of the competition this Stanion Room Only Since that faithful day SIX Thanksgivings ago, rind. BUTyear has changed all that. For the first time, my On however, that little football game has transformed into Thanksgiving Day, six years ago, just such a team has actually been practicing. Because we tiadition was born. something . . .something wonderful.!) is more than just another football game, it has become the Super Bowl of are the founders of the Turkey Bowl game, we don't want .-..-.. As juniors in high school, nine friends and I awoke mud football games - an event. to have our goose cooked by some stud newcomers who early on a cold, wet Thanksgiving morning, unaware that The Turkey Bowl started out as a little game between think they can conquer the seasoned veterans who have we were about to change the shape of the food-filled made the Turkey Bowl what ills today. holiday forever. 10 friends who decided it wuld be a kick to get up on Thanksgiving morning and throw the ball around. Therfore, we have also given our team a name - the We slipped on our best grubbies and wandered down Eric However, the game has grown year by year. Mean Machine. And if we find ourselves in the extremely to the local high school football field. The rain had fallen On Thursday, over 40 guys will take to the field, as unlikely and very doubtful situation where we may in buckets the night before, so the grass more resembled Stanion four teams will take to the mud to battle for the 1985 actually lose, we'll be prepared to take to Burl Reynolds' swampland than a football field. nutty tactics as the quarterback of the Mean Machine in All the better. Turkey Bowl championship. With the growth in popularity of the Turkey Bowl. the film "The Longest Yard." :... At this time of year, the big news in sports is the preparation for Thanksgiving Day has been somewhat Regardless that the level of competition has copege bowl situation - what school is going to what altered. While mom is busy making room for the relatives dramatically increased, the goal of the Turkey Bowl bald, where, when, and why seem to be the burning remains - fun. Win or lose, everyone out on that field qiitstions. and preparing to stuff the bird and mash the potatoes, we have been getting ready for the big game. Thursday will have a great time, especially if the Mean :- But forget all of this. Forget the Rose Bowl, the programs. The Turkey Bowl offers no fancy uniforms, Previously, the majority of the guys who meet out on Machine can churn up a couple of victories. Clgifornia Bowl and even the Tidy Bowl, because there is shapely cheerleaders or officials. the field on Thanksgiving Day had not touched a football And as we eat Thanksgiving dinner later that day, a bawl game that outdoes them all and puts the Stanford- What the Turkey Bowl does offer is a group of friends since the last Turkey Bowl We generally have to each and everyone of us will give thanks -- that we (41 "Big Game" to shame - the Turkey Bowl. dressed in cruddy clothes who go out and kick off the reintroduce ourselves to the football, a. well as the aches survived another Turkey Bowl. ’-:: The Turkey Bowl does not bring together two high- holidays by playing a little mud football. The only money and pains of running up and down thc football field. Eric Stanion is the assistant sports editor and pilkered schools playing on national television and involved is the cash that will be needed to buy detergent to However, that first tackle in the mud piddle that always quarterback of the Mean Machine. His columns appear titling in millions of dollars to their respected athletic wash our mud-stained clothes. The only cheerleaders that seems to appear in the center of the field, is like a fountain every once in a while. - Coaches predict Spartans will finish deep in the NorPac cellar KipScott Van Camp Gabi Neumann, 6-3 Amy I 'ettersen fifth place. seventh with Santa Clara last year. DaNy staff writer and Kris Glidden, also 6-3, should New coach Chris Gobrecht lost The Broncos and last-place San Fran- If the NorPac women's basket- give them plenty of rebounding four starters off of the once 17th- cisco have since left the conference, _1 ball coaches poll is any indication, strength in the middle. The Spartans went 0-2 over the weekend in ranked team, but has only one starter giving the Spartans the distinction of r Miami Dolphins the race for the title should come the Anheuser-Busch tournament and back, forward Lisa Oriard. Oriard being picked for last in 1985-88. gown to two teams: University of Or- were the Dolphins California averaged egon and California. (7-5) seven points per game last Coach Sharon Chatman said the outrebounded 52-32 by the University of season, and shot a NorPac record team needs improvement in the front And SJSU? The Spartans are California coach Gooch Foster .970 free throw percentage, hitting 32 line to reach its goal - a finish in the picked to finish in last place. But who a expects her Bears to finish much Hawaii. The Spartans have one exciting of 33 from the charily stripe. middle of the pack. knpws? Last year's first-place team. higher than last year's fifth place. weapon point guard Dana Foster who One thing is for sure. Gobrecht "Our inexperience up front Uriiversity of Washington, was The Bears, like Oregon, have ng pikked to finish fourth and ended up will have a tough time duplicating shows drastically," Chatman said. most of their team back, and feature Hawaii coach Bill Nepfel called 'one of the last year's Cinderella success. with an perfect league record and 26- an even taller front line than the The Spartans went 0-2 over the 2 overall mark. Ducks. best players we'll face all season.' weekend in the Anheuser-Busch tour- , Here's a rundown of the seven Centers Charlotte Lusschen and WSU (3-8) nament, and were out rebounded 52-32 as very teams in the order in which they are Heli Toikka are 6-8 and 6-4 respec- by University of Hawaii. e World pigked to finish: tively, and both have starting experi- State needs to replace three starters Year Kellie Murphy-Attebery. The 6- The Cugars finished fifth last The Spartans have one exciting ence. Lusschen proved tough in the from 1984, and get over the loss of 2 center averaged 10 points and five season and aren't expected to climb weapon - point guard Dana Foster .ps ), Oregon (6-5) middle last year, breaking the Nor- Brenda Arbuckle, a top scorer and rebounds per game and also earned much higher in 1985-86. - who Hawaii coach Bill Nepfel Pac single game shot block record rebounder who is redshirting after a second team freshman All-American Coach Harold Rhodes does have called "one of the best players we'll The Ducks placed third in the with 13. knee injury. honors. senior forward Marcia Miles, the face all season.’ conference last year, and return with Foster said the team's weakness The Beavers finished in second Newcomer Yvette Roberts, the league's top scorer last year (17.9 av- Foster, who scored 24 points and irned all five starters off of last year's is at point guard, but she's hoping place last year, with a respectable 19- third-best high school long jumper erage) back again. Flanking Miles is had 16 assists for the tournament, ugh, by team. Finnish transfer Mia Kuusisto will 10 overall record, but lost All-Ameri- nationwide last year, is expected to Nikki Mohr, a 5-8 steady performer controlled the offensive tempo for the SJSU coach Sharon Chatman fill the void. Kuusisto averaged 16 can Juli Coleman and center Tanya help right away at forward. Roberts who averaged 10 points and five re- Spartans, and ran circles around her said the Ducks were young in 1984-85, points-per-game in her native coun- Mothershed. The center position, averaged 23 points and 15 rebounds in bounds a game. opponents during the weekend. try, and "she's improving all the however, could but the experience will make them a be a problem. Proba- her last prep year. The guard position is the weak But the Hawaii game proved that time with us," Foster said. ble better team. starter Cindy Ahr averaged only Fresno will also be tough in the link for the Cougars. Senior redshirt Foster needs some help. The coach said any one of four two "They lost a few games last year, points-per-game and played backcourt. where junior Wendy Mar- Pat Broaden was highly touted by That help may come in the form a n Heery, teams could win the title this year: sparingly bat by the end of the season they were last year. tell returns with a 12-point scoring Rhodes last season, but suffered a of forward Japora Smith, who had 21 gymnast the Bears, University of Washington. playing well," Chatman said. average. Martell was fourth in the knee injury and didn't play. This year points and six rebounds against the Oregon, and Fresno State. -Oregon finished the 1984 season nation in free throw percentage with Broaden can finally prove herself, Rainbows. She agreed with the second-place Fresno (8-4) :ompany that at 14-14 overall, but won six of eight an .845 mark. along with freshman Cathy Gonzalez, Chatman also expects freshman prediction for her team. can corpora. at the season's end. The Bulldogs seem to be dupli- who scored 23 points and grabbed 12 starter Teddi Johnson to help the "I think the poll is pretty companies in , Junior guard and All-NorPac much cating the success of rebounds per game as a high school true to form," Foster said. their men's Washington (11-0) team under the basket. and boost the choice Lauri Tennant-Landerholm team. Last year Fresno had its best senior. With all of its inside problems, should lead the offense. She averaged season ever. 20-9 overall, but finished The Huskies may be the most Foster is one of the premier guards in tacts, CoHint 15 points and five assists a game last OSU (8-3) fourth in NorPac. changed team in NorPac. SJSU (3-9) the conference and the young players up Irish col': season. Coach Bob Spencer will build After a 26-2, first-place season in will gain experience as the season help Heery fi- The Ducks front line of 6-foot-4 Picked for third place, Oregon around NorPac Newcomer of the 1984-85, the Huskies are picked for Oh yes, SJSU finished tied for goes on. onpeting. that not only for his uncle,

:ision to stay Letter to the Editor e in Ireland," Division I the way to go gymnastics Division I program draws to this has been displayed twice to thou- To enhance my point, I pose the e began train- Editor: school than amassing large quanti sands of viewers on ESPN. Although following question to Mr. Stanion st the Grange I would like to express my views ties of wins in any lower division these games may not have been the What do the following schools have in rain with that in reference to Eric Stanion's Nov. 20 could bring, the greatest being na- epitome of greatness, the TV expo- common: U.C. Davis, Ft. Valley ifornia. article about Division I football being tional exposure. sure was a valuable asset that no Di- State, Indiana (Pa.), North Ala- the positive too much for SJSU. At the Division I level, Spartan vision II team could ever experience. bama, and Bloomberg? They are cur- eery at SJSU ' Mr. Stanion stated in his article football brings national exposure to Many Spartan alumni are cur- rently the top five football programs that the results of dropping to Divi- SJSU through television coverage, rently active in professional football. in Division II. Now I would like to ious attitude sion II status "could only be posi- alumni in the NFL, and premier Granted, SJSU is not considered a know how many you have heard of. A-15 - 2nds Sara ming Is and about tive." games against other nationally rec- football factory like USC, but we are Mark Bradley there are NOW "A lot of However, I believe that ognized schools. well-represented at the professional junior NOW

ate into col - many more positive aspects that the This year alone, SJSU football level. business burn out be- 65 nuch of gym- 4999 it ready for Keyrolan 11 Velour Spartan scoreboard Save (Shiny material) Training Suit Training Suits Saturday night's 420 Assist % .346 PCAA Football PCAA Soccer 500 Save 65 - SJSU UNLV stets 1364 Digs 1159 NLV SJSU 404 Team (Overall T Tam lOvandi Blocks 307 6 0 NOW -16 First downs 20 53 Solo blocks Fresno (100 1) 7 0 O Nevada-LV117-1-21 Magic Barrel 74 Fresno117-4-11 4 2 Bags 45-107 Rushes -yards 37-118 224 Serving aces 188 Fullerton 15-5-01 4 2 O 173 Passing 217 Nevada-LV15-5-1) 4 2 1 Fullerton 110-9-11 3 2 1599 Now 42 Return yards 17 Player totals Long Beach 16-6-01 4 3 Santa Barbara 18-12-11 3 2 46-31 Comp. -attempts 21-35 Player 11-A A 0 Utah State 13-8-01 3 4 SJSU18-11-21 2 4 si intercepted DeBusk 62-142 1083 253 55 Pacific (5-6-01 2 4 UC-Irvine(5-1 3-2) 2 4 699 Had 2 Pacific 12-13-01 0 6 (11 8-335 Punts 8-262 Watson 39-118 1 52 5 8J8U12-8-11 2 4 111 2-2 Fumbles/lost 3-1 Healy 230-521 9 76 93 NM State 11 10 01 0 7 Hicks 55-147 23 70 34 p-a8 Penalties-yards 11-81 NorPac Field Hockey 30:02 Possession time 29:58 Braymen 147-427 5 113 19 Save Nylon Cook 290-625 60 188 44 Timm Klverall Velcro Kids Material UNLV 7 9 0 0- 18 Spier 3-22 77 140 1 Stanford 19-3-11 6 1 ADVERTISE All Purpose Shoe Save 7 cis SJSU 3 6 7 0- 18 Higgins 246-548 18 208 95 San Jose State 17-6-11 3 4 1 Ice 377-757 8 258 40 California 14-8-11 3 4 1 FOR RESULTS SCORING SUMMARY Ladies' Lo Cut In d show Roberson 20,66 1 24 18 Pacific 14-8-1) 3 4 277-3171 Leg SJSU 'Brown 46 FG 3 5 0 special! Hockey stats Chico t46 -O) Socks -Green 1 run (DiGiovanna kick) SJSU - Nash 28 pass from Carlson Final Warmers Men's Long 113rown kick failed) SJSU OPP 1.INLV Dimry 46 interception return 26 Goals 22 Reg /1 Tube Socks (two point conversion failed) 249 Shots on goal 213 UNLV DiGiovanna 26 PG .104 Shooting average 103 NOW SJSU Clark 3 run (Brown kick) NOW 199 SPARTAN RUSHING Player Totals Save pled( 11-84. Walker 12-41, Allen 8-8, Shots Bast Save 5 25 Stewart 3-7, Carlson 3-1-221. Totals Pbyer at pal Gosh Assists Ave 200 7-118. Green 49 8 1 163 REBEL RUSHING Cafini 3 3 0 1 000 2nds Jones 14-42, Lewis 7-38, Hawthorne Laumans 69 4 1 068 Drew Leigh 4-20, Stallworth 8-19, Green 1.1, Hul- Savelkoul 44 1 1 023 NOW NOW berg 1-1-131. Totals 35-107. Johnston 42 2 1 .048 SPARTAN PASSING Regalia 10 2 2 200 4500/ co- Allen 15-25-1-119, Carlson 8-9-1-98, Dulin 23 5 0 .217 400 Clark 0-1-0-0. Totals 21-35-2-217. Justus 5 1 1 200 2nds REBEL PASSING Dunlap 8 0 2 .000 Training 4, Stallworth 16-30-1-173, Laney 0-1-0- Goalkeeping Totals Suit 0, Totals 16-31-2-173. (Shiny Material) Training Case Mon Save Save Suit SPARTAN RECEIVING ow Save 3-37, Sa Sam apinsnst on pal ich4, qr. (Shiny Material) Clark 9-74, Nash 5-62, Moon 190 832 4500 Thomas 2-24, Moore 2-20. Totals 21- McGarry 94 19 4000 217, Libbey 5 3 13 .625 FREE PAIR OF ADIDAS SOCKS REBEL RECEIVING NorPac Volleyball W,th V1100 ptv ' mor Lewis 8-75, Bridges 4-81, Thomas 2- TssmONal0 W 14, Totals 16 Miller 1-14, Jones 1-9. 8J8U 1213-81 12 0 173, Oregon (17-161 10 2 L&L FACTORY DISCOUNT SJSU Volleyball State California 123-20) 8 4 MONTEREY ROAD 297-8252 SJSU OPP Washington115-181 6 6 2266 4CS 14139-3373 Kills -Alt. 1163-3349 Oregon State 113-181 3 9 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK & WEEKDAY EVES. .277 Hitting % .172 Fresno State 19-23) 3 9 1285 Assists 1045 Washington State (9231 0 12 L NEN mim NEED am NEN INN min NI Tuesday, November 26, 1985/Spartan Dal

Here they

Andy Anderson (left) flips ball to teammate Steve Trebotich as he is serum again getting tackled.

Spartan football first consists of i 5 players The gdIlle is When mt. 1,, Illt(TIOCk iii a pile, kicked off back in 1895, they broken into two 40-minute halves with the front forwards of each team weren't playing football at with a rest period in between. When pushing against one another all the ball is in play, it may be kicked, The ball is thrown into the pile They played with a ball that carried or thrown but cannot be and it is heeled by the players (no looked squashed, as if Orson Welles thrown or knocked forward with the hands may be used in a serum). had at one time used it as a whoopie hand or arm. When the ball is heeled out of the cushion They didn't wear pads or The objective in rugby is to gain crowd, it may be picked up and helmets and used such terminology possession of the ball and touch it passed and the action resumes. In as "scrum," "try," "hooker" and down across the opposing team's goal American sports, the face-off in "mauls." line. So comes the word for a score in hockey and the jump ball in They were playing rugby. football "touchdown." basketball, can be attributed to the The game of rugby was To many Americans, rugby looks scrum. developed in Europe from soccer, like a strange sport. However, that and American football was derived great American sport we call According to SJSU rugby club from rugby. Rugby was a popular football, is nothing more than a coach Dr. Ron Macbeth, there is a sport in the United States in the early brutal variation of rugby. For philosophical difference between 20th century, but after World War It, instance, a touchdown in football is rugby and its distant cousin football. In rugby with the advent of football, rugby was what rugby calls a "try" (4 points). the injury rate is very low sidelined. An extra -point is nothing more because rugby players try to avoid a However, in 1970. SJSU once than a conversion after a try (2 collision and pass off the ball when they are going to get hit. again began playing rugby, not as an points) In rugby, when a player does NCAA-sanctioned sport, but as a club not think he can carry the ball over The thought of rugby brings to sport. The 1985 Spartan team is made the goal line, he may dropkick the mind "The Play" of the Cal-Stanford up of undergrads and grads as well. ball over the crossbar for three game of two years ago. When Cal Presently, the SJSU rugby club is 4-3, points. So comes the field goal in scored on a kickoff return, it used a with their next game at 1 p.m. football. series of laterals to take the ball into Saturday against Hayward One of the strangest sights of the end zone. Except for the Stanford Rugby is played on a field 120 rugby is the scrum, yes, the scrum. A band having marched onto the field, yards long and 75 yards wide scrum occurs whenever a minor Cal wasn't playing football at all, it According to the rules, each team violation is whistled by the referee. was playing rugby.

Photos by Ken P. Ruinard Text by Eric Stanion

Dave Richards takes the drink that refreshes Spartan Daily/Tuesday, 1985 0) 2)10Tas November 26, 51i NM, Football team finishes with worst record since 1970 continued from page 1B halftime will probably haunt the done at the start of the second hall in %ere OH short passes I it (ill running just sine game against l'acit it Sadly this was not the case. team for months to come. almost every game this season backs 1985 Swoon SJSU ended up losing the game, It was in that period that SJSU They seemed to come out of the Allen gained 1,717 yards through Clark needed ball more SJ11,1 20-18, and as happened all season, the was outscored 91-43 Statistics some- locker room unenthused and the air for five touchdowns, but hi( 21 Californai 48 responsibility for the times don't tell the story, but in this uninspired, something for which the also threw 14 interceptions 32 New Mexico State "Win: narrow loss fell When Clark was given the ball, on many shoulders case they do coaches are partially to blame. Will Allen be the Spartan quar- 7 StanfordState 4 1 he was reasonably effective, espe- 35 Among the offensive miscues In their game against Fresno But the players also need to terback of the future' cially considering the main alterna- 3218 UtaFullertonh State 20 was a blocked 29-yard field goal at- State (the eventual PCAA champion shoulder part of the responsibility. Gilbert stops short of saying no, tive Allen's passing. But he wasn't 17 Fresno State 37 tempt midway through the first with a 10-0-1 record, 7-0 in the confer- After all, aren't they supposed to be but he does say that he will definitely quar- given the ball nearly enough 0 4 1 ter, a fumble by fullback Keith ence), the Spartans gave the Bull- out on the field because they want to try and recruit a quarterback from 34 Pacific 26 Tatum that the Titans turned into a dogs all they could handle in the first be there'? the junior college ranks Now. as Gilbert talks of possibly 13 Oregon 35 touchdown on the very next play and half. The strange lack of intensity that moving him back to the defensive 22 Long Beach State 31 a pass by quart:rback Jon Carlson At halftime, the score was 9-3 plagued the team for much of the sea- Shuffle hard on offense backfield next year, memories loom 16 Nevada Las Vegas 16 that was intercepted as the Spartans Fresno State and the Red Wave was son isn't the only mystery that re- ominously of a rushing game that had mains unsolved There seems no question about were nearing field goal range in the losing its foam. gained only 290 yards in the first five SJSU Final Football Statistics game's closing seconds. Then the halftime transfor- One of the most puzzling ques- one thing though. It was extremely games of the season without Clark. mation took place, and a different Injuries prompted the switch of SJSU OPP SJSU team seemed to come out the First Analysis Clark from defense to offense. Inju- 213 downs 253 locker room to start the second half, Last season, the defense led the PCAA in 404.1279 Rushes -yards 501-1880 ries also cost the Spartans some of That loss seemed to take the as the Bulldogs scored twice in the 2878 Passing 2857 wind fewest yards allowed per game and was their best players, including offen- out of the Spartans' wilting sails, as first 12 minutes of the third quarter to 1105 Return yards 857 sive linemen Menu Mulitalo and John 209-426 they went on to lose handily to Fresno put the game away. Comp. -attempts 192-322 second in points allowed. This year, it will Aimonet ti. 23 Had intercepted 15 State and Arizona before beating Pa- 592164 Punts cific. 50-1954 Same story at Oregon finish near the bottom of the conference in But these and other injuries sim- 34-1 1 Fumblesilost 27-18 The Fullerton State game fea- ply don't excuse or explain SJSU's 105-879 Penalties yards 73-899 tured some offensive mixups. But the A similiar turnabout came when both categories. poor season, especially in light of the 3955 Total net yards 4517 defense also had its share of prob- the Spartans were battling Oregon in fact that their replacements ( Bruce 4.8 Average yards gained 5.5 lems this season. their last chance to redeem them- t ions is at quarterback. hard on the offense to adjust from one McAlvain and Mike Barnard) played 4 Missed PG. 7 In past years, the SJSU defense selves against a Pac-10 foe after Sophomore Doug Allen and Carl- quarterback to another each week consistently well, as did the rest of SJSU 34 87 was known for its 43 88 212 hard-hitting, in- being blown out in their first three son, a senior, alternated for the first ( and sometimes even in the middle of the offensive line OPP. 78 99 91 83 329 tense play and its effectiveness. Last tries. half of the season, until Gilbert fi- the same game). season, it led the PCAA in fewest nally gave Allen the nod before the RUSHING SJSU trailed by just four ( 14-10) Gilbert may not have seen great yards allowed per game (314) and at the half, but the Ducks came out Fresno State game on Oct. 12. Clark 89-429, Walker 94-327, Allen talent in either of the alternatives, Injuries mask problem 89-242. Cobarruvias 28-177, Meredith was second in points allowed per fired up (and the Spartans came out Gilbert was not happy with the game ; 20.5). but the choice should have been made 36-103, Stewart 2074,- Nash 1-18, flaU to score twice in just over six inconsistency of the offense, espe- Injuries don't excuse the prob- Malauulu 2-15, Payton 6-14. Riley This year, SJSU will finish at or much sooner than the sixth game of 3-9, minutes to ice the game. cially in the two frustrating losses to the season. lem they mask it. Tatum 6-6, Carlson 30-1-1351. Totals near the bottom of the conference in The worst example of the third- Utah State and Fullerton State. The simple, sad fact is that this 404-1279. both categories, yielding an average quarter blues came in the next-to-last Another question mark is at run- year's Spartan football team just PASSING of 410.6 and 30.8 points per game. game of the season against Long QB problems continue ning back, where junior K.C. Clark didn't have what it took to win. Allen 142-290-14-1717, Carlson 67- If the offense hadn't been so in- Beach State. moved from the defensive backfield 133-9-959. Clark 0-2-0-0, Malisuulu 0- consistent, it would be easy to blame midway through the season and the same prob- 1-0-0. Totals 209-426-23-2676. The Spartans were trailing 17-10 However, Allen didn't brighten It wasn't always the defense. blasted through opposing defenses to games, they lost be- RECEIVING when Freddie Payton fumbled the the dim offensive picture. Science Political lem. In some become SJSU's leading rusher for the that Nash 29-412. Thomas 24-391. Cage second-half kickoff. The 49ers recov- In the next two games, against cause of a few sloppy passes Defense uninspired season with 429 yards in just five 26-361. Malauulu 13-288, Walker 32- ered at the SJSU 19 and scored four Fresno State and Arizona, Allen com- drifted into the opponents' hands. 404501253, Clark 25-224, Meredith plays games. Other times, the defense wasn't alert At times, the defense looked later. They were helped im- pleted 19 of 53 passes for 230 and no 18-220, Crawford 13-141, Moon 9- mensely by two to deep passes that were caught be- uninspired, especially in a 37-22 loss offside penalties touchdowns. He also threw five inter- He rejuvenated an injury-ridden, 140. Hall 5-85, Satterfield 2-57, Pay- against hind the secondary for big plays. ton 6-50, to Long Beach State and a 41-0 stomp- the Spartans, one of which ceptions. talent -poor backfield with his breaka- Harvey 3-23, Moore 2-20, gave them a first down on a 3-3 Stewart 1-11, Riley 1-0. Totals 209- ing by Arizona. play. Admittedly, the Arizona defense way speed and hard-hitting style of Often, it was a combination of Seven minutes later, Long 2676. But most of the time, the defense Beach is formidable the Wildcats play. Several times he carried four or problems. State scored again to take a 30-10 TACKLES just looked as if it was being out- knocked Arizona State out of the Rose five defenders five or six yards down- five) lead. There are a lot (Top Weldon 98, Hollinger 88, played. Opposing teams' offenses Bowl Saturday with a 16-13 upset win. field before they finally stopped him. of reasons for the Lyon 87, Kennedy 81, Gilcrest 62. Spartans' were able to move the ball at will No one has answers But Allen couldn't do much better Clark's statistics dropped off poor season, from the top INTERCEPTIONS of against the less than spartan defense, against anyone else. somewhat in the last three games, as the coaching staff on down. Payton 3-80, K.C. Clark 2-54, Gilcrest One thing is for especially in the third quarter. None of the coaches or players He finished the season with 142 he gained a total of only 175 yards, certain, though 2-17, McDade 2-8, Weldon 2-7, King 1- next year will be better. It can't get 1 The third quarter memories of has an answer for the strange disap- completions in 290 attempts ( 48.9 per- paltry figures especially when com- 3, Santini 1-2, 0, Lyon 1-0. much worse. Total 15-171. that 15-minute stretch that follows pearing act that the Spartans have cent) many of those completions pared to the 130 yards he gained in UNLV favored to win league continued from page is NMS (4-14) declared academically ineligible 'If we were in a 6- 1986 there during the summer. After last season's debacle, the Fullerton's top returners are 6-4 foot-and-under Aggies fired Coach Weldon Drew and guard Kevin Henderson (17.3), a snagged Neil McCarthy from Weber first-team All-PCAA choice, and 6-8 league, we would be State. McCarthy has his work cut out forward Kerry Boagni (11.7). for him and knows lt Winter Session competitive.' "If we were in a 6-foot-and-under Utah State (10-8) Neil McCarthy, league, we would be competitive," he New Mexico St. coach said. San Jose State University Notorious for their high-scoring Elston Jones, a 6-7 forward, re- offense and high-yielding defense, turns from a foot injury suffered nine the middle-of-the-pack Aggies are a Pacific (5-13) games into last season to bolster New team nobody can overlook. Mexico State's front line. Wendell Office of Continuing Education They return of one the league's With four starters coming back Wright, a 6-5 forward who sat out the premier players in 6-7 senior forward and Rich Anema returning from a entire year, will help out Jones. Greg Grant. A PCAA first-teamer back injury, the Tigers have more ex- Forward Orlando Febres (10.1) Course Dates: January 2-17,1986 and All-American candidate, Grant perience, which should translate into is back, along with guard Gilbert Wil- averaged 19.4 points and 9.5 rebounds more victories. burn. a game last year, in addition to shoot- Forwards Domingo Rosario Wilburn led the PCAA in scoring ing 54 percent from the field. (14.1) and Drew Rodgers (10.4) and a year ago with a 23.6 average, but Utah State has only one other re- guards Kyle Pepple and James Ray didn't make either all-conference turning starter, 6-7 Bill Floyd, so Richardson are back, but the key will team. McCarthy knows why. Coach Rod Tueller's team evaluation be Anema. "Wilburn can score baskets," McCarthy said, "but the other thing is cloudy. A 6-8 senior forward, Anema av- "We'll find out what we're made about him is that he doesn't care if eraged 12.7 points a game during the the guy he's guarding scores baskets. of when we face Jerry (Tarkanian 1983-84 season before missing all of and the Rebels on Jan. 2," Tueller He needs to pay more attention to the last year. defensive end.'' said. "He's made a phenomenal comeback from back surgery," UC-Irvine (8-10) Coach Tom O'Neill said. "He's the Long Beach St. (2-16) most dedicated athlete I've ever been The Anteaters, with forwards around." With no seniors, second-year Tod Murphy and Johnny Rogers re- coach Ron Palmer is continuing to Last year's other starter, Andy turning, should be able to score with rebuild the 49er program. With 10 Franklin, who averaged 12.1 points anyone. But like Utah State, they will freshmen and sophomores, he has the and 6.3 rebounds, transferred to Cal- have to improve defensively. foundation for the future. Poly San Luis Obispo. top returners Last year, Irvine finished ahead Long Beach State's "Over the long haul, we'll miss of only the Aggies in team defense, include 6-3 guard Morton Wiley, 6-6 him (Franklin) on certain nights, but surrendering 78.9 points a game. swingman Jeff Eastin, forward Ste- night in an night out, his leaving phen Hamlin and center DeAnthony The 6-9,1 Murphy (17.0), a first- won't have an effect," O'Neill said. Langston. team All-PCAA choice, and the 6-10 Rogers (21.7), a second-team se- lection, give the Anteaters possibly the best one-two scoring punch in the league. Irvine also returns 6-6 Troy Car- mon (10.9) up front. In the backcourt. Christmas Bryan Williams and transfers Joe Buchanan and Mike Hess will see Wrap and Trims plenty of action. may con- Though the Anteaters Discover the distinctive wrappings that make gift-giving a joy! tend, Coach Bill Mulligan knows it :5 won't be easy. "There are so many good coaches in this conference. I look at .-;Z.*4;::;:1 :47.40,110 the schedule and say, 'Who can we beat?' And I'm an optimist," Mulli- gan said. UCSB (8-10)

The Gauchos have reason to be season Advance Registration optimistic for the league they return their entire starting unit. Leading the way will be 6-7 for- Ward Scott Fisher (14.6), a second- team All-PCAA pick a year ago. Deadline is Help up front comes from 6-7 Paris Fortson (11.1), while Santa SPARTAN karbara's three-guard lineup con- flicts of Conner Henry 113.2), Mauryc BOOKSTORE December 6, 1985 Carr (10.5) and either Richard TOWnserend or Tim DePriest. SPARTAN SHOPS INC ' "We're basically fighting for sec- place," Coach Jerry Pimm said. itasons alba on any given night, I think three (4rerlings Pick up schedules in DBH 136B Or tour teams can upset Las Vegas on their home court." MCMLXXXV Arnencon Greetings Corp AMERJCAN GREETINGS . Page 6R er-2crilz Football players put on probation Spartan City brawl ends in court By David Leland A fourth member of the football Daily staff writer team who was involved in the fight, Three SJSU football players en- Bobby Cobarruvias, a senior. tered last minute pleas of guilty in pleaded guilty Aug. 15 to assault and Santa Clara County Municipal Court battery He was fined $540 but did not Nov 18 and were given fines and pro- receive probation. bation for their part in a Spartan Vil- Santa Clara County Deputy Dis. lage melee which occurred almost a tract Attorney David Soares agreed year ago with the sentences given the stu- Samuel Kennedy, a junior, dents. pleaded guilty to one charge of tres- "I am absolutely satisfied with passing: Craig Conaway, aiso a ju- the judgment," Soares said. "These nior, pleaded guilty to battery with guys had no prior record. All they threat of bodily harm; and Robert need to do is obey the law while they Cavaretta, a senior, pleaded guilty to are on probation" two counts of assault and one count of Cavaretta said that he will pay a trespassing. 6360 fine and was placed on probation The exact conditions of the pro- for two years. bation and the amount of the fines "I'm sorry it ever happened and will not be available for two weeks, I definitely learned my lesson said Deputy Administrator of the Mu- through( this," he said. "I will never. nicipal Court, Betty Conslsow. ever, get involved in another fight. The three were arrested Dec. 9 I've learned it's not worth it because after forcing their way into a neigh- you go through so much it's incredi- bor's party in Spartan Village. ble." After being asked to leave, a The other players could not be fight ensued which left one resident reached for comment. with a broken nose and property Daily staff writer Tyrone van Specializing in Country French Amages totaling $250 Hoovdonk contributed to this report. Antiques & Accessories Saratoga WHERE THE INOiVIDUAL ENJOYS THE BUYING POWER OF A GROUP We are providing your organization with this Group Spartans continue Now featuring holiday gift plants, ivy Plaza Discount Membership topiary animals, and unique garden accessories Program with Bakery If you find a better newspaper Located in advertised price (same tire and warranty) from any tire company in enjoy great Discount Prices on Tires, plus By Scott Van Camp Some team members will partici- 14573 Big Basin Way. Saratoga CA 95070 Saratoga Daily staff writer Northern California. send us a copy FREE member benefits: pate in the Los Angeles Invitational Tel. (408) 741.11.92 Extending its unbeaten streak to on December 6-8. Plaza Center of the advertisement and your four, the SJSU women's swim team "Hopefully they'll be prepared to 14440 Big Basin Way invoice and we will send you a downed Hayward State 73-47 in a non- swim fast by then," he said. check for the difference. conference meet Friday. SJSU will then compete in the Ask at store for details The 4-0 Spartans broke a school Stanford and California invitationals JOIN US IN A GALA EVENING! record in the process. next month before returning to dual The 400-meter freestyle relay meet action Jan. 18, hosting Stanford. team of Diana Garzon, Colleen Bren- Mutimer expects the winning Ti,, Customer Relations Call 1 800 952 8616 nan, Angie Wester and Cincy Roppel streak to end against the Cardinal. shaved more than two seconds off of "They'll end up second or third in the old record set in 1983 with a time the country this season, so I have a of 3:42.49. feeling we'll just be swimming for Coach Jack Mutimer said he ex- good times that day," Mutimer said. pected tougher competition from the After Stanford, the Spartans will A very perplexed mother of an Eastern Pioneers after a friend gave him a M,eage L,omeo Mileage Limited Warrant, face Cal, another meet that the coach college coed reports that her daughter and Warranty misleading Hayward scouting report. could do without. LLIIFFEE TT IIMMEE RWooardk mmaa n, ash, yo friends have been buying up men's cotton I IFE TIME Workmanship "They were still a pretty good "Cal is a lot like Stanford. They iFETIME Road Hazard Limited Warranties at 'roiled Warranties at NO EXTRA COST, team for Division II, but I owe him both have big swimming budgets and boxer shorts and wearing them NO EXTRA COST. one," Mutimer said. get some great swimmers. It's an- "a la Madonna." 1555R-12 The Spartans won 12 of 14 events, other meet that we'll be outmatched It seems that the stripes, prints, and plaids 3690 WHITEWALL 14558-13 35 78 and had some good times, the coach NON-MEMBER WHITEWALL in," he said. '55513.13 take over where lace left off . Could this be the 3914 PRICE NON-MEMBER said. 1655E1.13 Other SJSU first -place finishes 4250 P155 80D-13" 27 94 WHITEWALL PRICE gift of the season for those desperately 175511-13 He was especially impressed included: Brennan 0,000 4382 P165800-13' 28 56 P155/808-13 36 90 free) CZR ;4 42 k-A; seeking something different? P175800-13" 01b7,MUM-13 3934 with Felicia Partos' 100 butterfly 11:04.26 and (500 free) 5:27.1 ; Wester 175513-34 4E96 29 06 SARATOGA VILLAGE P185 75D-14" 32 P175,758-13 40 26 time of 1:02.83, and Wester's 53:03 in (200 free) 1:56.36; Sharon Muyskens 18558-14 1,258 42 1555R-15 P195 758-14 35 78 P185/808-13 43 62 the 100 freestyle. (100 backstroke); Garzon 1100 4250 HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE 16556.15 4586 P205 758-14 36 90 P185/758-14 44 74 "Both were very good for so breaststroke) 1:04.58 and 200 individ- 115/7056.12 4474 P215 758-14 38 02 P195,758-14 48 10 early in the season," he said. ual medley 7537055-13 4586 P725 75E1.14 40 26 P205.758-14 51 46 185,70513.13 4924 11.15 75B-15 39 14 P215/758-14 54 32 Friday, November 29, 1985 ,85, 705Fi 14 5346 41 38 P205758-15 Saratoga Village Square 195, 70511- i4 ,15 758-15 52 08 P215'758-15 52 58 Alpha Tau Omega house 6 to 10 pm 14510 Big Basin Way 867-1714 P225,758-15 54 82 P235:758-15 55 94 Come browse the shops, retains IFC soccer title partake of refreshments & enjoy Mileage L.maed 1Ada. , MONRO-MAGNUM 60'S FOR By Steve Pipe ATO, which handled the ball with LIFETIME Workman.... moage unmet] Warr.ory live entertainment throughout Landed Wao3,114,, Daily staff writer precision, dribbling around defend- Drive a Few Miles IFE TIME YVorkmanship PICKUPS, VANS, RV's 8, 4WD Alpha Tau Omega defended their goals with terrific the Village along Big Basin Way. NO EXTR3.. . IFETIME Road Haraid ers and setting up /n,led Inter-Fraternity Council soccer title passes. & Dine in Europe! NON MEMBER by crushing sigma Alpha Epsilon 7-1 They scored three more times in SIZE PRICE NON-MEMBER Friday the second half, with goals by James 15558 ,2 O4e SIZE MICE 145513.33 P155/80R-13 41 38 Vienna Woods Delicatessen 3' lo WHITEWALL The two teams clashed in last Machmiller, and again by Stepavich 5165/808-13 45 86 155s8-13 3742 NONMEMBER PRIVATE year's final, too, with ATO winning 3- and Garcia. P185/808-13 50 34 Restaurant & Outside Terrace 165511.13 3518 SIZE PRICE HEAVY P185,758-14 50 96 DUTY ATO team captain Mike Chow * $ 1 0.00 in FREE accessories 175513.13 3802 P355.806-13 37 52 P195/758-14 52 58 man, n, ?hr. C The Greeks met on the South had to be carried off the field with European Food Served in an Intimate Atmosphere 16558 14 3832 P165 808-13 40 88 with any bike purchase 175513 14 4250 P205/758-14 5594 P375908-13 44 74 Campus field behind Spartan Sta- only a few minutes left in the game. 5215.758-14 Open 7 Days 14567 Big Basin Way 867-2410 18558 34 46 98 5706 P185 '8019-13 45 36 dium on a numbingly cold afternoon. Chow, involved in a couple of thump- all parts, accessories, P205/758-15 59:10 P185 758-14 46 98 sotab., * 10% off on Patio Level Plaza Del Robles 5558.35 th OP one-on- P215/7519-15 62 16 P195 758-34 49 84 And the SAE Warheads, winners in ing slide tackles earlier, went V,. and clothing with this coupon '65540,5 4' 37 the IFC football tournament Nov. I, one with the SAE goalie, who kicked "5 TOSS'? P225/75E1-15 64 90 P205,758-14 52 58 were never able to put any heat on Chow's shin. offer valid thru Dec. 31, 1985 75, TOSJI. 19 P235/758-15 66 02 P215, 75R-1 4 55 94 355-7056 13 P205758 -IS 54 32 ATO. Chow fell down in a heap, clutch- ,dPi k,_ Rentals Peugeot VALLEY INSTITUTE OF THEATRE ARTS P215/75E1-15 0 e -RS 705R r 4 4361 57 06 ATO broke it open early, with ing his leg, and his teammates s' 1 eS Safety Equipment Bianchi 35 '705E1,14 P225 758-15 60 42 Dean Stepavich and Tim Hoffman swarmed around him. A compress SAVE 10% on VITA'S P235 7519-15 61 54 Layaways Mountain scoring in rapid succession. The War- was applied to Chow's leg, which Big Snon Way Bik14486 "A Child's Christmas in Wales had 867 9009 Tues-Sat 10-6 and Cherished Christmas Classics" heads pulled goalie Robert Mesaros looked more like a minefield that Sun 10-4 11FGood rich t tt out after ATO's Art Garcia made it 3- been tripped. December 13-22 inside pages tor tremendous 9,11 000 a penalty kick. "1 don't believe in shin guards," at on Radial I A hy B F Goodrich Corey Farr replaced Mesaros, Chow said from the sidelines. "They Eastfield Junior Auxiliary's but it made little difference, at least slow you down." 2766 VILLA MONTALVO fabulous feasting Gourmet Kitchen Shop 90 DAY SAME AS CASH. CONTACT STORE FOR DETAILS. not to Garcia, who fired another goal. Chow wasn't the only player with Warhead players standing on the bruises SAE's Vallette, who was Refreshments Served at the yuletide sidelines screamed "offsides," but tackled earlier by Chow, said he will Village Open House festivities the referee Culled it "good." "definitely be sore in the morning." 'mention this ad 8. receive 10% off adult tickets SAE kept the game from being a Chow said "unity" was the key to first half shutout when Tom Vallette ATO's win. A gift from the Butter Paddle took a penalty kick that bounced off "Everyone played with the same is also a gift to the children an AT() defender and drilled what goal victory," said Chow, who of Eastfield would turn out to be the Warheads' played on last year's winning team only goal of the game. also. "We've been preparing for this A complete selection of kitchenware and Christmas gifts AT() came out smoking in the game since the beginning of Octo- 14510 Big Basin Way Saratoga 408-867-1678 second half, a half that was intensely ber." physical SAE, a team of talented "They practiced a lot. They keep football players, played fiercely for getting better every year," Vallette much of the game, but was simply said. outclassed by ATO. The Warheads In the semifinal match, Sigma never matched the soccer skills of Chi beat Delta Sigma 3-0. NEW ARRIVAL FOR THE WOMAN WHO Hand made sweaters DARES TO RE DIM RENT in outrageous colors continued from page ift inside, forcing them to take several Gift Certificates After starting out coldly with sev- difficult outside shots (from 20 feet or FREE Custom Gift Wrap eral misses. SJSU scored four points more). Accessories in a row on a turnaround jumper in Wonderful SJSU pulled away midway key by Wyatt and a 10-foot the through the half as Sonoma Stale Saratoga jumper by forward George Puou to 14515 Big Basin Way, missed several of the these outside 141-F 10-6, Sat 10-5 it up at 8-6. nutcrackers tie jumpers. From the 12-12 tie with However, the Cossacks hung 13:55 left, the Spartans went ona 27-10 collector dolls tight, matching SJSU basket for bas- streak to take a 39-20 lead with 3:20 Jewelry and tying it at 12-12 when forward ket left The streak included several COME TO THE COUNTRY Johnson hit a 15-footer from the Erik spectacular slams by forward Owens Silk Flowers Baskets right baseline and guard Berry. Shortly after Johnson's basket. Creative Custom Framing Dried Flowers Gifts SJSU as whistled for its fifth team The Spartans settled comfort- Over 1,000 Moldings to Select From Arrangements foul. But in a game filled with mis- ably into the lead for the rest of the 1. Sonoma State was unable to half, pulling away to a 50-24 advan, takes, 15% off All Regular Priced take advantage of the opportunity. tage at the buzzer Merchandise In fact, a few minutes later, the The Leading scorer at the half for Open 10-5 Daily 20605 Third St. Cossacks were whistled for their fifth SJSU was Puou with nine points, fol. 12-4 Sunday at Big Basin Way With this Coupon Valid 12/1-12/25 foul. lowed by Owens with seven The Cos 867-2870 Saratoga Village 867.0230 problem, the Because of the size sacks were led by Johnson, who had 14567 Big Basin Way (In The Plaza Del Robles) Cossacks were unable to get the ball six PLEASANT HILL EMERY VILLE SAN FRANCISCO SAN FRANCISCO SAN LEANDRO

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